Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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When the protocol part fails, the data usually does too but the protocol
part is often more fundamental and often provide the clues you need to
fix the test case.
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Extended the regex to include other valid characters such as those used
in the reply text of Test 836.
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As the email protocols implement SASL authentication rather than IMAP,
POP3 and SMTP specific authentication, updated the authentication
keywords to reflect this.
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Added support for falling back to <data> when <data1>, <data2>, etc...
don't exist in the <reply> section of a unit test.
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The test is only valid when one of four SSL backends is in use,
and must otherwise return success.
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The improved connection reuse logic would otherwise create a new
connection for each one, which isn't supported by the test
server, nor expected by the test.
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To better allow arguments like "1 to 9999" without flooding the terminal
with error messages, the given test cases range is now checked and only
test numbers with existing files are actually run.
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Also, removed an unneeded strippart
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This one seems to come and go as the optimizer decides how best
to inline some functions.
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This option is currently rather useless with these protocols
when no quote command is given, but it is valid.
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Follow up to commit 1a9b58fcb2 to replace the : command line option
with --next and -:.
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A recent change seems to have slightly changed the call stack
produced by the gcc optimizer.
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The previous test certificate contained a MD5 hash which is not
supported using TLSv1.2 with Schannel on Windows 7 or newer.
See the update to this blog post on IEInternals / MSDN:
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ieinternals/archive/2011/03/25/
misbehaving-https-servers-impair-tls-1.1-and-tls-1.2.aspx
"Update: If the server negotiates a TLS1.2 connection with a
Windows 7 or 8 schannel.dll-using client application, and it
provides a certificate chain which uses the (weak) MD5 hash
algorithm, the client will abort the connection (TCP/IP FIN)
upon receipt of the certificate."
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... or any other systems lacking a native snprintf
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This feature specifies the availability of cryptographic
authentication, which can be disabled at compile-time
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When allowing NTLM, the re-use connection logic was too focused on
finding an existing NTLM connection to use and didn't properly allow
re-use of other ones. This made the logic not re-use perfectly re-usable
connections.
Added test case 1418 and 1419 to verify.
Regression brought in 8ae35102c (curl 7.35.0)
Reported-by: Jeff King
Bug: http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/242213
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This one is needed with the gcc options -fstack-protector-all -O2
That brings the number of suppressions for test 165 to four, and I
suspect I could find another two missing without trying very hard. I'm
beginning to think suppressions isn't the best way to handle these
kinds of cases.
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Updates the test suite to handle binary-mode header output.
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Changes LF to CRLF and disables automatic output conversion.
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Do not try to convert line-endings to CRLF on Windows by setting stdout
to binary mode, just like the curl tool does if --ascii is not specified.
This should prevent corrupted stdout line-ending output like CRCRLF.
In order to make the previously naive text-aware tests work with
binary mode on Windows, text-mode is disabled for them if it is not
actually part of the test case and line-endings are corrected.
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According to RFC 2616 and RFC 2326 individual protocol elements, like
headers and except the actual content, are terminated by using CRLF.
Therefore the test data files for these protocols need to contain
mixed line-endings if the actual protocol elements use CRLF while
the file uses LF.
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gcc 4.7.2 with -O2 will optimize Curl_connect by inlining some
functions two levels deep, which makes the valgrind suppression
fail to match. The underlying reason for these idna suppressions is
a gcc strlen optimization when compiling libidn; compiling it with
-fno-builtin-strlen makes this suppression unnecessary.
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See http://curl.haxx.se/mail/lib-2014-02/0004.html for a
discussion on the problem.
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