"Active FTP hangs if server does not open data connection"
The server first sends a 150 and then when libcurl waits for the data
transfer, the server sends a 425.
By setting PROTOPT_NOURLQUERY in the protocol handler struct, the
protocol will get the "query part" of the URL cut off before the data is
handled by the protocol-specific code. This makes libcurl adhere to
RFC3986 section 2.2.
Test 1220 is added to verify a file:// URL with query-part.
A regression between 7.22.0 and 7.23.0 -- downloading a file with the
flags -O and -J results in the content being written to stdout if and
only if there was no Content-Disposition header in the http response. If
there is a C-D header with a filename attribute, the output is correctly
written.
Reported by: Dave Reisner
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/archive-2011-11/0030.html
591 -> FTP multi PORT and 425 on upload
592 -> FTP multi PORT and 421 on upload
593 -> FTP multi PORT upload, no data conn and no transient neg. reply
594 -> FTP multi PORT upload, no data conn and no positive prelim. reply
1206 -> FTP PORT and 425 on download
1207 -> FTP PORT and 421 on download
1208 -> FTP PORT download, no data conn and no transient negative reply
1209 -> FTP PORT download, no data conn and no positive preliminary reply
This test is created to verify Rene Bernhardt's patch which makes sure
libcurl properly _not_ deals with Negotiate if not asked to even if the
proxy says it can serve it.
As commit 5850cc4808 clarifies, libcurl can deliver header lines that
are longer than CURL_MAX_WRITE_SIZE, only body data is limited to that
size. The curl tool has check (when built debug-enabled) that made the
wrong checks and this new test 1205 verifies that larger headers work.
The fix is pretty much the one Nick Zitzmann provided, just edited to do
the right indent levels and with test case 1204 added to verify the fix.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2011-10/0190.html
Reported by: Nick Zitzmann
Content-disposition headers can provide file names with semicolons which
previously would be cut off at that point.
Added test case 1311 and 1312 to verify -J.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3375603
Reported by: Peter Hjalmarsson
When libcurl has said to the server that there's a POST or PUT coming
(with a content-length and all) it has to either deliver that amount of
data or it needs to close the connection before trying a second request.
Adds test case 1129, 1130 and 1131
The bug report is about when used with 100-continue, but the change is
more generic.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2011-06/0191.html
Reported by: Steven Parkes
When a time condition isn't met, so that no body is delivered to the
application even though a 2xx response is being read from the server, we
must close the connection to avoid a re-use of the connection to be
completely tricked.
Added test 1128 to verify.
Added test 1126 and 1127 to verify curl's behaviour when If-Modified-Since
is used and a 200 is returned.
The list of test cases in Makefile.am is now sorted numerically.
When TE: is inserted in the request, we must add a "Connection: TE" as
well to be HTTP 1.1 compliant. If a custom Connection: header is passed
in, we must use that and only append TE to it. Test case 1125 verifies
TE: + custom Connection:.
Transfer-Encoding differs from Content-Encoding in a few subtle ways,
but primarily it concerns the transfer only and not the content so when
discovered to be compressed we know we have to uncompress it. There will
only arrive compressed transfers in a response after we have requested
them with the appropriate TE: header.
Test case 1122 and 1123 verify.
This test case is meant to verify that the logic in commit
60172a0446 actually works. This test failed for me before that
change and it works after it.
Add test 582 for uploading a file using sftp and the multi interface.
(Patch and test slightly tweaked by Daniel Stenberg)
Initially marked as disabled until it is fixed in the source.
The URL parser got a little stricter as it now considers a ? to be a
host name divider so that the slightly sloppier URLs work too. The
problem that made me do this change was the reported problem with an URL
like: www.example.com?email=name@example.com This form of URL is not
really a legal URL (due to the missing slash after the host name) but is
widely accepted by all major browsers and libcurl also already accepted
it, it was just the '@' letter that triggered the problem now.
The side-effect of this change is that now libcurl no longer accepts the
? letter as part of user-name or password when given in the URL, which
it used to accept (and is tested in test 191). That letter is however
mentioned in RFC3986 to be required to be percent encoded since it is
used as a divider.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3090268
HTTP allows that a server sends trailing headers after all the chunks
have been sent WITHOUT signalling their presence in the first response
headers. The "Trailer:" header is only a SHOULD there and as we need to
handle the situation even without that header I made libcurl ignore
Trailer: completely.
Test case 1116 was added to verify this and to make sure we handle more
than one trailer header properly.
Reported by: Patrick McManus
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3052450
The 66 bytes checked are those 38 bytes with the chunked encoding
headers added: 8+8+10+35+5 = 66
The three-letter words become 8 bytes on the wire because they are sent
like: "3\r\none\r\n"
... and there's the trailing 5 bytes write after the four lines since
the final chunk is sent (which is "0\r\n\r\n").
Dirk Manske reported a regression. When connecting with the multi
interface, there were situations where libcurl wouldn't store
connect time correctly as it used to (and is documented to) do.
Using his fine sample program we could repeat it, and I wrote up
test case 573 using that code. The problem does not easily show
itself using the local test suite though.
The fix, also as suggested by Dirk, is a bit on the ugly side as
it adds yet another call to Curl_verboseconnect() and setting the
TIMER_CONNECT time. That situation is subject for some closer
inspection in the future.
- SMTP falls back to RFC821 HELO when EHLO fails (and SSL is not required).
- Use of true local host name (i.e.: via gethostname()) when available, as default argument to SMTP HELO/EHLO.
- Test case 804 for HELO fallback.
again when downloading files over FTP using ASCII and it turns out that the
final size of the file is not the same as the initial size the server
reported. This is very common since servers don't take the newline
conversions into account.
present in the tests/data/Makefile.am and outputs a notice message on the
screen if not. Each test file has to be included in that Makefile.am to get
included in release archives and forgetting to add files there is a common
mistake. This is an attempt to make it harder to forget.
command is a special "hack" used by the drftpd server, but even though it is
a custom extension I've deemed it fine to add to libcurl since this server
seems to survive and people keep using it and want libcurl to support
it. The new libcurl option is named CURLOPT_FTP_USE_PRET, and it is also
usable from the curl tool with --ftp-pret. Using this option on a server
that doesn't support this command will make libcurl fail.
sequences in uploaded data. The test server doesn't "decode" escaped dot-lines
but instead test cases must be written to take them into account. Added test
case 803 to verify dot-escaping.
detects and uses proxies based on the environment variables. If the proxy
was given as an explicit option it worked, but due to the setup order
mistake proxies would not be used fine for a few protocols when picked up
from '[protocol]_proxy'. Obviously this broke after 7.19.4. I now also added
test case 1106 that verifies this functionality.
(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=2913886)
POST using a read callback, with Digest authentication and
"Transfer-Encoding: chunked" enforced. I would then cause the first request
to be wrongly sent and then basically hang until the server closed the
connection. I fixed the problem and added test case 565 to verify it.
start second "Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 GMT 1970" as the date parser then returns 0
which internally then is treated as a session cookie. That particular date
is now made to get the value of 1.
proxy. libcurl would then wrongly close the connection after each
request. In his case it had the weird side-effect that it killed NTLM auth
for the proxy causing an inifinite loop!
I added test case 1098 to verify this fix. The test case does however not
properly verify that the transfers are done persistently - as I couldn't
think of a clever way to achieve it right now - but you need to read the
stderr output after a test run to see that it truly did the right thing.
(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=2535504) pointing out that realms with
quoted quotation marks in HTTP Digest headers didn't work. I've now added
test case 1095 that verifies my fix.
clarity. This does fix one problem that causes ;type=i FTP URLs
to fail in the Turkish locale when CURLOPT_PROXY_TRANSFER_MODE is
used (test case 561)
Added tests 561 and 1092 through 1094 to test various combinations
of ;type= and ;mode= URLs that could potentially fail in the Turkish
locale.
a fresh connection to be made in such cases and the request retransmitted.
This should fix test case 160. Added test case 1079 in an attempt to
test a similar connection dropping scenario, but as a race condition, it's
hard to test reliably.
CURLOPT_POST301 (but adds a define for backwards compatibility for you who
don't define CURL_NO_OLDIES). This option allows you to now also change the
libcurl behavior for a HTTP response 302 after a POST to not use GET in the
subsequent request (when CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION is enabled). I edited the
patch somewhat before commit. The curl tool got a matching --post302
option. Test case 1076 was added to verify this.
to HTTP 1.0 upon receiving a response from the HTTP server. Tests 1072
and 1073 are similar to test 1069 in that they involve the impossible
scenario of sending chunked data to a HTTP 1.0 server. All these currently
fail and are added to DISABLED.
Added test 1075 to test --anyauth with Basic authentication.
which caused an error when the second header was dumped due to stdout
being closed. Added test case 1066 to verify. Also fixed a potential
problem where a closed file descriptor might be used for an upload
when more than one URL is given.
was discovered to be problematic while investigating an incident reported by
Von back in May. curl in this case doesn't include a Content-Length: or
Transfer-Encoding: chunked header which is illegal. This test case is
added to DISABLED until a solution is found.
when a server responded with long headers and data. Luckily, the buffer
overflowed into another unused buffer, so no actual harm was done.
Added test cases 1060 and 1061 to verify.
line of a multiline FTP response whose last byte landed exactly at the end
of the BUFSIZE-length buffer would be treated as the terminal response
line. The following response code read in would then actually be the
end of the previous response line, and all responses from then on would
correspond to the wrong command. Test case 1062 verifies this.
Stop closing a never-opened ftp socket.
by Ben Sutcliffe. The test when run manually shows a problem in curl,
but the test harness web server doesn't run the test correctly so it's
disabled for now.
(http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=487567) pointing out that
libcurl used Content-Range: instead of Range when doing a range request with
--head (CURLOPT_NOBODY). This is now fixed and test case 1032 was added to
verify.
how the HTTP redirect following code didn't properly follow to a new URL if
the new url was but a query string such as "Location: ?moo=foo". Test case
1031 was added to verify this fix.
when using CURL_AUTH_ANY" (http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1945240).
The problem was that when libcurl rewound a stream meant for upload when it
would prepare for a second request, it could accidentally continue the
sending of the rewound data on the first request instead of on the second.
Ben also provided test case 1030 that verifies this fix.
redirections and thus cannot use CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION easily, we now
introduce the new CURLINFO_REDIRECT_URL option that lets applications
extract the URL libcurl would've redirected to if it had been told to. This
then enables the application to continue to that URL as it thinks is
suitable, without having to re-implement the magic of creating the new URL
from the Location: header etc. Test 1029 verifies it.
such as the CURLOPT_SSL_CTX_FUNCTION one treat that as if it was a Location:
following. The patch that introduced this feature was done for 7.11.0, but
this code and functionality has been broken since about 7.15.4 (March 2006)
with the introduction of non-blocking OpenSSL "connects".
It was a hack to begin with and since it doesn't work and hasn't worked
correctly for a long time and nobody has even noticed, I consider it a very
suitable subject for plain removal. And so it was done.
(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1850730) I wrote up test case 552. The
test is doing a 70K POST with a read callback and an ioctl callback over a
proxy requiring Digest auth. The test case code is more or less identical to
the test recipe code provided by Spacen Jasset (who submitted the bug report).