The FILE:// code doesn't support this option - and it doesn't make sense
to support it as long as it works as it does since then it'd only block
even longer.
But: setting CURLOPT_MAX_RECV_SPEED_LARGE would make the transfer first
get done and then libcurl would wait until the average speed would get
low enough. This happened because the transfer happens completely in the
DO state for FILE:// but then it would still unconditionally continue in
to the PERFORM state where the speed check is made.
Starting now, the code will skip from DO_DONE to DONE immediately if no
socket is set to be recv()ed or send()ed to.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1312
Reported-by: Mohammad AlSaleh
The comment in the code mentions the zero terminating after having
copied data, but it mistakingly zero terminated the source data and not
the destination! This caused the test 864 problem discussed on the list:
http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-12/0113.html
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stenberg <daniel@haxx.se>
Although highlighted by a bug in commit 1cfb436a2f, APOP
authentication could be chosen if the server was to reply with an empty
or missing timestamp in the server greeting and APOP was given in the
capability list by the server.
Added a loop to pop3_statemach_act() in which Curl_pp_readresp() is
called until the cache is drained. Without this multiple responses
received in a single packet could result in a hang or delay.
Similar to the processing of untagged CAPABILITY responses in IMAP and
multi-line EHLO responses in SMTP, moved the processing of multi-line
CAPA responses to pop3_state_capa_resp().
In an effort to reduce what pop3_endofresp() does and bring the POP3
source back inline with the IMAP and SMTP protocols, moved the APOP
detection into pop3_state_servergreet_resp().
Added support for downgrading the SASL authentication mechanism when the
decoding of CRAM-MD5, DIGEST-MD5 and NTLM messages fails. This enhances
the previously added support for graceful cancellation by allowing the
client to retry a lesser SASL mechanism such as LOGIN or PLAIN, or even
APOP / clear text (in the case of POP3 and IMAP) when supported by the
server.
In preparation for the upcoming SASL downgrade feature renamed the
imap__perform_authenticate(), pop3__perform_authenticate() and
smtp__perform_authenticate() functions.
Security flaw CVE-2013-6422
This is conceptually the same problem and fix that 3c3622b6 brought to the
OpenSSL backend and that resulted in CVE-2013-4545.
This version of the problem was independently introduced to the GnuTLS
backend with commit 59cf93cc, present in the code since the libcurl
7.21.4 release.
Advisory: http://curl.haxx.se/docs/adv_20131217.html
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-11/0214.html
Reported-by: Marc Deslauriers
Since all systems have inaccuracy in the timeout handling it is
imperative that we add an inaccuracy margin to the general timeout and
connecttimeout handling with the multi interface. This way, when the
timeout fires we should be fairly sure that it has passed the timeout
value and will be suitably detected.
For cases where the timeout fire before the actual timeout, we would
otherwise consume the timeout action and still not run the timeout code
since the condition wasn't met.
Reported-by: He Qin
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1298
To avoid the regression when users pass in passwords containing semi-
colons, we now drop the ability to set the login options with the same
options. Support for login options in CURLOPT_USERPWD was added in
7.31.0.
Test case 83 was modified to verify that colons and semi-colons can be
used as part of the password when using -u (CURLOPT_USERPWD).
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1311
Reported-by: Petr Bahula
Assisted-by: Steve Holme
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stenberg <daniel@haxx.se>
It is not 100% clear whether * should include clear text LOGIN or not
from RFC-5092, however, including it is then consistent with current
POP3 behaviour where clear text, APOP or SASL may be chosen.
If a specific SASL authentication mechanism was requested by the user
as part of the login options but wasn't supported by the server then
curl would fallback to clear text, when it shouldn't, rather than
reporting "No known authentication mechanisms supported" as the POP3
and SMTP protocols do.
In C, signed integer overflow is undefined behavior. Thus, the compiler
is allowed to assume that it will not occur. In the check for an
overflow, the developer assumes that the signed integer of type time_t
will wrap around if it overflows. However, this behavior is undefined in
the C standard. Thus, when the compiler sees this, it simplifies t +
delta < t to delta < 0. Since delta > 0 and delta < 0 can't both be
true, the entire if statement is optimized out under certain
optimization levels. Thus, the parsedate function would return
PARSEDATE_OK with an undefined value in the time, instead of return -1 =
PARSEDATE_FAIL.
The comment here says that SecKeychainSearch causes a deprecation
warning when used with a minimum Mac OS X SDK version of 10.7.0, which
is correct. However, the #if guard did not match. It was intended to
only use the code if 10.6.0 support was enabled, but it had 10.7.0
instead. This caused a warning if the minimum was exactly 10.7.0.
The URI that is passed in as part of the Authorization: header needs to
be cut off at '?' if CURLAUTH_DIGEST_IE is set. Previously the code only
did when calculating the MD5sum.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1308
Patched-by: Sergey Tatarincev
POP3_TYPE_ANY, or ~0, is written to pop3c->preftype in lib/pop3c.c, an
unsigned int variable. The result of ~0 is -1, which caused a warning
due to writing a negative number to an unsigned variable. To fix this,
make the expression ~0U so that its value is considered the unsigned
number UINT_MAX which is what SASL_AUTH_ANY does in curl_sasl.h.
1) Renamed curl_tlsinfo to curl_tlssessioninfo as discussed on the
mailing list.
2) Renamed curl_ssl_backend to curl_sslbackend so it doesn't follow our
function naming convention.
3) Updated sessioninfo.c example accordingly.
This fixes a NULL dereference in the case where the client asks for
CURLINFO_TLS_SESSION data after the (TLS) session has already been
destroyed (i.e. curl_easy_perform has already completed for this
handle). Instead of crashing, we now return a CURLSSLBACKEND_NONE
error.
This is an extension to the fix in 7d80ed64e4. We may
call Curl_disconnect() while cleaning up the multi handle,
which could lead to openssl sending packets, which could get
a SIGPIPE.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Commit 7d80ed64e4 introduced some helpers to handle
sigpipe in easy.c. However, that fix was incomplete, and we
need to add more callers in other files. The first step is
making the helpers globally accessible.
Since the functions are small and should generally end up
inlined anyway, we simply define them in the header as
static functions.
Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
This fixes a rare Happy Eyeballs bug where if the first IP family runs
out of addresses before the second-family-timer fires, and the second
IP family's first connect fails immediately, no further IPs of the
second family are attempted.
When adding entries to the DNS cache with CURLOPT_RESOLVE, they are
marked 'inuse' forever to prevent them from ever being removed in normal
operations. Still, the code that pruned out-of-date DNS entries didn't
care for the 'inuse' struct field and pruned it anyway!
Reported-by: Romulo A. Ceccon
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1303
Added new API for returning a SSL backend type and pointer, in order to
allow access to the TLS internals, that may then be used to obtain X509
certificate information for example.
Otherwise a NOOP operation would be performed which a) only returns a
single line response and not a multiline response where -I needs to be
used, and b) provides an inconsistent user experience compared to that
of the POP3 and IMAP protocols.
singleipconnect() could return the file descriptor of an open socket
even though the function returned a CURLE_COULDNT_CONNECT error code
from commit ed1662c374 and 02fbc26d59.
This could cause tests 19, 704 and 1233 to fail on FreeBSD, AIX and
Solaris.
Incorrectly processed multiline server greeting responses as "wanted"
continue responses in smtp_endofresp(), from commit f16c0de4e9,
which in turn broke the SMTP server detection in the test suite,
because the EHLO command would not be sent.
Added a loop to smtp_statemach_act() in which Curl_pp_readresp() is
called until the cache is drained. Without this multiple responses
received in a single packet could result in a hang or delay.
Similar to the processing of untagged CAPABILITY responses in IMAP moved
the processing of multiline EHLO responses to smtp_state_ehlo_resp() and
introduced an internal response code of one to differentiate a multiline
continuation from the end of command. This also allows for the separate
processing of multiline responses from commands such as VRFY and EXPN.
singleipconnect() did not return the open socket descriptor on some
errors, thereby sometimes causing a socket leak. This patch ensures
the socket is always returned.
Even though this is only a formality (since not many people build on
Mavericks while targeting Leopard), since we still support Leopard
at the earliest, we might as well be pedantic.
It turns out that some of the constants necessary to make this feature
work are missing from Snow Leopard's Security framework even though
they are defined in the headers.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-11/0076.html
Reported by: myriachan
Rather than set the authentication options as part of the login details
specified in the URL, or via the older CURLOPT_USERPWD option, added a
new libcurl option to allow the login options to be set separately.
This patch fixes and issue introduced in commit 7d7df83198, if the
tunnel state was TUNNEL_CONNECT, waitconnect_getsock() would return a
bitmask indicating a readable socket but never stored the socket in the
return array.
Our own printf() replacement clearly can't properly handle %.*s with a
string that isn't zero terminated. Instead of fixing the printf code or
even figuring out what the proper posix behavior is, I reverted this
piece of the code back to the previous version where it does malloc +
memcpy instead.
Regression added in e839446c2a, released in curl 7.32.0.
Reported-by: Felix Yan
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1295
This patch adds a 200ms delay between the first and second address
family socket connection attempts.
It also iterates over IP addresses in the order returned by the
system, meaning most dual-stack systems will try IPv6 first.
Additionally, it refactors the connect code, removing most code that
handled synchronous connects. Since all sockets are now non-blocking,
the logic can be made simpler.
nss.c:702: warning: pointer targets in passing argument 3 of
'Curl_extract_certinfo' differ in signedness
nss.c:702: warning: pointer targets in passing argument 4 of
'Curl_extract_certinfo' differ in signedness
Made sure the cast was correctly "unsigned char *" to "char *" and not
"unsigned char *" to "unsigned char *".
nss.c:700: warning: pointer targets in passing argument 3 of
'Curl_extract_certinfo' differ in signedness
nss.c:700: warning: pointer targets in passing argument 4 of
'Curl_extract_certinfo' differ in signedness
Introduced in commit 7d7df83198 curl would loop displaying "Whut?"
if it was trying to connect to an address and port that didn't have
anything listening on it.
Renamed copy_header_value() to Curl_copy_header_value() as this
function is now non static.
Simplified proxy flag in Curl_http_input_auth() when calling
sub-functions.
Removed unnecessary white space removal when using negotiate as it had
been missed in commit cdccb42267.
...following recent changes to Curl_base64_decode() rather than trying
to parse a header line for the authentication mechanisms which is CRLF
terminated and inline zero terminate it.
...following recent changes to Curl_base64_decode() rather than trying
to parse a header line for the authentication mechanisms which is CRLF
terminated and inline zero terminate it.
The code rejected 0 as a valid timeout while in fact the function could
indeed legitimately return that and it should be respected.
Reported-by: Bjorn Stenberg
A base64 string should be a multiple of 4 characters in length, not
contain any more than 2 padding characters and only contain padding
characters at the end of string. For example: Y3VybA==
Strings such as the following are considered invalid:
Y= - Invalid length
Y== - Invalid length
Y=== - More than two padding characters
Y=x= - Padding character contained within string
This patch fixes a bug in Happy Eyeballs where curl would wait for a
connect response from socket1 before checking socket2.
Also, it updates error messages for failed connections, showing the ip
addresses that failed rather than just the host name repeatedly.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-10/0236.html
Reported-by: Paul Marks
This patch invokes two socket connect()s nearly simultaneously, and
the socket that is first connected "wins" and is subsequently used for
the connection. The other is terminated.
There is a very slight IPv4 preference, in that if both sockets connect
simultaneously IPv4 is checked first and thus will win.
Should a client application fail to decode an authentication message
received from a server, or not support any of the parameters given by
the server in the message, then the authentication phrase should be
cancelled gracefully by the client rather than simply terminating the
connection.
The authentication phrase should be cancelled by simply sending a '*'
to the server, in response to erroneous data being received, as per
RFC-3501, RFC-4954 and RFC-5034.
This patch adds the necessary state machine constants and appropriate
response handlers in order to add this functionality for the CRAM-MD5,
DIGEST-MD5 and NTLM authentication mechanisms.
This is a regression since the switch to always-multi internally
c43127414d.
Test 1316 was modified since we now clearly call the Curl_client_write()
function when doing the LIST transfer part and then the
handler->protocol says FTP and ftpc.transfertype is 'A' which implies
text converting even though that the response is initially a HTTP
CONNECT response in this case.
This workaround had been previously been implemented for IMAP and POP3
but not SMTP. Some of the recent test case additions implemented this
behaviour to emulate a bad server and the SMTP code didn't cope with it.
... if not already initialized. This fixes a regression introduced by
commit 4ad8e142da, which caused test619
to intermittently fail on certain machines (namely Fedora build hosts).
Changed the failure code when TLS v1.1 and v1.2 is requested but not
supported by older OpenSSL versions, following review from libcurl
peers, and reduced the number of required preprocessor if statements.
...with the use of CURL_SSLVERSION_TLSv1_1 and CURL_SSLVERSION_TLSv1_2
being conditional on OpenSSL v1.0.1 as the appropriate flags are not
supported under earlier versions.
Commit ad34a2d5c8 relies on definitions that are only present in
OpenSSL v1.0.1 and up. This quick fix allows the builds that use
older versions of OpenSSL to continue building.
According to the documentation for libssh2_userauth_list(), a NULL
return value is not necessarily an error. You must call
libssh2_userauth_authenticated() to determine if the SSH_USERAUTH_NONE
request was successful.
This fixes a segv when using sftp on a server that allows logins with an
empty password. When NULL was interpreted as an error, it would
free the session but not flag an error since the libssh2 errno would be
clear. This resulted in dereferencing a NULL session pointer.
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hall <tylerwhall@gmail.com>
CURL_SSLVERSION_TLSv1_0, CURL_SSLVERSION_TLSv1_1,
CURL_SSLVERSION_TLSv1_2 enum values are added to force exact TLS version
(CURL_SSLVERSION_TLSv1 means TLS 1.x).
axTLS:
axTLS only supports TLS 1.0 and 1.1 but it cannot be set that only one
of these should be used, so we don't allow the new enum values.
darwinssl:
Added support for the new enum values.
SChannel:
Added support for the new enum values.
CyaSSL:
Added support for the new enum values.
Bug: The original CURL_SSLVERSION_TLSv1 value enables only TLS 1.0 (it
did the same before this commit), because CyaSSL cannot be configured to
use TLS 1.0-1.2.
GSKit:
GSKit doesn't seem to support TLS 1.1 and TLS 1.2, so we do not allow
those values.
Bugfix: There was a typo that caused wrong SSL versions to be passed to
GSKit.
NSS:
TLS minor version cannot be set, so we don't allow the new enum values.
QsoSSL:
TLS minor version cannot be set, so we don't allow the new enum values.
OpenSSL:
Added support for the new enum values.
Bugfix: The original CURL_SSLVERSION_TLSv1 value enabled only TLS 1.0,
now it enables 1.0-1.2.
Command-line tool:
Added command line options for the new values.
Setting only CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYHOST without CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER set
should still verify that the host name fields in the server certificate
is fine or return failure.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-10/0002.html
Reported-by: Ishan SinghLevett
If no WINVER and/or _WIN32_IWNNT define was set, the Windows platform
SDK often defaults to high value, e.g. 0x601 (whoch may probably depend
on the Windows version being used, in my case Windows 7).
If WINVER >= 0x600 then winsock2.h includes some defines for WSAPoll(),
e.g. POLLIN, POLLPRI, POLLOUT etc. These defines clash with cURL's
lib/select.h.
Make sure HAVE_STRUCT_POLLFD is defined then.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1282
Reported-by: "kdekker"
Patch-by: Marcel Raad
Moved the standard SASL mechanism strings into curl_sasl.h rather than
hard coding the same values over and over again in the protocols that
use SASL authentication.
For more information about the mechanism strings see:
http://www.iana.org/assignments/sasl-mechanisms
In ossl_connect_step2() when the "Unknown SSL protocol error" occurs, it
would output the local port number instead of the remote one which
showed when doing SSL over a proxy (but with the correct remote host
name). As libcurl only speaks SSL to the remote we know it is the remote
port.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1281
Reported-by: Gordon Marler
Added the ability to use an XOAUTH2 bearer token [RFC6750] with POP3 for
authentication using RFC6749 "OAuth 2.0 Authorization Framework".
The bearer token is expected to be valid for the user specified in
conn->user. If CURLOPT_XOAUTH2_BEARER is defined and the connection has
an advertised auth mechanism of "XOAUTH2", the user and access token are
formatted as a base64 encoded string and sent to the server as
"AUTH XOAUTH2 <bearer token>".
iOS 7 finally added the option to enable 1/n-1 when using TLS 1.0
and a CBC cipher, so we now always turn that on unless the user
manually turns it off using CURLSSLOPT_ALLOW_BEAST.
It appears Apple also added some new PSK ciphers, but no interface to
use them yet, so we at least support printing them if we find them.
Implement: Expired Cookies These following situation, curl removes
cookie(s) from struct CookieInfo if the cookie expired.
- Curl_cookie_add()
- Curl_cookie_getlist()
- cookie_output()
Solaris with the SunStudio Compiler is reportedly missing this define,
but as we're using it without any good reason on all the places it was
used I've now instead switched to just use sensible buffer sizes that
fit a 32 bit decimal number. Which also happens to be smaller than the
common NI_MAXSERV value which is 32 on most machines.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1277
Reported-by: D.Flinkmann
Otherwise, the FTP protocol would unnecessarily hang 60 seconds if
aborted in the CURLOPT_HEADERFUNCTION callback.
Reported by: Tomas Mlcoch
Bug: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1005686
Make sure that the custom struct fields are only used by code that
doesn't use a struct defintion from the outside.
Attempts to fix the problem introduced in 3dc6fc42bf
Otherwise the connection can get stuck during various phases, waiting
for new data on the socket using select() etc., but it will never be
received as the data has already been read into SSL library.
The transfer size would be calculated incorrectly if the email contained
within the FETCH response, had been partially received by the pingpong
layer. As such the following, example output, would be seen if the
amount remaining was smaller than the amount received:
* Excess found in a non pipelined read: excess = 1394, size = 262,
maxdownload = 262, bytecount = 1374
* transfer closed with -1112 bytes remaining to read
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-08/0170.html
Reported-by: John Dunn
When building the code using LLVM Clang without NGHTTP2, I was getting
this warning:
../lib/http.h:155:1: warning: empty struct is a GNU extension [-Wgnu]
Placing a dummy variable into the data structure silenced the warning.
Recent OpenSSL uses user interface abstraction to negotiate access to
private keys in the cryprographical engines. An OpenSSL application is
expected to implement the user interface. Otherwise a default one
provided by OpenSSL (interactive standard I/O) will be used and the
aplication will have no way how to pass a password to the engine.
Longer-desc: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-08/0265.html
Using the first little merge of nghttp2 into libcurl, I stumbeled on the
missing 'snprintf' in MSVCRT. Isn't this how we do it for other libcurl
files? I.e. use 'curl_msnprintf' and not 'snprintf' directly:
When an error occurs parsing an LDAP URL, The ludp->lud_attrs[i] entries
could be freed even though they sometimes point to data within an
allocated area.
This change introduces a lud_attrs_dup[] array for the duplicated string
pointers, and it removes the unused lud_exts array.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-08/0209.html
XOAUTH2 would be selected in preference to LOGIN and PLAIN if the IMAP
or SMTP server advertised support for it even though a user's password
was supplied but bearer token wasn't.
Modified the selection logic so that XOAUTH2 will only be selected if
the server supports it and A) The curl user/libcurl programmer has
specifically asked for XOAUTH via the ;AUTH=XOAUTH login option or 2)
The bearer token is specified. Obviously if XOAUTH is asked for via
the login option but no token is specified the user will receive a
authentication failure which makes more sense than no known
authentication mechanisms supported!
'struct monitor', introduced in 6cf8413e, already exists in an IRIX
header file (sys/mon.h) which gets included via various standard headers
by lib/easy.c
cc-1101 cc: ERROR File = ../../curl/lib/easy.c, Line = 458
"monitor" has already been declared in the current scope.
Reported-by: Tor Arntsen
When waiting for a 100-continue response from the server, the
Curl_readwrite() will refuse to run if called until the timeout has been
reached.
We timeout code in multi_socket() allows code to run slightly before the
actual timeout time, so for test 154 it could lead to the function being
executed but refused in Curl_readwrite() and then the application would
just sit idling forever.
This was detected with runtests.pl -e on test 154.
I brought back security.h in commit bb55293313. As we actually
already found out back in 2005 in commit 62970da675, the file name
security.h causes problems so I renamed it curl_sec.h instead.
Added the ability to use an XOAUTH2 bearer token [RFC6750] with SMTP for
authentication using RFC6749 "OAuth 2.0 Authorization Framework".
The bearer token is expected to be valid for the user specified in
conn->user. If CURLOPT_XOAUTH2_BEARER is defined and the connection has
an advertised auth mechanism of "XOAUTH2", the user and access token are
formatted as a base64 encoded string and sent to the server as
"AUTH XOAUTH2 <bearer token>".
Added the ability to use an XOAUTH2 bearer token [RFC6750] with IMAP for
authentication using RFC6749 "OAuth 2.0 Authorization Framework".
The bearer token is expected to be valid for the user specified in
conn->user. If CURLOPT_XOAUTH2_BEARER is defined and the connection has
an advertised auth mechanism of "XOAUTH2", the user and access token are
formatted as a base64 encoded string and sent to the server as
"A001 AUTHENTICATE XOAUTH2 <bearer token>".
Added the ability to specify an XOAUTH2 bearer token [RFC6750] via the
option CURLOPT_XOAUTH2_BEARER for authentication using RFC6749 "OAuth
2.0 Authorization Framework".
Added the ability to generated a base64 encoded XOAUTH2 token
containing: "user=<username>^Aauth=Bearer <bearer token>^A^A"
as per RFC6749 "OAuth 2.0 Authorization Framework".
We've announced this pending removal for a long time and we've
repeatedly asked if anyone would care or if anyone objects. Nobody has
objected. It has probably not even been working for a good while since
nobody has tested/used this code recently.
The stuff in krb4.h that was generic enough to be used by other sources
is now present in security.h
Make sure we always return CURLM_CALL_MULTI_PERFORM when we reach
CURLM_STATE_DONE since the state is transient and it can very well
continue executing as there is nothing to wait for.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-08/0211.html
Reported-by: Yi Huang
... this also makes sure that the progess callback gets called more
often during TFTP transfers.
Added test 1238 to verify.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1269
Reported-by: Jo3
I build curl.exe (using MingW) with '-DCURLDEBUG' and by importing from
libcurl.dll. Which means the new curl_easy_perform_ev() must be
exported from libcurl.dll.
Doing curl_multi_add_handle() on an easy handle that is already added to
a multi handle now returns this error code. It previously returned
CURLM_BAD_EASY_HANDLE for this condition.
The closure_handle is "owned" by the multi handle and it is
unconditional so the setting up of it should be in the Curl_multi_handle
function rather than curl_multi_add_handle.
This function is meant to work *exactly* as curl_easy_perform() but will
use the event-based libcurl API internally instead of
curl_multi_perform(). To avoid relying on an actual event-based library
and to not use non-portable functions (like epoll or similar), there's a
rather inefficient emulation layer implemented on top of Curl_poll()
instead.
There's currently some convenience logging done in curl_easy_perform_ev
which helps when tracking down problems. They may be suitable to remove
or change once things seem to be fine enough.
curl has a new --test-event option when built with debug enabled that
then uses curl_easy_perform_ev() instead of curl_easy_perform(). If
built without debug, using --test-event will only output a warning
message.
NOTE: curl_easy_perform_ev() is not part if the public API on purpose.
It is only present in debug builds of libcurl and MUST NOT be considered
stable even then. Use it for libcurl-testing purposes only.
runtests.pl now features an -e command line option that makes it use
--test-event for all curl command line tests. The man page is updated.
libcurl quietly truncates usernames, passwords, and options from
before an '@' sign in a URL to 255 (= MAX_CURL_PASSWORD_LENGTH - 1)
characters to fit in fixed-size buffers on the stack. Allocate a
buffer large enough to fit the parsed fields on the fly instead to
support longer passwords.
After this change, there are no more uses of MAX_CURL_OPTIONS_LENGTH
left, so stop defining that constant while at it. The hardcoded max
username and password length constants, on the other hand, are still
used in HTTP proxy credential handling (which this patch doesn't
touch).
Reported-by: Colby Ranger
Instead of nesting "if(success)" blocks and leaving the reader in
suspense about what happens in the !success case, deal with failure
cases early, usually with a simple goto to clean up and return from
the function.
No functional change intended. The main effect is to decrease the
indentation of this function slightly.
libcurl truncates usernames, passwords, and options set with
curl_easy_setopt to 255 (= MAX_CURL_PASSWORD_LENGTH - 1) characters.
This doesn't affect the return value from curl_easy_setopt(), so from
the caller's point of view, there is no sign anything strange has
happened, except that authentication fails.
For example:
# Prepare a long (300-char) password.
s=0123456789; s=$s$s$s$s$s$s$s$s$s$s; s=$s$s$s;
# Start a server.
nc -l -p 8888 | tee out & pid=$!
# Tell curl to pass the password to the server.
curl --user me:$s http://localhost:8888 & sleep 1; kill $pid
# Extract the password.
userpass=$(
awk '/Authorization: Basic/ {print $3}' <out |
tr -d '\r' |
base64 -d
)
password=${userpass#me:}
echo ${#password}
Expected result: 300
Actual result: 255
The fix is simple: allocate appropriately sized buffers on the heap
instead of trying to squeeze the provided values into fixed-size
on-stack buffers.
Bug: http://bugs.debian.org/719856
Reported-by: Colby Ranger
libcurl truncates usernames and passwords it reads from .netrc to
LOGINSIZE and PASSWORDSIZE (64) characters without any indication to
the user, to ensure the values returned from Curl_parsenetrc fit in a
caller-provided buffer.
Fix the interface by passing back dynamically allocated buffers
allocated to fit the user's input. The parser still relies on a
256-character buffer to read each line, though.
So now you can include an ~246-character password in your .netrc,
instead of the previous limit of 63 characters.
Reported-by: Colby Ranger
Instead of remembering before each "return" statement which temporary
allocations, if any, need to be freed, take care to set pointers to
NULL when no longer needed and use a goto to a common block to exit
the function and free all temporaries.
No functional change intended. Currently the only temporary buffer in
this function is "proxy" which is already correctly freed when
appropriate, but there will be more soon.
Use appropriately sized buffers on the heap instead of fixed-size
buffers on the stack, to allow for longer usernames and passwords.
Callers never pass anything longer than MAX_CURL_USER_LENGTH (resp.
MAX_CURL_PASSWORD_LENGTH), so no functional change inteded yet.
This makes the socket callback get called with the proper bitmask as
otherwise the application could be left hanging waiting for reading on
an upload connection!
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-08/0043.html
Reported-by: Bill Doyle
With everything being struct SessionHandle pointers now, this rename
makes multi.c use the library-wide practise of calling that pointer
'data' instead of the previously used 'easy'.
Moved Curl_easy_addmulti() from easy.c to multi.c, renamed it to
easy_addmulti and made it static.
Removed Curl_easy_initHandleData() and uses of it since it was emptied
in commit cdda92ab67b47d74a.
All protocol handler structs are now opaque (void *) in the
SessionHandle struct and moved in the request-specific sub-struct
'SingleRequest'. The intension is to keep the protocol specific
knowledge in their own dedicated source files [protocol].c etc.
There's some "leakage" where this policy is violated, to be addressed at
a later point in time.
1 - always allocate the struct in protocol->setup_connection. Some
protocol handlers had to get this function added.
2 - always free at the end of a request. This is also an attempt to keep
less memory in the handle after it is completed.
CURLOPT_DNS_USE_GLOBAL_CACHE broke in commit c43127414d (been
broken since the libcurl 7.29.0 release). While this option has been
documented as deprecated for almost a decade and nobody even reported
this bug, it should remain functional.
Added test case 1512 to verify
The previous naming scheme ftp_state_post_XXXX() wasn't really helpful
as it wasn't always immediately after 'xxxx' and it wasn't easy to
understand what it does based on such a name.
This new one is instead ftp_state_yyyy() where yyyy describes what it
does or sends.
This is a regression as this logic used to work. It isn't clear when it
broke, but I'm assuming in 7.28.0 when we went all-multi internally.
This likely never worked with the multi interface. As the failed
connection is detected once the multi state has reached DO_MORE, the
Curl_do_more() function was now expanded somewhat so that the
ftp_do_more() function can request to go "back" to the previous state
when it makes another attempt - using PASV.
Added test case 1233 to verify this fix. It has the little issue that it
assumes no service is listening/accepting connections on port 1...
Reported-by: byte_bucket in the #curl IRC channel
For some reason, OS X 10.5's GCC suddenly stopped working correctly with
macros that change MD5_Init etc. in the code to CC_MD5_Init etc., so I
worked around this by removing use of the macros and inserting static
functions that just call CommonCrypto's implementations of the functions
instead.
This changes the previous check for untrusted certs to a check for
certs explicitely marked as trusted.
The change is backward-compatible (tested with certdata.txt v1.80).
The internal function that's used to detect known file extensions for
the default Content-Type got the the wrong pointer passed in when
CURLFORM_BUFFER + CURLFORM_BUFFERPTR were used. This had the effect that
strlen() would be used which could lead to an out-of-bounds read (and
thus segfault). In most cases it would only lead to it not finding or
using the correct default content-type.
It also showed that test 554 and test 587 were testing for the
previous/wrong behavior and now they're updated as well.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1262
Reported-by: Konstantin Isakov
Christian Heimes brought to our attention that the certdata.txt
format has recently changed [1], causing ca-bundle.crt created
with mk-ca-bundle.[pl|vbs] to include untrusted certs.
[1] http://lists.debian.org/debian-release/2012/11/msg00411.html
The motivation for having a separate struct that keep track of an easy
handle when using the multi handle was removed when we switched to
always using the multi interface internally. Now they were just two
separate struct that was always allocated for each easy handle.
This first step just moves the Curl_one_easy struct members into the
SessionHandle struct and hides this somehow (== keeps the source code
changes to a minimum) by defining Curl_one_easy to SessionHandle
The biggest changes in this commit are:
1 - the linked list of easy handles had to be changed somewhat due
to the new struct layout. This made the main linked list pointer
get renamed to 'easyp' and there's also a new pointer to the last
node, called easylp. It is no longer circular but ends with ->next
pointing to NULL. New nodes are still added last.
2 - easy->state is now called easy->mstate to avoid name collision
(This doesn't need to appear in the release notes.) I noticed a few places
where infof() was called, and there should've been an LF at the end of the
string, but there wasn't.
It turns out Snow Leopard not only has SecItemCopyMatching() defined in
a header not included by the omnibus header, but it won't work for our
purposes, because searching for SecIdentityRef objects wasn't added
to that API until Lion. So we now use the old SecKeychainSearch API
instead if the user is building under, or running under, Snow Leopard.
Bug: http://sourceforge.net/p/curl/bugs/1255/
Reported by: Edward Rudd
Previously we used __MAC_10_X and __IPHONE_X to mark digest-generating
code that was specific to OS X and iOS. Now we use
__MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED and __IPHONE_OS_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED
instead of those macros.
Bug: http://sourceforge.net/p/curl/bugs/1255/
Reported by: Edward Rudd
For the standard VMS text file formats, VMS needs to read the file to
get the actual file size.
For the standard VMS binary file formats, VMS needs a special format of
fopen() call so that it stops reading at the logical end of file instead
of at the end of the blocks allocated to the file.
I structured the patch this way as I was not sure about changing the
structures or parameters to the routines, but would prefer to only call
the stat() function once and pass the information to where the fopen()
call is made.
Bug: https://sourceforge.net/p/curl/bugs/758/
The code for CURLFORM_FILECONTENT had its check for duplicate options
wrong so that it would reject CURLFORM_PTRNAME if used in combination
with it (but not CURLFORM_COPYNAME)! The flags field used for this
purpose cannot be interpreted that broadly.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-07/0258.html
Reported-by: Byrial Jensen
Linking on Solaris 10 x86 with Sun Studio 12 failed when we upgraded
automake for the release builds.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1217
Reported-by: Dagobert Michelsen
Commit 6d30f8ebed didn't work properly. First, it used the wrong
array index, but this fix also:
1 - only does the copying if indeed there was any activity
2 - makes sure to properly translate between internal and external
bitfields, which are not guaranteed to match
Reported-by: Evgeny Turnaev
Instead of going 50,100,150 etc millisecond delay time when nothing has
been found to do or wait for, we now start lower and double each loop as
in 4,8,16,32 etc.
This lowers the minimum wait without sacrifizing the longer wait too
much with unnecessary CPU cycles burnt.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-07/0103.html
Reported-by: Andreas Malzahn
In the case of an active connection when ftp_do_more() detects that the
server has connected back, it must make sure to mark it as complete so
that the multi_runsingle() function will detect this and move on to the
next state.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-07/0115.html
Reported-by: Clemens Gruber
CURLOPT_XFERINFOFUNCTION is now the preferred progress callback function
and CURLOPT_PROGRESSFUNCTION is considered deprecated.
This new callback uses pure 'curl_off_t' arguments to pass on full
resolution sizes. It otherwise retains the same characteristics: the
same call rate, the same meanings for the arguments and the return code
is used the same way.
The progressfunc.c example is updated to show how to use the new
callback for newer libcurls while supporting the older one if built with
an older libcurl or even built with a newer libcurl while running with
an older.
This reverts commit 7ed25cc, reinstating commit 8ec2cb5.
As of 18-jul-2013 we still do have code in libcurl that makes use of these
memory functions. Commit 8ec2cb5 comment still applies and is yet valid.
These memory functions are solely used in Windows builds, so all related
code is protected with '#ifdef WIN32' preprocessor conditional compilation
directives.
Specifically, wcsdup() _wcsdup() are used when building a Windows target with
UNICODE and USE_WINDOWS_SSPI preprocessor symbols defined. This is the case
when building a Windows UNICODE target with Windows native SSL/TLS support
enabled.
Realizing that wcsdup() _wcsdup() are used is a bit tricky given that usage
of these is hidden behind _tcsdup() which is MS way of dealing with code
that must tolerate UNICODE and non-UNICODE compilation. Additionally, MS
header files and those compatible from other compilers use this preprocessor
conditional compilation directive in order to select at compilation time
whether 'wide' or 'ansi' MS API functions are used.
Without this code, Windows build targets with Windows native SSL/TLS support
enabled and MemoryTracking support enabled misbehave in tracking memory usage,
regardless of being a UNICODE enabled build or not.
Fixed issue with static build for MSVC2010.
After some investigation I've discovered known issue
http://public.kitware.com/Bug/view.php?id=11240 When .rc file is linked
to static lib it fails with following linker error
LINK : warning LNK4068: /MACHINE not specified; defaulting to X86
file.obj : fatal error LNK1112: module machine type 'x64' conflicts with
target machine type 'X86'
Fix add target property /MACHINE: for MSVC generation.
Also removed old workarounds - it caused errors during msvc build.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2013-07/0046.html
I just noticed that OS X no longer supports SSLv2. Other TLS engines return
an error if the requested protocol isn't supported by the underlying
engine, so we do that now for SSLv2 if the framework returns an error
when trying to turn on SSLv2 support. (Note: As always, SSLv2 support is
only enabled in curl when starting the app with the -2 argument; it's off
by default. SSLv2 is really old and insecure.)
When doing multi-part formposts, libcurl used a pseudo-random value that
was seeded with time(). This turns out to be bad for users who formpost
data that is provided with users who then can guess how the boundary
string will look like and then they can forge a different formpost part
and trick the receiver.
My advice to such implementors is (still even after this change) to not
rely on the boundary strings being cryptographically strong. Fix your
code and logic to not depend on them that much!
I moved the Curl_rand() function into the sslgen.c source file now to be
able to take advantage of the SSL library's random function if it
provides one. If not, try to use the RANDOM_FILE for seeding and as a
last resort keep the old logic, just modified to also add microseconds
which makes it harder to properly guess the exact seed.
The formboundary() function in formdata.c is now using 64 bit entropy
for the boundary and therefore the string of dashes was reduced by 4
letters and there are 16 hex digits following it. The total length is
thus still the same.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1251
Reported-by: "Floris"
When using %x, the number must be treated as unsigned as otherwise it
would get sign-extended on for example 64bit machines and do wrong
output. This problem showed when doing printf("%08x", 0xffeeddcc) on a
64bit host.
Follow-up fix from 7d80ed64e4.
The SessionHandle may not be around to use when we restore the sigpipe
sighandler so we store the no_signal boolean in the local struct to know
if/how to restore.
When the c-ares based resolver backend failed to resolve a name, it
tried to show the name that failed from existing structs. This caused
the wrong output and shown hostname when for example --interface
[hostname] was used and that name resolving failed.
Now we use the hostname used in the actual resolve attempt in the error
message as well.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1191
Reported-by: Kim Vandry
When we recently started to treat a zero return code from SSL_read() as
an error we also got false positives - which primarily looks to be
because the OpenSSL documentation is wrong and a zero return code is not
at all an error case in many situations.
Now ossl_recv() will check with ERR_get_error() to see if there is a
stored error and only then consider it to be a true error if SSL_read()
returned zero.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1249
Reported-by: Nach M. S.
Patch-by: Nach M. S.
Something (a recent security update maybe?) changed in Lion, and now it
has changed SSLCopyPeerTrust such that it may return noErr but also give
us a null trust, which caught us off guard and caused an eventual crash.
... and restore the ordinary handling again when it returns. This is
done for curl_easy_perform() and curl_easy_cleanup() only for now - and
only when built to use OpenSSL as backend as this is the known culprit
for the spurious SIGPIPEs people have received.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1180
Reported by: Lluís Batlle i Rossell
This doesn't need to be in the release notes. I cleaned up a lot of the #if
lines in the code to use MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED and
MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED instead of checking for whether things like
__MAC_10_6 or whatever were defined, because for some SDKs Apple has released
they were defined out of place.
RFC3986 details how a path part passed in as part of a URI should be
"cleaned" from dot sequences before getting used. The described
algorithm is now implemented in lib/dotdot.c with the accompanied test
case in test 1395.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1200
Reported-by: Alex Vinnik
Security problem: CVE-2013-2174
If a program would give a string like "%FF" to curl_easy_unescape() but
ask for it to decode only the first byte, it would still parse and
decode the full hex sequence. The function then not only read beyond the
allowed buffer but it would also deduct the *unsigned* counter variable
for how many more bytes there's left to read in the buffer by two,
making the counter wrap. Continuing this, the function would go on
reading beyond the buffer and soon writing beyond the allocated target
buffer...
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/docs/adv_20130622.html
Reported-by: Timo Sirainen
As a remedy to the problem when a socket gets closed and a new one is
opened with the same file descriptor number and as a result
multi.c:singlesocket() doesn't detect the difference, the new function
Curl_multi_closed() gets told when a socket is closed so that it can be
removed from the socket hash. When the old one has been removed, a new
socket should be detected fine by the singlesocket() on next invoke.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1248
Reported-by: Erik Johansson