Now the logic for handling name duplicates and picking the longest
expiry and strictest subdomain is the same for the callback as for when
reading from file.
Also strip trailing dots from the hostname added by the callback.
A minor side-effect is that the hostname provided by the callback can
now enable subdomains by starting the name with a dot, but we discourage
using such hostnames in documentation.
Amended test 1915 to verify.
Closes#21201
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 remain some false positives, hits in test data, and `dir` use,
around 100 issues in total.
There is no plan to enforce badwords on tests.
Also:
- badwords.txt: let a few `manpage[s]` occurrences through
(in Perl code).
Closes#19541
Only actually needed servers should be listed and none is then implied
if no servers are listed.
Outputs a warning if "none" is still set as a server.
Closes#18466
This allows testing Y2038 with system time set to after that, so that
actual Y2038 issues can be exposed, and not masked by expiry errors.
Fixes#11576Closes#11610
When setting a blank expire string, meaning unlimited, curl would pass
TIME_T_MAX to getime_r() when creating the output, while on 64 bit
systems such a large value cannot be convetered to a tm struct making
curl to exit the loop with an error instead. It can't be converted
because the year it would represent doesn't fit in the 'int tm_year'
field!
Starting now, unlimited expiry is instead handled differently by using a
human readable expiry date spelled out as "unlimited" instead of trying
to use a distant actual date.
Test 1660 and 1915 have been updated to help verify this change.
Reported-by: Jonathan Cardoso
Fixes#7720Closes#7721