curl/tests/data/test159
Daniel Stenberg da58d03ff7 Venkat Akella found out that libcurl did not like HTTP responses that simply
responded with a single status line and no headers nor body. Starting now, a
HTTP response on a persistent connection (i.e not set to be closed after the
response has been taken care of) must have Content-Length or chunked
encoding set, or libcurl will simply assume that there is no body.

To my horror I learned that we had no less than 57(!) test cases that did bad
HTTP responses like this, and even the test http server (sws) responded badly
when queried by the test system if it is the test system. So although the
actual fix for the problem was tiny, going through all the newly failing test
cases got really painful and boring.
2006-11-25 13:32:04 +00:00

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# Server-side
<reply>
# no <data> in this test since we have NTLM from the start
# This is supposed to be returned when the server gets a first
# Authorization: NTLM line passed-in from the client
<data1001>
HTTP/1.1 401 Now gimme that second request of crap
Server: Microsoft-IIS/5.0
Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1
Content-Length: 34
WWW-Authenticate: NTLM TlRMTVNTUAACAAAAAgACADAAAAAGgoEAc51AYVDgyNcAAAAAAAAAAG4AbgAyAAAAQ0MCAAQAQwBDAAEAEgBFAEwASQBTAEEAQgBFAFQASAAEABgAYwBjAC4AaQBjAGUAZABlAHYALgBuAHUAAwAsAGUAbABpAHMAYQBiAGUAdABoAC4AYwBjAC4AaQBjAGUAZABlAHYALgBuAHUAAAAAAA==
This is not the real page either!
</data1001>
# This is supposed to be returned when the server gets the second
# Authorization: NTLM line passed-in from the client
<data1002>
HTTP/1.1 200 Things are fine in server land swsclose
Server: Microsoft-IIS/5.0
Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1
Content-Length: 32
Finally, this is the real page!
</data1002>
<datacheck>
HTTP/1.1 401 Now gimme that second request of crap
Server: Microsoft-IIS/5.0
Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1
Content-Length: 34
WWW-Authenticate: NTLM TlRMTVNTUAACAAAAAgACADAAAAAGgoEAc51AYVDgyNcAAAAAAAAAAG4AbgAyAAAAQ0MCAAQAQwBDAAEAEgBFAEwASQBTAEEAQgBFAFQASAAEABgAYwBjAC4AaQBjAGUAZABlAHYALgBuAHUAAwAsAGUAbABpAHMAYQBiAGUAdABoAC4AYwBjAC4AaQBjAGUAZABlAHYALgBuAHUAAAAAAA==
HTTP/1.1 200 Things are fine in server land swsclose
Server: Microsoft-IIS/5.0
Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1
Content-Length: 32
Finally, this is the real page!
</datacheck>
</reply>
# Client-side
<client>
<features>
NTLM
</features>
<server>
http
</server>
<name>
HTTP with NTLM authorization when talking HTTP/1.0
</name>
<command>
http://%HOSTIP:%HTTPPORT/159 -u testuser:testpass --ntlm -0
</command>
</client>
# Verify data after the test has been "shot"
<verify>
<strip>
^User-Agent:.*
</strip>
# We strip off a large chunk of the type-2 NTLM message since it depends on
# the local host name and thus differs on different machines!
<strippart>
s/^(Authorization: NTLM TlRMTVNTUAADAAAAGAAYAEAAAAAYABgAWAAAAAAAAABwAAAACAAIAHAAAAA).*/$1/
</strippart)
<protocol>
GET /159 HTTP/1.0
Authorization: NTLM TlRMTVNTUAABAAAABoIIAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA=
User-Agent: curl/7.10.6-pre1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.10.6-pre1 OpenSSL/0.9.7a ipv6 zlib/1.1.3
Host: 127.0.0.1:%HTTPPORT
Accept: */*
GET /159 HTTP/1.0
Authorization: NTLM TlRMTVNTUAADAAAAGAAYAEAAAAAYABgAWAAAAAAAAABwAAAACAAIAHAAAAA
User-Agent: curl/7.10.6-pre1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.10.6-pre1 OpenSSL/0.9.7a ipv6 zlib/1.1.3
Host: 127.0.0.1:%HTTPPORT
Accept: */*
</protocol>
</verify>