- use the new `Curl_xfer_write_resp()` to write incoming responses
directly to the client
- eliminates `stream->recvbuf`
- memory consumption on parallel transfers minimized
Closes#12828
and mark the stream for close, but return OK since the response this far
was ok - if headers were received. Partly because this is what curl has
done traditionally.
Test 499 verifies. Updates test 689.
Reported-by: Sergey Bronnikov
Bug: https://curl.se/mail/lib-2024-02/0000.htmlCloses#12842
For active mode transfers.
Due to some interesting timing, curl can sometimes get the 226 (transfer
complete) over the control channel first, before the data connection
signals readability. If this happens, use that as a signal to check the
data connection.
Additionally, set the socket filter in listen mode *before* the
PORT/EPRT command is issued, to reduce the risk that the little time gap
could interfere.
This issue never reproduced for me on Debian and takes several hundred
rounds for me to trigger on my mac.
Reported-by: Stefan Eissing
Fixes#12823Closes#12841
Since the QUIC/h3 code has no knowledge or handling of multissl it might
bring unintended consequences if we allow it.
configure, cmake and curl_setup.h all now reject this combination.
Assisted-by: Viktor Szakats
Assisted-by: Gisle Vanem
Ref: #12806Closes#12807
- delete redundant warning suppressions for `-Wformat-nonliteral`.
This now relies on `CURL_PRINTF()` and it's theoratically possible
that this macro isn't active but the warning is. We're ignoring this
as a corner-case here.
- replace two pragmas with code changes to avoid the warnings.
Follow-up to aee4ebe591#12803
Follow-up to 0923012758#12540
Follow-up to 3829759bd0#12489
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Closes#12812
- Use http authentication mechanisms as a default, not a preset.
Consider http authentication options which are mapped to SASL options as
a default (overriding the hardcoded default mask for the protocol) that
is ignored if a login option string is given.
Prior to this change, if some HTTP auth options were given, sasl mapped
http authentication options to sasl ones but merged them with the login
options.
That caused problems with the cli tool that sets the http login option
CURLAUTH_BEARER as a side-effect of --oauth2-bearer, because this flag
maps to more than one sasl mechanisms and the latter cannot be cleared
individually by the login options string.
New test 992 checks this.
Fixes https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/10259
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/12790
When checking if the user wants to replace the header, the check should
be case insensitive.
Adding test 461 to verify
Found-by: Dan Fandrich
Ref: #12782Closes#12784
The pingpong logic now uses its own dynbuf for receiving command
response data.
When the "final" response header for a commanad has been received, that
final line is left first in the recvbuf for the protocols to parse at
will. If there is additional data behind the final response line, the
'overflow' counter is indicate how many bytes.
Closes#12757
Rework CMake options for building/using curl tool and libcurl manuals.
- rename `ENABLE_MANUAL` to `ENABLE_CURL_MANUAL`, meaning:
to build man page and built-in manual for curl tool.
- rename `BUILD_DOCS` to `BUILD_LIBCURL_DOCS`, meaning:
to build man pages for libcurl.
- `BUILD_LIBCURL_DOCS` now works without having to enable
`ENABLE_CURL_MANUAL` too.
- drop support for existing CMake-level `USE_MANUAL` option to avoid
confusion. (It used to work with the effect of current
`ENABLE_CURL_MANUAL`, but only by accident.)
Assisted-by: Richard Levitte
Ref: #12771Closes#12773
This assert triggers wrongly when CURLU_GUESS_SCHEME and
CURLU_NO_AUTHORITY are both set and the URL is a single path.
I think this assert has played out its role. It was introduced in a
rather big refactor.
Follow-up to 4cfa5bcc9a
Reported-by: promptfuzz_ on hackerone
Closes#12775
Since we only support using a single TLS library at any one time, we
know that the TLS library for QUIC is the same that is also shown for
regular TLS.
Fixes#12763
Reported-by: Viktor Szakats
Closes#12767
To prevent that it gets used in a subsequent transfer that skips the
verifystatus check since that check can't be done when the session id is
reused.
Reported-by: Hiroki Kurosawa
Closes#12760
To avoid a local hack to pass function pointers and to avoid
deprecation warnings when building with libssh2 v1.11.1 or newer:
```
lib/vssh/libssh2.c:3324:5: warning: 'libssh2_session_callback_set' is deprecated: since libssh2 1.11.1. Use libssh2_session_callback_set2() [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
lib/vssh/libssh2.c:3326:5: warning: 'libssh2_session_callback_set' is deprecated: since libssh2 1.11.1. Use libssh2_session_callback_set2() [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
```
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl-for-win/actions/runs/7609484879/job/20720821100#step:3:4982
Ref: https://github.com/libssh2/libssh2/pull/1285
Ref: c0f69548be
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Closes#12754
- HTTP/3 for curl using OpenSSL's own QUIC stack together
with nghttp3
- configure with `--with-openssl-quic` to enable curl to
build this. This requires the nghttp3 library
- implementation with the following restrictions:
* macOS has to use an unconnected UDP socket due to an
issue in OpenSSL's datagram implementation
See https://github.com/openssl/openssl/issues/23251
This makes connections to non-reponsive servers hang.
* GET requests will send the indicator that they have
no body in a separate QUIC packet. This may result
in processing delays or Transfer-Encodings on proxied
requests
* uploads that encounter blocks will use 100% cpu as
detection of these flow control issue is not working
(we have not figured out to pry that from OpenSSL).
Closes#12734
- in en- and decoding, check the websocket frame payload lengths for
negative values (from curl_off_t) and error the operation in that case
- add test 2307 to verify
Closes#12707
- enforce a response body length of 0, if the
response has no Content-lenght. This is according
to the RTSP spec.
- excess bytes in a response body are forwarded to
the client writers which will report and fail the
transfer
Follow-up to d7b6ce6Fixes#12701Closes#12706
The libpsl version output otherwise also includes version number for its
dependencies, like IDN lib, but since libcurl does not use libpsl's IDN
functionality those components are not important.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl-for-win/issues/63Closes#12700
This clarifies the handling of server responses by folding the code for
the complicated protocols into their protocol handlers. This concerns
mainly HTTP and its bastard sibling RTSP.
The terms "read" and "write" are often used without clear context if
they refer to the connect or the client/application side of a
transfer. This PR uses "read/write" for operations on the client side
and "send/receive" for the connection, e.g. server side. If this is
considered useful, we can revisit renaming of further methods in another
PR.
Curl's protocol handler `readwrite()` method been changed:
```diff
- CURLcode (*readwrite)(struct Curl_easy *data, struct connectdata *conn,
- const char *buf, size_t blen,
- size_t *pconsumed, bool *readmore);
+ CURLcode (*write_resp)(struct Curl_easy *data, const char *buf, size_t blen,
+ bool is_eos, bool *done);
```
The name was changed to clarify that this writes reponse data to the
client side. The parameter changes are:
* `conn` removed as it always operates on `data->conn`
* `pconsumed` removed as the method needs to handle all data on success
* `readmore` removed as no longer necessary
* `is_eos` as indicator that this is the last call for the transfer
response (end-of-stream).
* `done` TRUE on return iff the transfer response is to be treated as
finished
This change affects many files only because of updated comments in
handlers that provide no implementation. The real change is that the
HTTP protocol handlers now provide an implementation.
The HTTP protocol handlers `write_resp()` implementation will get passed
**all** raw data of a server response for the transfer. The HTTP/1.x
formatted status and headers, as well as the undecoded response
body. `Curl_http_write_resp_hds()` is used internally to parse the
response headers and pass them on. This method is public as the RTSP
protocol handler also uses it.
HTTP/1.1 "chunked" transport encoding is now part of the general
*content encoding* writer stack, just like other encodings. A new flag
`CLIENTWRITE_EOS` was added for the last client write. This allows
writers to verify that they are in a valid end state. The chunked
decoder will check if it indeed has seen the last chunk.
The general response handling in `transfer.c:466` happens in function
`readwrite_data()`. This mainly operates now like:
```
static CURLcode readwrite_data(data, ...)
{
do {
Curl_xfer_recv_resp(data, buf)
...
Curl_xfer_write_resp(data, buf)
...
} while(interested);
...
}
```
All the response data handling is implemented in
`Curl_xfer_write_resp()`. It calls the protocol handler's `write_resp()`
implementation if available, or does the default behaviour.
All raw response data needs to pass through this function. Which also
means that anyone in possession of such data may call
`Curl_xfer_write_resp()`.
Closes#12480