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.
"Connection: close" and actually close the connection after the
response-body, libcurl could still have outstanding data to send and it
would not properly notice this and stop sending. This caused weirdness and
sad faces. http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=2080222
Note that there are still reasons to consider libcurl's behavior when
getting a >= 400 response code while sending data, as Craig Perras' note
"http upload: how to stop on error" specifies:
http://curl.haxx.se/mail/archive-2008-08/0138.html
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.
NetWare curlbuild.h settings depend on whether LIBC or CLIB is used.
The NetWare specific Makefile is capable of knowing which target is being built.
So, finally, the NetWare Makefile will take care of generating curlbuild.h
CVS checked out curlbuild.h.dist as curlbuild.h for any non-configure target
when host system is not running buildconf.bat.
All the curlbuild.h stuff was done taking in consideration that no adjustment
would be needed in non-configure makefiles.
As it is documented, when trying to build on non-configure capable systems or on
systems which for any reason don't run the true configure script, it is required
to have the proper curlbuild.h in place before calling any makefile.
Due to the hardcore memory debugging stuff c-ares enabled debug builds also need
the file in the proper place before attempting to build c-ares.