38c994b83b
This happens because the multi-pass code abuses the redirect following code for doing multiple requests, and when we following redirects to an absolute URL we must use the newly specified port and not the one specified in the original URL. A proper fix to this would need to separate the negotiation "redirect" from an actual redirect. |
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.. | ||
examples | ||
libcurl | ||
.cvsignore | ||
BINDINGS | ||
BUGS | ||
CONTRIBUTE | ||
curl-config.1 | ||
curl.1 | ||
DISTRO-DILEMMA | ||
FAQ | ||
FEATURES | ||
HISTORY | ||
index.html | ||
INSTALL | ||
INSTALL.devcpp | ||
INTERNALS | ||
KNOWN_BUGS | ||
LICENSE-MIXING | ||
Makefile.am | ||
MANUAL | ||
README.netware | ||
README.win32 | ||
RESOURCES | ||
SSLCERTS | ||
THANKS | ||
TheArtOfHttpScripting | ||
TODO | ||
VERSIONS |
_ _ ____ _ ___| | | | _ \| | / __| | | | |_) | | | (__| |_| | _ <| |___ \___|\___/|_| \_\_____| README.win32 Read the README file first. Curl has been compiled, built and run on all sorts of Windows and win32 systems. While not being the main develop target, a fair share of curl users are win32-based. The unix-style man pages are tricky to read on windows, so therefore are all those pages converted to HTML as well as pdf, and included in the release archives. The main curl.1 man page is also "built-in" in the command line tool. Use a command line similar to this in order to extract a separate text file: curl -M >manual.txt