As the data might be held by TLS buffers, leaving some and expecting to
get called again is error prone.
Reported-by: ralfjunker on github
Fixes#14201Closes#14597
Fix FTP protocol to flush the pingpong's send buffer before receiving a
response from the server, as it may never come otherwise.
Fixes FTP/FTPS tests with `CURL_DBG_SOCK_WBLOCK=90` set.
Closes#14452
Adds a `bool eos` flag to send methods to indicate that the data
is the last chunk the invovled transfer wants to send to the server.
This will help protocol filters like HTTP/2 and 3 to forward the
stream's EOF flag and also allow to EAGAIN such calls when buffers
are not yet fully flushed.
Closes#14220
Adds a `bool eos` flag to send methods to indicate that the data is the
last chunk the invovled transfer wants to send to the server.
This will help protocol filters like HTTP/2 and 3 to forward the
stream's EOF flag and also allow to EAGAIN such calls when buffers are
not yet fully flushed.
Closes#14220
Based on the standards and guidelines we use for our documentation.
- expand contractions (they're => they are etc)
- host name = > hostname
- file name => filename
- user name = username
- man page => manpage
- run-time => runtime
- set-up => setup
- back-end => backend
- a HTTP => an HTTP
- Two spaces after a period => one space after period
Closes#14073
In cases where the connection was fast, curl sometimes failed to open a
connection. This fixes a regression of c2d973627b.
The regression triggered in these steps:
1. Create an smtp connection
2. Use STARTTLS
3. Receive the response
4. We are inside the loop in `smtp_statemachine`, calling
`smtp_state_starttls_resp`
5. In the good flow, we exit the loop, re-enter `smtp_statemachine` and
run `smtp_perform_upgrade_tls` at the start of the function.
In the bad flow, we stay in the while loop, calling
`Curl_pp_readresp`, which reads part of the TLS handshake and things
go wrong.
The reason is that `Curl_pp_moredata` changed behavior and always
returns `true`, so we stay in the loop in `smtp_statemachine`. With a
slow connection `Curl_pp_readresp` cannot read new data and returns
`CURL_AGAIN`, so we leave the loop and re-enter `smtp_statemachine`.
With a fast connection, `Curl_pp_readresp` reads new data from the tcp
connection, which is part of the TLS handshake.
The fix is in `Curl_pp_moredata`, which needs to take the final line
into account and return `false` if only the final line is stored.
Closes#13048
- replace `Curl_read()`, `Curl_write()` and `Curl_nwrite()` to
clarify when and at what level they operate
- send/recv of transfer related data is now done via
`Curl_xfer_send()/Curl_xfer_recv()` which no longer has
socket/socketindex as parameter. It decides on the transfer
setup of `conn->sockfd` and `conn->writesockfd` on which
connection filter chain to operate.
- send/recv on a specific connection filter chain is done via
`Curl_conn_send()/Curl_conn_recv()` which get the socket index
as parameter.
- rename `Curl_setup_transfer()` to `Curl_xfer_setup()` for
naming consistency
- clarify that the special CURLE_AGAIN hangling to return
`CURLE_OK` with length 0 only applies to `Curl_xfer_send()`
and CURLE_AGAIN is returned by all other send() variants.
- fix a bug in websocket `curl_ws_recv()` that mixed up data
when it arrived in more than a single chunk
The method for sending not just raw bytes, but bytes that are either
"headers" or "body". The send abstraction stack, to to bottom, now is:
* `Curl_req_send()`: has parameter to indicate amount of header bytes,
buffers all data.
* `Curl_xfer_send()`: knows on which socket index to send, returns
amount of bytes sent.
* `Curl_conn_send()`: called with socket index, returns amount of bytes
sent.
In addition there is `Curl_req_flush()` for writing out all buffered
bytes.
`Curl_req_send()` is active for requests without body,
`Curl_buffer_send()` still being used for others. This is because the
special quirks need to be addressed in future parts:
* `expect-100` handling
* `Curl_fillreadbuffer()` needs to add directly to the new
`data->req.sendbuf`
* special body handlings, like `chunked` encodings and line end
conversions will be moved into something like a Client Reader.
In functions of the pattern `CURLcode xxx_send(..., ssize_t *written)`,
replace the `ssize_t` with a `size_t`. It makes no sense to allow for negative
values as the returned `CURLcode` already specifies error conditions. This
allows easier handling of lengths without casting.
Closes#12964
Curl_read/Curl_write clarifications
- replace `Curl_read()`, `Curl_write()` and `Curl_nwrite()` to 1clarify
when and at what level they operate
- send/recv of transfer related data is now done via
`Curl_xfer_send()/Curl_xfer_recv()` which no longer has
socket/socketindex as parameter. It decides on the transfer setup of
`conn->sockfd` and `conn->writesockfd` on which connection filter
chain to operate.
- send/recv on a specific connection filter chain is done via
`Curl_conn_send()/Curl_conn_recv()` which get the socket index as
parameter.
- rename `Curl_setup_transfer()` to `Curl_xfer_setup()` for naming
consistency
- clarify that the special CURLE_AGAIN handling to return `CURLE_OK`
with length 0 only applies to `Curl_xfer_send()` and CURLE_AGAIN is
returned by all other send() variants.
SingleRequest reshuffling
- move functions into request.[ch]
- differentiate between reset and free
- add Curl_req_done() to perform last actions
- add a send `bufq` to SingleRequest for future use in keeping upload data
Closes#12963
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
- bufref: use strndup
- cookie: use strndup
- formdata: use strndup
- ftp: use strndup
- gtls: use aprintf instead of malloc + strcpy * 2
- http: use strndup
- mbedtls: use strndup
- md4: use memdup
- ntlm: use memdup
- ntlm_sspi: use strndup
- pingpong: use memdup
- rtsp: use strndup instead of malloc, memcpy and null-terminate
- sectransp: use strndup
- socks_gssapi.c: use memdup
- vtls: use dynbuf instead of malloc, snprintf and memcpy
- vtls: use strdup instead of malloc + memcpy
- wolfssh: use strndup
Closes#12453
- use CLIENTWRITE_BODY *only* when data is actually body data
- add CLIENTWRITE_INFO for meta data that is *not* a HEADER
- debug assertions that BODY/INFO/HEADER is not used mixed
- move `data->set.include_header` check into Curl_client_write
so protocol handlers no longer have to care
- add special in FTP for `data->set.include_header` for historic,
backward compatible reasons
- move unpausing of client writes from easy.c to sendf.c, so that
code is in one place and can forward flags correctly
Closes#11885
- refs #11342 where errors with git https interactions
were observed
- problem was caused by 1st sends of size larger than 64KB
which resulted in later retries of 64KB only
- limit sending of 1st block to 64KB
- adjust h2/h3 filters to cope with parsing the HTTP/1.1
formatted request in chunks
- introducing Curl_nwrite() as companion to Curl_write()
for the many cases where the sockindex is already known
Fixes#11342 (again)
Closes#11803
To avoid abuse. The limit is set to 300 KB for the accumulated size of
all received HTTP headers for a single response. Incomplete research
suggests that Chrome uses a 256-300 KB limit, while Firefox allows up to
1MB.
Closes#11582
- they are mostly pointless in all major jurisdictions
- many big corporations and projects already don't use them
- saves us from pointless churn
- git keeps history for us
- the year range is kept in COPYING
checksrc is updated to allow non-year using copyright statements
Closes#10205
- almost all backend calls pass the Curl_cfilter intance instead of
connectdata+sockindex
- ssl_connect_data is remove from struct connectdata and made internal
to vtls
- ssl_connect_data is allocated in the added filter, kept at cf->ctx
- added function to let a ssl filter access its ssl_primary_config and
ssl_config_data this selects the propert subfields in conn and data,
for filters added as plain or proxy
- adjusted all backends to use the changed api
- adjusted all backends to access config data via the exposed
functions, no longer using conn or data directly
cfilter renames for clear purpose:
- methods `Curl_conn_*(data, conn, sockindex)` work on the complete
filter chain at `sockindex` and connection `conn`.
- methods `Curl_cf_*(cf, ...)` work on a specific Curl_cfilter
instance.
- methods `Curl_conn_cf()` work on/with filter instances at a
connection.
- rebased and resolved some naming conflicts
- hostname validation (und session lookup) on SECONDARY use the same
name as on FIRST (again).
new debug macros and removing connectdata from function signatures where not
needed.
adapting schannel for new Curl_read_plain paramter.
Closes#9919
- general construct/destroy in connectdata
- default implementations of callback functions
- connect: cfilters for connect and accept
- socks: cfilter for socks proxying
- http_proxy: cfilter for http proxy tunneling
- vtls: cfilters for primary and proxy ssl
- change in general handling of data/conn
- Curl_cfilter_setup() sets up filter chain based on data settings,
if none are installed by the protocol handler setup
- Curl_cfilter_connect() boot straps filters into `connected` status,
used by handlers and multi to reach further stages
- Curl_cfilter_is_connected() to check if a conn is connected,
e.g. all filters have done their work
- Curl_cfilter_get_select_socks() gets the sockets and READ/WRITE
indicators for multi select to work
- Curl_cfilter_data_pending() asks filters if the have incoming
data pending for recv
- Curl_cfilter_recv()/Curl_cfilter_send are the general callbacks
installed in conn->recv/conn->send for io handling
- Curl_cfilter_attach_data()/Curl_cfilter_detach_data() inform filters
and addition/removal of a `data` from their connection
- adding vtl functions to prevent use of Curl_ssl globals directly
in other parts of the code.
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Closes#9855
Add licensing and copyright information for all files in this repository. This
either happens in the file itself as a comment header or in the file
`.reuse/dep5`.
This commit also adds a Github workflow to check pull requests and adapts
copyright.pl to the changes.
Closes#8869
This leaves the CURLE_RECV_ERROR error code for explicit failure to
receive network data and allows users to better separate the problems.
Ref #8356
Reported-by: Rianov Viacheslav
Closes#8506
- the data needs to be "line-based" anyway since it's also passed to the
debug callback/application
- it makes infof() work like failf() and consistency is good
- there's an assert that triggers on newlines in the format string
- Also removes a few instances of "..."
- Removes the code that would append "..." to the end of the data *iff*
it was truncated in infof()
Closes#7357
... in most cases instead of 'struct connectdata *' but in some cases in
addition to.
- We mostly operate on transfers and not connections.
- We need the transfer handle to log, store data and more. Everything in
libcurl is driven by a transfer (the CURL * in the public API).
- This work clarifies and separates the transfers from the connections
better.
- We should avoid "conn->data". Since individual connections can be used
by many transfers when multiplexing, making sure that conn->data
points to the current and correct transfer at all times is difficult
and has been notoriously error-prone over the years. The goal is to
ultimately remove the conn->data pointer for this reason.
Closes#6425
... reuses the same dynamic buffer instead of doing repeated malloc/free
cycles.
Test case 100 (FTP dir list PASV) does 7 fewer memory allocation calls
after this change in my test setup (132 => 125), curl 7.72.0 needed 140
calls for this.
Test case 103 makes 9 less allocations now (130). Down from 149 in
7.72.0.
Closes#6004
Updated terminology in docs, comments and phrases to refer to C strings
as "null-terminated". Done to unify with how most other C oriented docs
refer of them and what users in general seem to prefer (based on a
single highly unscientific poll on twitter).
Reported-by: coinhubs on github
Fixes#5598Closes#5608
It was used (intended) to pass in the size of the 'socks' array that is
also passed to these functions, but was rarely actually checked/used and
the array is defined to a fixed size of MAX_SOCKSPEREASYHANDLE entries
that should be used instead.
Closes#4169
The timeout set with CURLOPT_TIMEOUT is no longer used when
disconnecting from one of the pingpong protocols (FTP, IMAP, SMTP,
POP3).
Reported-by: jasal82 on github
Fixes#3264Closes#3374
- Get rid of variable that was generating false positive warning
(unitialized)
- Fix issues in tests
- Reduce scope of several variables all over
etc
Closes#2631
Response data for a handle with a large buffer might be cached and then
used with the "closure" handle when it has a smaller buffer and then the
larger cache will be copied and overflow the new smaller heap based
buffer.
Reported-by: Dario Weisser
CVE: CVE-2018-1000300
Bug: https://curl.haxx.se/docs/adv_2018-82c2.html
... since the 'tv' stood for timeval and this function does not return a
timeval struct anymore.
Also, cleaned up the Curl_timediff*() functions to avoid typecasts and
clean up the descriptive comments.
Closes#2011
... to cater for systems with unsigned time_t variables.
- Renamed the functions to curlx_timediff and Curl_timediff_us.
- Added overflow protection for both of them in either direction for
both 32 bit and 64 bit time_ts
- Reprefixed the curlx_time functions to use Curl_*
Reported-by: Peter Piekarski
Fixes#2004Closes#2005
When imap_done() got called before a connection is setup, it would try
to "finish up" and dereffed a NULL pointer.
Test case 1553 managed to reproduce. I had to actually use a host name
to try to resolve to slow it down, as using the normal local server IP
will make libcurl get a connection in the first curl_multi_perform()
loop and then the bug doesn't trigger.
Fixes#1953
Assisted-by: Max Dymond