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-rw-r--r--docs/KNOWN_BUGS11
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/docs/KNOWN_BUGS b/docs/KNOWN_BUGS
index c8a757e19..42611d62c 100644
--- a/docs/KNOWN_BUGS
+++ b/docs/KNOWN_BUGS
@@ -68,10 +68,6 @@ may have been fixed since this was written!
is waiting for the the 100-continue response.
http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2008-08/0462.html
-59. If the CURLOPT_PORT option is used on an FTP URL like
- "ftp://example.com/file;type=A" using a proxy, the ";type=A" is stripped off.
- See the comment in parse_remote_port()
-
58. It seems sensible to be able to use CURLOPT_NOBODY and
CURLOPT_FAILONERROR with FTP to detect if a file exists or not, but it is
not working: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2008-07/0295.html
@@ -96,7 +92,7 @@ may have been fixed since this was written!
52. Gautam Kachroo's issue that identifies a problem with the multi interface
where a connection can be re-used without actually being properly
- SSL-negoatiated:
+ SSL-negotiated:
http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2008-01/0277.html
49. If using --retry and the transfer timeouts (possibly due to using -m or
@@ -146,12 +142,13 @@ may have been fixed since this was written!
30. You need to use -g to the command line tool in order to use RFC2732-style
IPv6 numerical addresses in URLs.
-29. IPv6 URLs with zone ID is not supported.
+29. IPv6 URLs with zone ID is not nicely supported.
http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-fenner-literal-zone-02.txt (expired)
specifies the use of a plus sign instead of a percent when specifying zone
IDs in URLs to get around the problem of percent signs being
special. According to the reporter, Firefox deals with the URL _with_ a
percent letter (which seems like a blatant URL spec violation).
+ libcurl supports zone IDs where the percent sign is URL-escaped (i.e. %25).
See http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1371118
@@ -194,7 +191,7 @@ may have been fixed since this was written!
would not meaningfully support NUL characters within RFC 959 <string>,
anyway (e.g., UNIX pathnames may not contain NUL).
-14. Test case 165 might fail on system which has libidn present, but with an
+14. Test case 165 might fail on a system which has libidn present, but with an
old iconv version (2.1.3 is a known bad version), since it doesn't recognize
the charset when named ISO8859-1. Changing the name to ISO-8859-1 makes the
test pass, but instead makes it fail on Solaris hosts that use its native