Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Viktor Szakats
b5ea0736bb
tests/data: add XML prolog to test files
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 87ba80a6df

Closes #19946
2025-12-12 17:17:24 +01:00
Viktor Szakats
63e9721b63
tests: avoid hard-coded CRLFs in more sections
- `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 #19284

Closes #19313
2025-11-03 21:15:12 +01:00
Viktor Szakats
4d2a05d3fe
tests: use crlf=yes attribute more
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
2025-10-31 15:01:08 +01:00
Daniel Stenberg
3fd80c7b59
tests: remove leading spaces from some tags
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
2023-10-04 14:15:23 +02:00
Daniel Stenberg
e2b4df7b5e
tests: use %TESTNUMBER instead of fixed number
This makes the tests easier to copy and relocate to other test numbers
without having to update content.

Closes #6738
2021-03-19 15:57:21 +01:00
Daniel Stenberg
e6b21d422e
runtests: provide curl's version string as %VERSION for tests
... so that we can check HTTP requests for User-Agent: curl/%VERSION

Update 600+ test cases accordingly.

Closes #6037
2020-10-02 22:54:23 +02:00
Daniel Stenberg
974fa1242a Adjusted how libcurl treats HTTP 1.1 responses without content-lenth or
chunked encoding (that also lacks "Connection: close"). It now simply
assumes that the connection WILL be closed to signal the end, as that is how
RFC2616 section 4.4 point #5 says we should behave.
2007-06-25 13:58:14 +00:00
Dan Fandrich
33bea767eb Convert (most of) the test data files into genuine XML. A handful still
are not, due mainly to the lack of support for XML character entities
(e.g. & => &amp; ).  This will make it easier to validate test files using
tools like xmllint, as well as edit and view them using XML tools.
2007-01-23 02:25:56 +00:00
Daniel Stenberg
da58d03ff7 Venkat Akella found out that libcurl did not like HTTP responses that simply
responded with a single status line and no headers nor body. Starting now, a
HTTP response on a persistent connection (i.e not set to be closed after the
response has been taken care of) must have Content-Length or chunked
encoding set, or libcurl will simply assume that there is no body.

To my horror I learned that we had no less than 57(!) test cases that did bad
HTTP responses like this, and even the test http server (sws) responded badly
when queried by the test system if it is the test system. So although the
actual fix for the problem was tiny, going through all the newly failing test
cases got really painful and boring.
2006-11-25 13:32:04 +00:00