Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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The curl command line utility would display the the completed progress
bar with a percentage of zero as the progress routines didn't know the
size of the transfer.
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Removed the hard returns from imap and pop3 by using the same style for
sending the authentication string as smtp. Moved the "Other mechanisms
not supported" check in smtp to match that of imap and pop3 to provide
consistency between the three email protocols.
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Added 255 octet limit check as per Section 4. Paragraph 8 of RFC-5034.
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Users using the Secure Transport (darwinssl) back-end can now use a
certificate and private key to authenticate with a site using TLS. Because
Apple's security system is based around the keychain and does not have any
non-public function to create a SecIdentityRef data structure from data
loaded outside of the Keychain, the certificate and private key have to be
loaded into the Keychain first (using the certtool command line tool or
the Security framework's C API) before we can find it and use it.
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In addition to checking for the SASL-IR capability the user can override
the sending of the client's initial response in the AUTHENTICATION
command with the use of CURLOPT_SASL_IR should the server erroneously
not report SASL-IR when it does support it.
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Updated the default behaviour of sending the client's initial response in the AUTH
command to not send it and added support for CURLOPT_SASL_IR to allow the user to
specify including the response.
Related Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2012-03/0114.html
Reported-by: Gokhan Sengun
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Allowed the user to specify whether to send the client's intial response
in the AUTH command via CURLOPT_SASL_IR.
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By introducing an internal alternative to curl_multi_init() that accepts
parameters to set the hash sizes, easy handles will now use tiny socket
and connection hash tables since it will only ever add a single easy
handle to that multi handle.
This decreased the number mallocs in test 40 (which is a rather simple
and typical easy interface use case) from 1142 to 138. The maximum
amount of memory allocated used went down from 118969 to 78805.
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When connecting back to an FTP server after having sent PASV/EPSV,
libcurl sometimes didn't use the proxy properly even though the proxy
was used for the initial connect.
The function wrongly checked for the CURLOPT_PROXY variable to be set,
which made it act wrongly if the proxy information was set with an
environment variable.
Added test case 711 to verify (based on 707 which uses --socks5). Also
added test712 to verify another variation of setting the proxy: with
--proxy socks5://
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1218
Reported-by: Zekun Ni
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... in order to prevent an artificial timeout event based on stale
speed-check data from a previous network transfer. This commit fixes
a regression caused by 9dd85bced56f6951107f69e581c872c1e7e3e58e.
Bug: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/906031
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Bug: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=705783
Reported-by: Ludovico Cavedon <cavedon@debian.org>
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Commit 11332577b3cb removed the length check that was performed by the
old scanf() code.
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Fixed an issue in parse_proxy(), introduced in commit 11332577b3cb,
where an empty username or password (For example: http://:@example.com)
would cause a crash.
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Updated the naming convention of the login parameters to match those of
other functions.
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Tidy up of variable names and comments in setstropt_userpwd() and
parse_login_details().
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There is no need to perform separate clearing of data if a NULL option
pointer is passed in. Instead this operation can be performed by simply
not calling parse_login_details() and letting the rest of the code do
the work.
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setstropt_userpwd() was calling setstropt() in commit fddb7b44a79d to
set each of the login details which would duplicate the strings and
subsequently cause a memory leak.
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In addition to parsing the optional login options from the URL, added
support for parsing them from CURLOPT_USERPWD, to allow the following
supported command line:
--user username:password;options
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Added bounds checking when searching for the separator characters within
the login string as this string may not be NULL terminated (For example
it is the login part of a URL). We do this in preference to allocating a
new string to copy the login details into which could then be passed to
parse_login_details() for performance reasons.
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signed and unsigned type in conditional expression
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Separated the parsing of login details from the processing of them in
parse_url_login() ready for use by setstropt_userpwd().
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Re-factored these functions to reflect their new behaviour following the
addition of login options.
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Standardised the naming of all perform based functions to be in the form
smtp_perform_something().
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Updated the coding style, in this function, to be consistant with other
response functions rather then performing a hard return on failure.
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Updated the coding style, in this function, to be consistent with other
response functions rather then performing a hard return on failure.
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Standardised the naming of all perform based functions to be in the form
pop3_perform_something() following the changes made to IMAP.
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Started to apply the same tidy up to the POP3 code as applied to the
IMAP code in the 7.30.0 release.
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Added support for specifying the preferred authentication mechanism in
the URL as per Internet-Draft 'draft-earhart-url-smtp-00'.
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... to use left-shifted values, like those defined in curl.h, rather
than 16-bit hexadecimal values.
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Added support for specifying the preferred authentication type and SASL
mechanism in the URL as per RFC-2384.
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