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History of Changes
Daniel (13 March 2001)
- Added the policy stuff to the curl_easy_setopt man page for the two supported
policies.
- Implemented some support for the CURLOPT_CLOSEPOLICY option. The policies
CURLCLOSEPOLICY_LEAST_RECENTLY_USED and CURLCLOSEPOLICY_OLDEST are now
supported, and the "least recently used" is used as default if no policy
is chosen.
- Added CURLOPT_RANDOM_FILE and CURLOPT_EGDSOCKET to libcurl for seeding the
SSL random engine. The random seeding support was also brought to the curl
client with the new options --random-file <file> and --egd-file <file>. I
need some people to really test this to know they work as supposed. Remember
that libcurl now informs (if verbose is on) if the random seed is considered
weak (HTTPS connections).
- Made the chunked transfer-encoding engine detected bad formatted data length
and return error if so (we can't possibly extract sensible data if this is
the case). Added a test case that detects this. Number 36. Now there are 60
test cases.
- Added 5 new libcurl options to curl/curl.h that can be used to control the
persistant connection support in libcurl. They're also documented (fairly
thoroughly) in the curl_easy_setopt.3 man page. Three of them are now
implemented, although not really tested at this point... Anyway, the new
implemented options are named CURLOPT_MAXCONNECTS, CURLOPT_FRESH_CONNECT,
CURLOPT_FORBID_REUSE. The ones still left to write code for are:
CURLOPT_CLOSEPOLICY and its related option CURLOPT_CLOSEFUNCTION.
- Made curl (the actual command line tool) use the new libcurl 7.7 persistant
connection support by re-using the same curl handle for every specified file
transfer and after some more test case tweaking we have 100% test case OK.
I made some test cases return HTTP/1.0 now to make sure that works as well.
- Had to add 'Connection: close' to the headers of a bunch of test cases so
that curl behaves "old-style" since the test http server doesn't do multiple
connections... Now I get 100% test case OK.
- The curl.haxx.se site, the main curl mailing list and my personal email are
all dead today due to power blackout in the area where the main servers are
located. Horrible.
- I've made persistance work over a squid HTTP proxy. I find it disturbing
that it uses headers that aren't present in any HTTP standard though
(Proxy-Connection:) and that makes me feel that I'm now on the edge of what
the standard actually defines. I need to get this code excercised on a lot
of different HTTP proxies before I feel safe.
Now I'm facing the problem with my test suite servers (both FTP and HTTP)
not supporting persistant connections and libcurl is doing them now. I have
to fix the test servers to get all the test cases do OK.
Daniel (8 March 2001)
- "Transfer-Encoding: chunked" is no longer any trouble for libcurl. I've
added two source files and I've run some test downloads that look fine.
Daniel (5 March 2001)
- The current 57 test cases now pass OK. It would suggest that libcurl works
using the old-style with one connection per handle. The test suite doesn't
handle multiple connections yet so there are no test cases for this.
- I patched the telnet.c heavily to not use any global variables anymore. It
should make it a lot nicer library-wise.
- The file:// support was modified slightly to use the internal connect-first-
then-do approach.
Daniel (4 March 2001)
- More bugs erased.
Version 7.7-alpha2
Daniel (4 March 2001)
- Now, there's even a basic check that a re-used connection is still alive
before it is assumed so. A few first tests have proven that libcurl will
then re-connect instead of re-use the dead connection!
Daniel (2 March 2001)
- Now they work intermixed as well. Major coolness!
- More fiddling around, my 'tiny' client I have for testing purposes now has
proved to download both FTP and HTTP with persistant connections. They do
not work intermixed yet though.
Daniel (1 March 2001)
- Wilfredo Sanchez pointed out a minor spelling mistake in a man page and that
curl_slist_append() should take a const char * as second argument. It does
now.
Daniel (22 February 2001)
- The persistant connections start to look good for HTTP. On a subsequent
request, it seems that libcurl now can pick an already existing connection
if a suitable one exists, or it opens a new one.
- Douglas R. Horner mailed me corrections to the curl_formparse() man page
that I applied.
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Daniel (20 February 2001)
- Added the docs/examples/win32sockets.c file for our windows friends.
- Linus Nielsen Feltzing provided brand new TELNET functionality and
improvements:
* Negotiation is now passive. Curl does not negotiate until the peer does.
* Possibility to set negotiation options on the command line, currently only
XDISPLOC, TTYPE and NEW_ENVIRON (called NEW_ENV).
* Now sends the USER environment variable if the -u switch is used.
* Use -t to set telnet options (Linus even updated the man page, awesome!)
- Haven't done this big changes to curl for a while. Moved around a lot of
struct fields and stuff to make multiple connections get connection specific
data in separate structs so that they can co-exist in a nice way. See the
mailing lists for discussions around how this is gonna be implemented. Docs
and more will follow.
Studied the HTTP RFC to find out better how persistant connections should
work. Seems cool enough.
Daniel (19 February 2001)
- Bob Schader brought me two files that help set up a MS VC++ libcurl project
easier. He also provided me with an up-to-date libcurl.def file.
- I moved a bunch of prototypes from the public <curl/curl.h> file to the
library private urldata.h. This is because of the upcoming changes. The
low level interface is no longer being planned to become reality.
Daniel (15 February 2001)
- CURLOPT_POST is not required anymore. Just setting the POST string with
CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS will switch on the HTTP POST. Most other things in
libcurl already works this way, i.e they require only the parameter to
switch on a feature so I think this works well with the rest. Setting a NULL
string switches off the POST again.
- Excellent suggestions from Rich Gray, Rick Jones, Johan Nilsson and Bjorn
Reese helped me define a way how to incorporate persistant connections into
libcurl in a very smooth way. If done right, no change may have to be made
to older programs and they will just start using persistant connections when
applicable!
Daniel (13 February 2001)
- Changed the word 'timeouted' to 'timed out' in two different error messages.
Suggested by Larry Fahnoe.
Daniel (9 February 2001)
- Frank Reid and Cain Hopwood provided information and research around a HTTPS
PUT/upload problem we seem to have. No solution found yet.
Daniel (8 February 2001)
- An interesting discussion is how to specify an empty password without having
curl ask for it interactively? The current implmentation takes an empty
password as a request for a password prompt. However, I still want to
support a blank user field. Thus, today if you enter "-u :" (without user
and password) curl will prompt for the password. Tricky. How would you
specify you want the prompt otherwise?
- Made the netrc parse result possible to use for other protocols than FTP and
HTTP (such as the upcoming TELNET fixes).
- The previously mentioned "MSVC++ problems" turned out to be a non-issue.
- Added a HTTP file upload code example in the docs/examples/ section on
request.
- Adjusted the FTP response fix slightly.
Version 7.6.1-pre3
Daniel (7 February 2001)
- SM found a flaw in the response reading function for FTP that could make
libcurl not get out of the loop properly when it should, if libcurl got -1
returned when reading the socket.
- I found a similar mistake in http.c when using a proxy and reading the
results from the proxy connection.
Daniel (6 February 2001)
- A friendly person named "SM" (nntp at iname.com) pointed out that the VC
makefile in src/ needed the libpath set for the debug build to work.
- Daniel Gehriger stepped in to assist with the VC++ stuff Robert Weaver
brought up yesterday.
- Jun-ichiro itojun Hagino brought a big patch that brings IPv6-awareness to
a bunch of different areas within libcurl.
- Robert Weaver told me about the problems the MS VC++ 6.0 compiler has with
the 'static' keyword on a number of libcurl functions. I might need to add a
patch that redefines static when libcurl is compiled with that compiler.
Daniel (4 February 2001)
- curl_getinfo() was extended with two new options:
CURLINFO_CONTENT_LENGTH_DOWNLOAD and CURLINFO_CONTENT_LENGTH_UPLOAD. They
return the full assumed content length of the transfer in the given
direction. The CURLINFO_CONTENT_LENGTH_DOWNLOAD will be the Content-Length:
size of a HTTP download. Added descriptions to the man page as well. This
was done after discussions with Bob Schader.
Daniel (3 February 2001)
- Ingo Ralf Blum provided another fix that makes curl build under the more
recent cygwin installations. It seems they've changed the preset defines to
not include WIN32 anymore.
Version 7.6.1-pre2
Daniel (31 January 2001)
- Curl_read() and curl_read() now return a ssize_t for the size, as it had to
be able to return -1. The telnet support crashed due to this and there was a
possibility to weird behaviour all over. Linus Nielsen Feltzing helped me
find this.
- Added a configure.in check for a working getaddrinfo() if IPv6 is requested.
I also made the configure script feature --enable-debug which sets a couple
of compiler options when used. It assumes gcc.
Daniel (30 January 2001)
- I finally took a stab at the long-term FIXME item I've had on myself, and
now libcurl will properly work when doing a HTTP range-request that follows
a Location:. Previously that would make libcurl fail saying that the server
doesn't seem to support range requests.
- I added a test case for the HTTP PUT resume thing (test case 33).
Version 7.6.1-pre1
Daniel (29 January 2001)
- Yet another Content-Range change. Ok now? Bob Schader checks from his end
and it works for him.
Daniel (27 January 2001)
- So the HTTP PUT resume fix wasn't good. There should appearantly be a
Content-Range header when resuming a PUT.
- I noticed I broke the download-check that verifies that a resumed HTTP
download is actually resumed. It got broke because my new 'httpreq' field
in the main curl struct. I should get slapped. I added a test case for
this now, so I won't be able to ruin this again without noticing.
- Added a test case for content-length verifying when downloading HTTP.
- Made the progress meter title say if the transfer is being transfered. It
makes the output slightly better for resumes.
- When dealing with Location: and HTTP return codes, libcurl will not attempt
to follow the spirit of RFC2616 better. It means that when POSTing to a
URL that is being following to a second place, the standard will judge on
what to do. All HTTP codes except 303 and 305 will cause curl to make a
second POST operation. 303 will make a GET and 305 is not yet supported.
I also wrote two test cases for this POST/GET/Location stuff.
Daniel (26 January 2001)
- Lots of mails back and forth with Bob Schader finally made me add a small
piece of code in the HTTP engine so that HTTP upload resume works. You can
now do an operation like 'curl -T file -C <offset> <URL>' and curl will PUT
the ending part of the file starting at given offet to the specified URL.
Version 7.6-pre4
Daniel (25 January 2001)
- I took hold of Rick Jones' question why we don't use recv() and send() for
reading/writing to the sockets and I've now modified the sread() and
swrite() macros to use them instead. If nothing else, they could be tested
in the next beta-round coming right up.
- Jeff Morrow found a problem with libcurl's usage of SSL_read() and supplied
his research results in how to fix this. It turns out we have to invoke the
function several times in some cases. The same goes for the SSL_write().
I made some rather drastic changes all over libcurl to make all writes and
reads get done on one single place so that this repeated-attempts thing
would only have to be implemented at one point.
- Rick Jones spotted that the 'total time' counter really didn't measure the
total time very accurate on subsecond levels.
- Johan Nilsson pointed out the need to more clearly specify that the timeout
value you set for a download is for the *entire* download. There's currently
no option available that sets a timeout for the connection phase only.
Daniel (24 January 2001)
- Ingo Ralf Blum submitted a series of patches required to get curl to compile
properly with cygwin.
- Robert Weaver posted a fix for the win32 section of the curl_getenv() code
that corrected a potential memory leak.
- Added comments in a few files in a sudden attempt to make the sources more
easy to read and understand!
Daniel (23 January 2001)
- Added simple IPv6 detection in the configure script and made the version
string add 'ipv6' to the enable section in that case. ENABLE_IPV6 will be
set if curl is compiled with IPv6 support enabled.
- Added a parser for IPv6-style specified IP-addresses in a URL. Thus, when
IPv6 gets enabled soon, we can use URLs like '[0::1]:80'...
- Made the URL globbing in the client possible to fail silently if there's an
error in the globbing. It makes it almost intuitive, so when you don't
follow the syntax rules, globbing is simply switched off and the raw string
is used instead.
I still think we'll get problems with IPv6-style IP-addresses when we *want*
globbing on parts of the URL as the initial part of the URL will for sure
seriously confuse the globber.
Daniel (22 January 2001)
- Björn Stenberg supplied a progress meter patch that makes it look better even
during slow starts. Previously it made some silly assumptions...
- Added two FTP tests for -Q and -Q - stuff since it was being discussed on
the mailing list. Had to correct the ftpserver.pl too as it bugged slightly.
Daniel (19 January 2001)
- Made the Location: parsers deal with any-length URLs. Thus I removed the last
code that restricts the length of URLs that curl supports.
- Added a --globoff test case (#28) and it quickly identified a memory problem
in src/main.c that I took care of.
Version 7.6-pre3
Daniel (17 January 2001)
- Made the two former files lib/download.c and lib/highlevel.c become the new
lib/transfer.c which makes more sense. I also did the rename from Transfer()
to Curl_Transfer() in the other source files that use the transfer function
in the spirit of using Curl_ prefix for library-scoped global symbols.
Daniel (11 January 2001)
Daniel Stenberg
committed
- Added -g/--globoff that switches OFF the URL globbing and thus enables {}[]
letters to be part of the URL. Do note that RFC2396 section 2.4.3 explicitly
mention these letters to be escaped. This was posted as a feature request by
Jorge Gutierrez and as a bug by Terry.
- Short options to curl that requires parameters can now be specified without
having the option and its parameter space separated. -ofile works as good as
-o file. -m20 is equal to -m 20. Do note that this goes for single-letter
options only, verbose --long-style options still must be separated with
space from their parameters.
- Francis Dagenais reported that the SCO compiler still fails when compiling
curl due to that getpass_r() prototype. I've now put it around #ifndef
HAVE_GETPASS_R in an attempt to please the SCO systems.
- Made some minor corrections to get the client to cleanup properly and I made
the separator work again when getting multiple globbed URLs to stdout.
- Worked with Loic Dachary to get the make dist and make distcheck work
Daniel Stenberg
committed
correctly. The 'maketgz' script is now using the automake generated 'make
dist' when creating release archives. Loic successfully made 'make rpms'
automatically build RPMs!
Loic Dachary (6 January 2001)
- Automated generation of rpm packages, no need to be root.
- make distcheck generates a proper distribution (EXTRA_DIST
in all Makefile.am modified to match FILES).
Daniel (5 January 2001)
- Huge client-side hack: now multiple URLs are supported. Any number of URLs
can be specified on the command line, and they'll all be downloaded. There
must be a corresponding -o or -O for each URL or the data will be written to
stdout. This needs more testing, time to release a 7.6-pre package.
- The krb4 support was broken in the release. Fixed now.
- Huge internal symbol rename operation. All non-static but still lib-internal
symbols should now be prefixed with 'Curl_' to prevent collisions with other
libs. All public symbols should be prefixed with 'curl_' and the rest should
be static and thus invisible to the outside world. I updated the INTERNALS
document to say this as well.
Daniel Stenberg
committed
Daniel (4 January 2001)
- As Kevin P Roth suggested, I've added text to the man page for every command
line option and what happens when you specify that option more than
once. That hasn't been exactly crystal clear before.
- Made the configure script possible to run from outside the source-tree. For
odd reasons I can't build curl properly outside though. It has to do with
curl's dependencies on libcurl...
- Cut off all older (dated 1999 and earlier) CHANGES entries from this file.
The older piece is named CHANGES.0 and is added to the CVS repository in
case anyone would need it.
- I added another file 'CVS-INFO' to the CVS. It contains information about
files in the CVS that aren't included in release archives and how to build
curl when you get the sources off CVS.
- Updated CONTRIBUTE and FAQ due to the new license.
Daniel Stenberg
committed
Daniel (3 January 2001)
- Renamed README.libcurl to LIBCURL
- Changed headers in all sources files to the new dual license concept of
curl: use the MIT/X derivate license *or* MPL. The LEGAL file was updated
accordingly and the MPL 1.1 and MIT/X derivate licenses are now part of the
release archive.
Daniel (30 December 2000)
- Made all FTP commands get sent with the trailing CRLF in one single write()
as splitting them up seems to confuse at least some firewalls (FW-1 being
one major).
Daniel (19 December 2000)
- Added file desrciptor and FILE handle leak detection to the memdebug system
and thus I found and removed a file descriptor leakage in the ftp parts
that happened when you did PORTed downloads.
- Added an include <stdio.h> in <curl/curl.h> since it uses FILE *.
Daniel (12 December 2000)
- Multiple URL downloads with -O was still bugging. Not anymore I think or
hope, or at least I've tried... :-O
- Francois Petitjean fixed another -O problem
Version 7.5.1
Daniel (11 December 2000)
- Cleaned up a few of the makefiles to use unix-style newlines only. As Kevin
P Roth found out, at least one CVS client behaved wrongly when it found
different newline conventions within the same file.
- Albert Chin-A-Young corrected the LDFLAGS use in the configure script for
the SSL stuff.
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Daniel (6 December 2000)
- Massimo Squillace correctly described how libcurl could use session ids when
doing SSL connections.
- James Griffiths found out that curl would crash if the file you specify with
-o is shorter than the URL! This took some hours to fully hunt down, but it
is fixed now.
Daniel (5 December 2000)
- Jaepil Kim sent us makefiles that build curl using the free windows borland
compiler. The root makefile now accepts 'make borland' to build curl with
that compiler.
- Stefan Radman pointed out that the test makefiles didn't use the PERL
variable that the configure scripts figure out. Actually, you still need
perl in the path for the test suite to run ok.
- Rich Gray found numerous portability problems:
* The SCO compiler got an error on the getpass_r() prototype in getpass.h
since the curl one differed from the SCO one
* The HPUX compiler got an error because of how curl did the sigaction
stuff and used a define HPUX doesn't have (or need).
* A few more problems remain to be researched.
- Paul Harrington experienced a core dump using https. Not much details yet.
Daniel (4 December 2000)
- Jörn Hartroth fixed a problem with multiple URLs and -o/-O.
Version 7.5
Daniel (1 December 2000)
- Craig Davison gave us his updates on the VC++ makefiles, so now curl should
build fine with the Microsoft compiler on windows too.
- Fixed the libcurl versioning so that we don't ruin old programs when
releasing new shared library interfaces.
Daniel (30 November 2000)
- Renamed docs/README.curl to docs/MANUAL to better reflect what the document
actually contains.
Daniel (29 November 2000)
- I removed a bunch of '#if 0' sections from the code. They only make things
harder to follow. After all, we do have all older versions in the CVS.
Version 7.5-pre5
Daniel (28 November 2000)
- I filled in more error codes in the man page error code list that had been
lagging.
- James Griffiths mailed me a fine patch that introduces the CURLOPT_MAXREDIRS
libcurl option. When used, it'll prevent location following more than the
set number of times. It is useful to break out of endless redirect-loops.
Daniel (27 November 2000)
- Added two test cases for file://.
Daniel (22 November 2000)
- Added the libcurl CURLOPT_FILETIME setopt, when set it tries to get the
modified time of the remote document. This is a special option since it
involves an extra set of commands on FTP servers. (Using the MDTM command
which is not in the RFC959)
curl_easy_getinfo() got a corresponding CURLINFO_FILETIME to get the time
after a transfer. It'll return a zero if CURLOPT_FILETIME wasn't used or if
the time wasn't possible to get.
--head/-I used on a FTP server will now present a 'Last-Modified:' header
if curl could get the time of the specified file.
- Added the option '--cacert [file]' to curl, which allows a specified PEM
file to be used to verify the peer's certificate when doing HTTPS
connections. This has been requested, rather recently by Hulka Bohuslav but
others have asked for it before as well.
Daniel (21 November 2000)
- Numerous fixes the test suite has brought into the daylight:
* curl_unescape() could return a too long string
* on ftp transfer failures, there could be memory leaks
* ftp CWD could use bad directory names
* memdebug now uses the mprintf() routines for better portability
* free(NULL) removed when doing resumed transfers
- Added a bunch of test cases for FTP.
- General cleanups to make less warnings with gcc -Wall -pedantic.
- I made the tests/ftpserver.pl work with the most commonly used ftp
operations. PORT, PASV, RETR, STOR, LIST, SIZE, USER, PASS all work now. Now
all I have to do is integrate the ftp server doings in the runtests.pl
script so that ftp tests can be run the same way http tests already run.
Daniel Stenberg
committed
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Daniel (20 November 2000)
- Made libcurl capable of dealing with any-length URLs. The former limit of
4096 bytes was a bit annoying when people wanted to use curl to really make
life tough on a web server. Now, the command line limit is the most annoying
but that can be circumvented by using a config file.
NOTE: there is still a 4096-byte limit on URLs extracted from Location:
headers.
- Corrected the spelling of 'resolve' in two error messages.
- Alexander Kourakos posted a bug report and a patch that corrected it! It
turned out that lynx and wget support lowercase environment variable names
where curl only looked for the uppercase versions. Now curl will use the
lowercase versions if they exist, but if they don't, it'll use the uppercase
versions.
Daniel (17 November 2000)
- curl_formfree() was added. How come no one missed that one before? I ran the
test suite with the malloc debug enabled and got lots of "nice" warnings on
memory leaks. The most serious one was this. There were also leaks in the
cookie handling, and a few errors when curl failed to connect and similar
things. More tests cases were added to cover up and to verify that these
problems have been removed.
- Mucho updated config file parser (I'm dead tired of all the bug reports and
weird behaviour I get on the former one). It works slightly differently now,
although I doubt many people will notice the differences. The main
difference being that if you use options that require parameters, they must
both be specified on the same line. With this new parser, you can also
specify long options without '--' and you may separate options and
parameters with : or =. It makes a config file line could look like:
user-agent = "foobar and something"
Parameters within quotes may contain spaces. Without quotes, they're
expected to be a single non-space word.
Had to patch the command line argument parser a little to make this work.
- Added --url as an option to allow the URL to be specified this way. It makes
way nicer config files. The previous way of specifying URLs in the config
file doesn't work anymore.
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Daniel (15 November 2000)
- Using certain characters in usernames or passwords for HTTP authentication
failed. This was due to the mprintf() that had a silly check for letters,
and if they weren't isprint() they weren't outputed "as-is". This caused
passwords and usernames using '§' (for example) to fail.
Version 7.4.2
Daniel (15 November 2000)
- 'tests/runtests.pl' now sorts the test cases properly when 'all' is used.
Daniel (14 November 2000)
- I fell over the draft-ietf-ftpext-mlst-12.txt Internet Draft titled
"Extensions to FTP" that contains a defined way how the ftp command SIZE
could be assumed to work.
- Laurent Papier posted a bug report about using "-C -" and FTP uploading a
file that isn't prsent on the server. The server might then return a 550 and
curl will fail. Should it instead as Laurent Papier suggests, start
uploading from the beginning as a normal upload?
Daniel (13 November 2000)
- Fixed a crash with the followlocation counter.
- While writing test cases for the test suite, I discovered an old limitation
that prevented -o and -T to be used at the same time. I removed this
immediately as this has no relevance in the current libcurl.
- Chris Faherty fixed a free-twice problem in lib/file.c
- I fixed the perl http server problem in the test suite.
Version 7.4.2 pre4
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Daniel (10 November 2000)
- I've (finally) started working on the curl test suite. It is in the new
tests/ directory. It requires sh and perl. There's a TCP server in perl and
most of the other stuff running a pretty simple shell script.
I've only made four test cases so far, but it proves the system can work.
- Laurent Papier noticed that curl didn't set TYPE when doing --head checks
for sizes on FTP servers. Some servers seem to return different sizes
depending on whether ASCII or BINARY is used!
- Laurent Papier detected that if you appended a FTP upload and everything was
already uploaded, curl would hang.
- Angus Mackay's getpass_r() in lib/getpass.c is now compliant with the
getpass_r() function it seems some systems actually have.
- Venkataramana Mokkapati detected a bug in the cookie parser and corrected
it. If the cookie was set for the full host name (domain=full.host.com),
the cookie was never sent back because of a faulty length comparison between
the set domain length and the current host name.
Daniel (9 November 2000)
- Added a configure check for gethostbyname in -lsocket (OS/2 seems to need
it). Added a check for RSAglue/rsaref for the cases where libcrypto is found
but libssl isn't. I haven't verified this fix yet though, as I have no
system that requires those libs to build.
Version 7.4.2 pre3
Daniel (7 November 2000)
- Removed perror() outputs from getpass.c. Angus Mackay also agreed to a
slightly modified license of the getpass.c file as the prototype was changed.
Daniel (6 November 2000)
- Added possibility to set a password callback to use instead of the built-in.
They're controled with curl_easy_setopt() of course, the tags are
CURLOPT_PASSWDFUNCTION and CURLOPT_PASSWDDATA.
- Used T. Bharath's thinking and fixed the timers that showed terribly wrong
times when location: headers were followed.
- Emmanuel Tychon discovered that curl didn't really like user names only in
the URL. I corrected this and I also fixed the since long living problem
with URL encoded user names and passwords in the URLs. They should work now.
Daniel (2 November 2000)
- When I added --interface, the new error code that was added with it was
inserted in the wrong place and thus all error codes from 35 and upwards got
increased one step. This is now corrected, we're back at the previous
numbers. All new exit codes should be added at the end.
Daniel (1 November 2000)
- Added a check for signal() in the configure script so that if sigaction()
isn't present, we can use signal() instead.
- I'm having a license discussion going on privately. The issue is yet again
GPL-licensed programs that have problems with MPL. I am leaning towards
making a kind of dual-license that will solve this once and for all...
Daniel (31 October 2000)
- Added the packages/ directory. I intend to let this contain some docs and
templates on how to generate custom-format packages for various platforms.
I've now removed the RPM related curl.spec files from the archive root.
Daniel (30 October 2000)
- T. Bharath brought a set of patches that bring new functionality to
curl_easy_getinfo() and curl_easy_setopt(). Now you can request peer
certificate verification with the *setopt() CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER option
and then use the CURLOPT_CAINFO to set the certificate to verify the remote
peer against. After an such an operation with a verification request, the
*_getinfo() option CURLINFO_SSL_VERIFYRESULT will return information about
whether the verification succeeded or not.
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Daniel (27 October 2000)
- Georg Horn brought us a splendid patch that solves the long-standing
annoying problem with timeouts that made curl exit with silly exit codes
(which as been commented out lately). This solution is sigaction() based and
of course then only works for unixes (and only those unixes that actually
have the sigaction() function).
Daniel (26 October 2000)
- Björn Stenberg supplied a patch that fixed the flaw mentioned by Kevin Roth
that made the password get echoed when prompted for interactively. The
getpass() function (now known as my_getpass()) was also fixed to not use any
static buffers. This also means we cannot use the "standard" getpass()
function even for those systems that have it, since it isn't thread-safe.
- Kevin Roth found out that if you'd write a config file with '-v url', the
url would not be used as "default URL" as documented, although if you wrote
it 'url -v' it worked! This has been corrected now.
- Kevin Roth's idea of using multiple -d options on the same command line was
just brilliant, and I couldn't really think of any reason why we shouldn't
support it! The append function always append '&' and then the new -d
chunk. This enables constructs like the following:
curl -d name=daniel -d age=unknown foobarsite.com
Daniel (24 October 2000)
- I fixed the lib/memdebug.c source so that it compiles on Linux and other
systems. It will be useful one day when someone else but me wants to run the
memory debugging system.
Daniel (23 October 2000)
- I modified the maketgz and configure scripts, so that the configure script
will fetch the version number from the include/curl/curl.h header files, and
then the maketgz doesn't have to rebuild the configure script when I build
release-archives.
- Björn Stenberg and Linus Nielsen correctly pointed out that curl was silly
enough to not allow @-letters in passwords when they were specified with the
-u or -U flags (CURLOPT_USERPWD and CURLOPT_PROXYUSERPWD). This also
suggests that curl probably should url-decode the password piece of an URL
so that you could pass an encoded @-letter there...
Daniel (20 October 2000)
- Yet another http server barfed on curl's request that include the port
number in the Host: header always. I now only include the port number if it
isn't the default (80 for HTTP, 443 for HTTPS). www.perl.com turned out to
run one of those nasty servers.
- The PHP4 module for curl had problems with referer that seems to have been
corrected just yesterday. (Sterling Hughes of the PHP team confirmed this)
Daniel (17 October 2000)
- Vladimir Oblomov reported that the -Y and -y options didn't work. They
didn't work for me either. This once again proves we should have that test
suite...
- I finally changed the error message libcurl returns if you try a https://
URL when the library wasn't build with SSL enabled. It will now return this
error:
"libcurl was built with SSL disabled, https: not supported!"
I really hope it will make it a bit clearer to users where the actual
problem lies.
Daniel (16 October 2000)
- I forgot to remove some of the malloc debug defines from the makefiles in
the release archive (of course).
Version 7.4
Daniel (16 October 2000)
- The buffer overflow mentioned below was posted to bugtraq on Friday 13th.
Daniel (12 October 2000)
- Colin Robert Phipps elegantly corrected a buffer overflow. It could be used
by an evil ftp server to crash curl. I took the opportunity of replacing a
few other sprintf()s into snprintf()s as well.
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Daniel (11 October 2000)
- Found some more memory leaks. This new simple memory debugger has turned out
really useful!
Version 7.4 pre6
Daniel (9 October 2000)
- Florian Koenig pointed out that the bool typedef in the curl/curl.h include
file was breaking PHP 4.0.3 compiling. The bool typedef is not used in the
public interface and was wrongly inserted in that header file.
- Jörg Hartroth corrected a minor memory leak in the src/urlglob.c stuff. It
didn't harm anyone since the memory is free()ed on exit anyway.
- Corrected the src/main.c. We use the _MPRINTF_REPLACE #define to use our
libcurl-printf() functions. This gives us snprintf() et al on all
platforms. I converted the allocated useragent string to one that uses a
local buffer.
- I've set an #if 0 section around the Content-Transfer-Encoding header
generated in lib/formdata.c. This will hopefully make curl do more
PHP-friendly multi-part posts.
Version 7.4 pre5
- Nico Baggus found out that curl's ability to force a ASCII download when
using FTP was no longer working! I corrected this. This problem was probably
introduced when I redesigned libcurl for version 7.
- Georg Horn provided a source example that proved a memory leak in libcurl.
I added simple memory debugging facilities and now we can make libcurl log
all memory fiddling functions. An additional perl script is used to analyze
the output logfile and to match malloc()s with free()s etc. The memory leak
Georg found turned out to be the main cookie struct that cookie_cleanup()
didn't free! The perl script is named memanalyze.pl and it is available in
the CVS respository, not in the release archive.
Daniel (8 October 2000)
- Georg Horn found a GetHost() problem. It turned out it never assigned the
pointer in the third argument properly! This could make a crash, or at best
a memory leak!
Version 7.4 pre4
Daniel (6 October 2000)
- Is the -F post following the RFC 1867 spec? We had this dicussion on the
mailing list since it appears curl can't post -F form posts to a PHP
receiver... I've been in touch with the PHP developers about this.
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- Domenico Andreoli found out that the long option '--proxy' wasn't working
anymore! The option parser got confused when I added the --proxytunnel for
7.3. This was indeed a very old flaw that hasn't turned up until now...
- Jörn Hartroth provided patches, updated makefiles and two new files for DLL
stuff on win32. He also pointed out that lib source files were compiled with
-I../src which isn't only wrong but plain stupid!
- Troels Walsted Hansen fixed a problem with HTTP resume. Curl previously used
a local variable badly, that could lead to crashes.
Version 7.4 pre3
Daniel (4 October 2000)
- More docs written. The curl_easy_getinfo.3 man page is now pretty accurate,
as is the -w section in curl.1. I added two options to enable the user to
get information about the received headers' size and the size of the HTTP
request. T. Bharath requested them.
Daniel (3 October 2000)
- Corrected a sever free() before use in the new add_buffer_send()! ;-)
Version 7.4 pre2
Daniel (3 October 2000)
- Jason S. Priebe sent me patches that changed the way curl issues HTTP
requests. The entire request is now issued in one single shot. It didn't do
this previously, and it has turned out that since the common browsers do it
this way, some sites have turned out to work with browsers but not with
curl! Although this is not a client-side problem, we want to be able to
fully emulate browsers, and thus we have now adjusted the networking layer
to slightly more appear as a browser. I adjusted Jason's patch, the faults
are probably mine.
Daniel (2 October 2000)
- Anyone who ever uploaded data with curl on a slow link has noticed that the
progess meter is updated very infrequently. That is due to the large buffer
size curl is using. It reads 50Kb and sends it, updates the progress meter
and loops. 50Kb is very much on a slow link, although it is pretty neat to
use on a fast one.
I've now made an adjustment that makes curl use a 2Kb buffer for uploads to
start with. If curl's average upload speed is faster than buffer size bytes
per second, curl will increase the used buffer size up to max 50Kb. It
should make the progress meter work better.
Version 7.4 pre1
Daniel (29 September 2000)
- Ripped out the -w stuff from the library and put in the curl tool. It gets
all the relevant info from the library using the new curl_easy_getinfo()
function.
- brad at openbsd.org mailed me a patch that corrected my kerberos mistake and
removed a compiler warning from hostip.c that OpenBSD people get.
Daniel (28 September 2000)
- Of course (I should probably get punished somehow) I didn't properly correct
the #include lines for the base64 stuff in the kerberos sources in the just
released 7.3 package. They still include the *_krb.h files! Now, the error
is sooo very easy to spot and fix so I won't bother with a quick bug fix
release. I'll post a patch whenever one is needed instead. It'll be
available in the CVS in a few minutes anyway.
Daniel (28 September 2000)
- Removed the base64_krb.[ch] files. They've now replaced the former
base64.[ch] files.
Daniel (26 September 2000)
- Updated some docs.
- I changed the OpenSSL fix to work with older versions as well. The posted
patch was only working with 0.9.6 and no older ones.
Version 7.3-pre8
Daniel (25 September 2000)
- Erdmut Pfeifer informed us that curl didn't build with OpenSSL 0.9.6 and
showed us what needed to get patched in order to make it build properly
again.
- Dirk Kruschewski found a bug in the cookie parser. I made an alternative
approach to the solution Dirk himself suggested. The bug made a cookie
header that didn't end with a trailing semicolon to not get parsed.
- I've marked -c and -t deprecated now. If you use any of them, curl will tell
you to use "-C -" or "-T -" instead. I don't think occupying two letters for
nearly identical functions is good use. Also, -T - kind of follows the curl
tradition of using - for stdin where a file name is expected.
Daniel (23 September 2000)
- Martin Hedenfalk provided the patch that finally made the krb4 ftp upload
work!
Daniel (21 September 2000)
- The kerberos code is not quite thread-safe yet. There are a few more globals
that need to be take care of. Let's get the upload working first!
Daniel (20 September 2000)
- Richard Prescott solved another name lookup buffer size problem. I took this
opportunity to rewrite the GetHost() function. With these large buffer
sizes, I think keeping them as local arrays quickly turn ugly. I now use
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malloc() to get the buffer memory. Thanks to this, I now can realloc() to a
large buffer in case of demand (errno == ERANGE) in case a solution like
that would become necessary. I still want to avoid that kind of nastiness.
- Tried to compile and run curl on Linux for alpha and FreeBSD for alpha. Went
as smooth as it could.
- Added a docs/examples directory with two tiny example sources that show how
to use libcurl. I hope users will supply me with more useful examples
further on.
- Applied a patch by Jörn Hartroth to no longer use the word 'inteface' in the
config struct in the src/main.c file since certain compilers have that word
"reservered". I figure that is some kind of C++ decease.
- Updated the curl.1 man page with --interface and --krb4.
- Modified the base64Encode() function to work like the kerberos one, so that
I could remove the use of that. There is no need for *two* base64 encoding
functions! ;-)
Version 7.3pre5
Daniel (19 September 2000)
- The kerberos4-layer source code that is much "influenced" by the original
krb4 source code, through yafc into curl, was using quite a lot of global
variables. libcurl can't work properly with globals like that why I had to
clean up almost every function in the new security.c to make them use
connection specific variables instead of the globals. I just hope I didn't
destroy anything now... :-) configure updated, version string now reflects
krb4 built-in. It almost works now. Only uploads are still being naughty.
Version 7.3pre3
Daniel (18 September 2000)
- Martin Hedenfalk supplied a major patch that introduces krb4-ftp support to
curl. Martin is the primary author of the ftp client named yafc and he did
not hesitate to help us implement this when I asked him. Many and sincere
thanks to a splendid effort. It didn't even take many hours!
- Stephen Kick supplied a big patch that introduces the --interface flag to
the curl tool and CURLOPT_INTERFACE for libcurl. It allows you to specify an
outgoing interface to use for your request. This may not work on all
platforms. This needs testing.
- Richard Prescott noticed that curl on Tru64 unix could core dumped if the
name didn't resolve properly. This was due to the GetHost() function not
returning an error even though it failed on some platforms!
Daniel (15 September 2000)
- Updated all sorts of documents in regards to the new proxytunnel support.
Version 7.3pre2
Daniel (15 September 2000)
- Kai-Uwe Rommel pointed out a problem in the httpproxytunnel stuff for ftp.
Adjusted it. Added better info message when setting up the tunnel and the
pasv message when doing the second connect.
Daniel (15 September 2000)
- libcurl now allows "httpproxytunnel" to an arbitrary host and port name. The
second connection on ftp needed that.
- TheArtOfHTTPScripting was corrected all over. I both type and spell really
bad at times!
Daniel (14 September 2000)
- -p/--proxytunnel was added to 'curl'. It uses the new
CURLOPT_HTTPPROXYTUNNEL libcurl option that allows "any" protocol to tunnel
through the specified http proxy. At the moment, this should work with ftp.