This passes -Werror to gcc when building curl and libcurl,
allowing easy dection of compile warnings.
Signed-off-by: Ben Greear <greearb@candelatech.com>
The --remote-header-name option for the command-line tool assumes that
everything beyond the filename= field is part of the filename, but that
might not always be the case, for example:
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=file.txt; modification-date=...
This fix chops the filename off at the next semicolon, if there is one.
When getting multiple URLs, curl didn't properly reset the byte counter
after a successful transfer so if the subsequent transfer failed it
would wrongly use the previous byte counter and behave badly (segfault)
because of that. The code assumes that the byte counter and the 'stream'
pointer is well in synch.
Reported by: Jon Sargeant
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3028241
Since uploading from stdin is very likely to not work with anyauth and
its multi-phase probing for what authentication to actually use, alert
the user about it. Multi-phase negotiate almost certainly will involve
sending data and thus libcurl will need to rewind the stream to send
again, and it cannot do that with stdin.
I think the [REMARK] and commented function calls cluttered the code a
bit too much and made the generated code ugly to read. Now we instead
track the remarks one specially and just lists them at the end of the
generated code more as additional information.
And additionally, don't show function or object pointers actual value
since they make no sense to anyone. Show 'functionpointer' and
'objectpointer' instead.
In the generated code --libcurl makes, all calls to curl_easy_setopt()
that use *_LARGE options now have the value typecasted to curl_off_t, so
that it works correctly for 32bit systems with 64bit curl_off_t type.
curl didn't properly handle escaping characters in a URL with the use of
backslash. It did an attempt, but that failed as reported in bug
3022551. The described example was using the URL
"http://example.com?{AB,C\,D}".
I've now removed the special-handling of letters following the backslash
and I also removed the bad extra check that triggered this particular
bug.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=3022551
Reported by: Jon Sargeant
The main change is to allow input from user-specified methods,
when they are specified with CURLOPT_READFUNCTION.
All calls to fflush(stdout) in telnet.c were removed, which makes
using 'curl telnet://foo.com' painful since prompts and other data
are not always returned to the user promptly. Use
'curl --no-buffer telnet://foo.com' instead. In general,
the user should have their CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION do a fflush
for interactive use.
Also fix assumption that reading from stdin never returns < 0.
Old code could crash in that case.
Call progress functions in telnet main loop.
Signed-off-by: Ben Greear <greearb@candelatech.com>
The feature that uses the file name given in a
Content-disposition: header didn't properly skip trailing
carriage returns and linefeed characters from the end of the file
name when it was given without quotes.
(http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=2958074) that curl on Windows with
option --trace-time did not use local time when timestamping trace lines.
This could also happen on other systems depending on time souurce.
versions --ftp-ssl and --ftp-ssl-reqd as these options are now used to
control SSL/TLS for IMAP, POP3 and SMTP as well in addition to FTP. The old
option names are still working but the new ones are the prefered ones
(listed and documented).
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.