The function does not return the same value as snprintf() normally does,
so readers may be mislead into thinking the code works differently than
it actually does. A different function name makes this easier to detect.
Reported-by: Tomas Hoger
Assisted-by: Daniel Gustafsson
Fixes#3296Closes#3297
lib/curl_ntlm.c had code that read as follows:
#ifdef USE_OPENSSL
# ifdef USE_OPENSSL
# else
# ..
# endif
#endif
Remove the redundant USE_OPENSSL along with #else (it's not possible to
reach it anyway). The removed construction is a leftover from when the
SSLeay support was removed.
Closes#3269
Reviewed-by: Daniel Gustafsson <daniel@yesql.se>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg <daniel@haxx.se>
When a zeroed out allocation is required, use calloc() rather than
malloc() followed by an explicit memset(). The result will be the
same, but using calloc() everywhere increases consistency in the
codebase and avoids the risk of subtle bugs when code is injected
between malloc and memset by accident.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/2497
With the recently introduced MultiSSL support multiple SSL backends
can be compiled into cURL That means that now the order of the SSL
One option would be to use the same SSL backend as was configured
via `curl_global_sslset()`, however, NTLMv2 support would appear
to be available only with some SSL backends. For example, when
eb88d778e (ntlm: Use Windows Crypt API, 2014-12-02) introduced
support for NTLMv1 using Windows' Crypt API, it specifically did
*not* introduce NTLMv2 support using Crypt API at the same time.
So let's select one specific SSL backend for NTLM support when
compiled with multiple SSL backends, using a priority order such
that we support NTLMv2 even if only one compiled-in SSL backend can
be used for that.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/1848
In that case, use libcurl's internal MD4 routine. This fixes tests 1013
and 1014 which were failing due to configure assuming NTLM and SMB were
always available whenever mbed TLS was in use (which is now true).
curl_printf.h defines printf to curl_mprintf, etc. This can cause
problems with external headers which may use
__attribute__((format(printf, ...))) markers etc.
To avoid that they cause problems with system includes, we include
curl_printf.h after any system headers. That makes the three last
headers to always be, and we keep them in this order:
curl_printf.h
curl_memory.h
memdebug.h
None of them include system headers, they all do funny #defines.
Reported-by: David Benjamin
Fixes#743
As of https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/#/c/6980/, almost all of
BoringSSL #ifdefs in cURL should be unnecessary:
- BoringSSL provides no-op stubs for compatibility which replaces most
#ifdefs.
- DES_set_odd_parity has been in BoringSSL for nearly a year now. Remove
the compatibility codepath.
- With a small tweak to an extend_key_56_to_64 call, the NTLM code
builds fine.
- Switch OCSP-related #ifdefs to the more generally useful
OPENSSL_NO_OCSP.
The only #ifdefs which remain are Curl_ossl_version and the #undefs to
work around OpenSSL and wincrypt.h name conflicts. (BoringSSL leaves
that to the consumer. The in-header workaround makes things sensitive to
include order.)
This change errs on the side of removing conditionals despite many of
the restored codepaths being no-ops. (BoringSSL generally adds no-op
compatibility stubs when possible. OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER #ifdefs are
bad enough!)
Closes#640
This header file must be included after all header files except
memdebug.h, as it does similar memory function redefinitions and can be
similarly affected by conflicting definitions in system or dependent
library headers.
Since we just started make use of free(NULL) in order to simplify code,
this change takes it a step further and:
- converts lots of Curl_safefree() calls to good old free()
- makes Curl_safefree() not check the pointer before free()
The (new) rule of thumb is: if you really want a function call that
frees a pointer and then assigns it to NULL, then use Curl_safefree().
But we will prefer just using free() from now on.
SSLeay was the name of the library that was subsequently turned into
OpenSSL many moons ago (1999). curl does not work with the old SSLeay
library since years. This is now reflected by only using USE_OPENSSL in
code that depends on OpenSSL.
curl_ntlm_core.c:146: warning: passing 'DES_cblock' (aka 'unsigned char
[8]') to parameter of type 'char *' converts
between pointers to integer types with different
sign
Rather than duplicate the code in setup_des_key() for OpenSSL and in
extend_key_56_to_64() for non-OpenSSL based crypto engines, as it is
the same, use extend_key_56_to_64() for all engines.
curl_ntlm_core.c:301: warning: pointer targets in passing argument 2 of
'CryptImportKey' differ in signedness
curl_ntlm_core.c:310: warning: passing argument 6 of 'CryptEncrypt' from
incompatible pointer type
curl_ntlm_core.c:540: warning: passing argument 4 of 'CryptGetHashParam'
from incompatible pointer type
This fixes compilation issues with compilers that don't support 64-bit
integers through long long or __int64 which was introduced in commit
07b66cbfa4.
As Windows based autoconf builds don't yet define USE_WIN32_CRYPTO
either explicitly through --enable-win32-cypto or automatically on
_WIN32 based platforms, subsequent builds broke with the following
error message:
"Can't compile NTLM support without a crypto library."
Curl_rand() will return a dummy and repatable random value for this
case. Makes it possible to write test cases that verify output.
Also, fake timestamp with CURL_FORCETIME set.
Only when built debug enabled of course.
Curl_ssl_random() was not used anymore so it has been
removed. Curl_rand() is enough.
create_digest_md5_message: generate base64 instead of hex string
curl_sasl: also fix memory leaks in some OOM situations