To formalize they are now XML-compliant (with some asterisks.)
Also to help syntax highlighters work on them to make their content more
readable.
Also:
- Delete empty comment decorations.
- GHA/checksrc: simplify XML check.
- runtests: fail to load test data with XML prolog missing.
Follow-up to bfe6eb1c06#19927
Follow-up to 87ba80a6dfCloses#19946
There is no more mixed-newline file in the repository after this patch.
Except for`.bat` and `.sln` files (4 in total), all files use LF
newlines.
Also:
- `spacecheck.pl`: drop mixed-EOL exception for test data.
- runtests: add option `-w` to check if test data has stray CR bytes in
them.
- build: enable the option above in test targets, except the CI-specific
one where `spacecheck.pl` does this job already.
- tested OK (with expected failures) in CI with stray CRs added.
- cmake: enable option `-a` for the `tests` target. To continue testing
after a failed test.
Follow-up to 63e9721b63#19313
Follow-up to 6cf3d7b1b1#19318
Follow-up to 4d2a05d3fe#19284Closes#19347
- `reply/data*`, `verify/stdout`, `verify/stderr`, `verify/file*`,
`verify/proxy`:
- make `crlf="yes"` force CRLF to all lines, instead of just applying
to HTTP protocol headers.
- add support for `crlf="headers"` that only converts HTTP protocol
header lines to CRLF. (previously done via `crlf="yes"`.)
- use `crlf="headers"` where possible.
- `reply/connect*`:
- add support for `crlf="yes"` and `crlf="headers"`.
- use them where possible.
- `client/file*`, `client/stdin`:
- add support for `crlf="yes"`.
- use it where possible.
- `reply/data*`, `verify/protocol`:
- replace existing uses of `crlf="yes"` with `crlf="headers`" where it
does not change the result.
Reducing the number of `tests/data/test*`:
- CRLF newlines from 10295 to 1985. (119985 lines total)
- files with mixed newlines from 656 to 113. (1890 files total)
After this patch there remain 141 sections with mixed newlines, where
the mixing is not split between headers/non-headers. There is no obvious
pattern here. Some of the CRLF uses might be accidental, or
non-significant. They will be tackled in a future patch.
Follow-up to 6cf3d7b1b1#19318
Follow-up to 4d2a05d3fe#19284Closes#19313
To make special newlines more explicit and visible.
Mostly in `<protocol>` sections, some in `<data*>` and `<upload>`.
Reducing the number of `tests/data/test*`:
- CRLF newlines from 21535 to 11337.
- files with mixed newlines from 1335 to 707.
Also delete empty `<protocol>` sections.
Closes#19284
The threee tags `<name>`, `</name>` and `<command>` were frequently used
with a leading space that this removes. The reason this habbit is so
widespread in testcases is probably that they have been copy and pasted.
Hence, fixing them all now might curb this practice from now on.
Closes#12028
Make the built-in HTTP parser behave similar to hyper and reject any
HTTP response using more than 3 digits for the response code.
Updated test 1432 accordingly.
Enabled test 1432 in the hyper builds.
Closes#7641
missing CRs and modified %hostip
lib556/test556: use a real HTTP version to make test reuse more convenient
make sure the weekday in Date headers matches the date
test61: replace stray "^M" (5e 4d) at the end of a cookie with a '^M' (0d)
Gets the test working with external proxies like Privoxy again.
Closes#6463
Responses with status codes 1xx, 204 or 304 don't have a response body. For
these, don't parse these headers:
- Content-Encoding
- Content-Length
- Content-Range
- Last-Modified
- Transfer-Encoding
This change ensures that HTTP/2 upgrades work even if a
"Content-Length: 0" or a "Transfer-Encoding: chunked" header is present.
Co-authored-by: Daniel Stenberg
Closes#3702Fixes#3968Closes#3977
Added CURLOPT_HTTP09_ALLOWED and --http0.9 for this purpose.
For now, both the tool and library allow HTTP/0.9 by default.
docs/DEPRECATE.md lays out the plan for when to reverse that default: 6
months after the 7.64.0 release. The options are added already now so
that applications/scripts can start using them already now.
Fixes#2873Closes#3383
HTTP 1.1 is clearly specified to only allow three digit response codes,
and libcurl used sscanf("%3d") for that purpose. This made libcurl
support smaller numbers but not larger. It does now, but we will not
make any specific promises nor document this further since it is going
outside of what HTTP is.
Bug: http://curl.haxx.se/bug/view.cgi?id=1441
Reported-by: Balaji