Give ERRNO explanation in a failf() when unable to open a socket.
Helps in finding out what the issue preventing your curl to work
really is. Just had a wrong ulimit after a sys update.
Closes#19158
No callers of this function checked the return code, meaning failures
are not lethal == using failf was wrong, and it can just as well return
void.
Closes#19137
After this patch, the codebase no longer overrides system printf
functions. Instead it explicitly calls either the curl printf functions
`curl_m*printf()` or the system ones using their original names.
Also:
- drop unused `curl_printf.h` includes.
- checksrc: ban system printf functions, allow where necessary.
Follow-up to db98daab05#18844
Follow-up to 4deea9396b#18814Closes#18866
- creating a socket filter with NULL addrinfo fails with
CURLE_BAD_FUNCTION_ARGUMENT
- remove getsockname use before accept call, serves no purpose
and did not lead to proper error before
Reported-by: Joshua Rogers
Closes#18882
Also:
- tests/server: replace local `sstrerror()` with `curlx_strerror()`.
- tests/server: show the error code next to the string, where missing.
- curlx: use `curl_msnprintf()` when building for src and tests.
(units was already using it.)
- lib: drop unused includes found along the way.
- curlx_strerror(): avoid compiler warning (and another similar one):
```
In file included from servers.c:14:
../../lib/../../lib/curlx/strerr.c: In function ‘curlx_strerror’:
../../lib/../../lib/curlx/strerr.c:328:32: error: ‘snprintf’ output may be truncated before the last format character [-Werror=format-truncation=]
328 | SNPRINTF(buf, buflen, "%s", msg);
| ^
../../lib/../../lib/curlx/strerr.c:47:18: note: ‘snprintf’ output 1 or more bytes (assuming 2) into a destination of size 1
47 | #define SNPRINTF snprintf
| ^
../../lib/../../lib/curlx/strerr.c:328:7: note: in expansion of macro ‘SNPRINTF’
328 | SNPRINTF(buf, buflen, "%s", msg);
| ^~~~~~~~
```
Follow-up to 45438c8d6f#18823Closes#18840
- it's just too random who got mentioned
- we can't mention all, so better consistently mention none
- make sure they all are mentioned in THANKS
- also remove some unnecessary comment ramblings
Closes#18803
By checking the size of the actual buffer and using that as memcpy
target instead of another union member, this helps readers and static
code analyzers to determine that this is not a buffer overflow.
Ref: #18677Closes#18787
When attempts on all addresses have been started, do no longer set any
EXPIRE_HAPPY_EYEBALLS timeouts.
Fixes#18767
Reported-by: Johannes Schindelin
Closes#18768
This reverts commit df60e8fe70.
The "first byte" checkpoint is not strictly the first byte received, but
the sign of first traffic from the server, which a closed connection
also is.
Closes#18676
Before this patch `accept4()`, `socket()`, `socketpair()`, `send()` and
`recv()` system symbols were remapped via macros, using the same name,
to local curl debug wrappers. This patch replaces these overrides by
introducing curl-namespaced macros that map either to the system symbols
or to their curl debug wrappers in `CURLDEBUG` (TrackMemory) builds.
This follows a patch that implemented the same for `accept()`.
The old method required tricks to make these redefines work in unity
builds, and avoid them interfering with system headers. These tricks
did not work for system symbols implemented as macros.
The new method allows to setup these mappings once, without interfering
with system headers, upstream macros, or unity builds. It makes builds
more robust.
Also:
- checksrc: ban all mapped functions.
- docs/examples: tidy up checksrc rules.
Follow-up to 9863599d69#18502
Follow-up to 3bb5e58c10#17827Closes#18503
- update Microsoft documentation links.
(also drop language designator where present.)
- checksrc: allow longer than 78 character lines if they
contain a https URL. To make these links easier to use and parse.
- merge links that were split into two lines.
Closes#18626
To avoid overriding the system symbol `accept`, which is a macro on some
systems (AIX), and thus can't be called via the `(function)` PP trick.
It's also problematic to reset such macro to its original value.
Follow-up to 3bb5e58c10#17827
Reported-by: Andrew Kirillov
Fixes#18500Closes#18501Closes#18502
In WebAssembly, using `TCP_NODELAY` fails with:
```
* Could not set TCP_NODELAY: Protocol not available
```
Add a new feature macro in `curl_setup.h` telling whether `TCP_NODELAY`
is known to be supported at runtime, when defined at compile-time.
Keep `TCP_NODELAY` guards at their current positions to ensure the
necessary headers (e.g. `netinet/tcp.h` and `netinet/in.h`) define it.
Reported-by: Jeroen Ooms
Fixes#17974Closes#18155
`getsock()` calls operated on a global limit that could
not be configure beyond 16 sockets. This is no longer adequate
with the new happy eyeballing strategy.
Instead, do the following:
- make `struct easy_pollset` dynamic. Starting with
a minimal room for two sockets, the very common case,
allow it to grow on demand.
- replace all protocol handler getsock() calls with pollsets
and a CURLcode to return failures
- add CURLcode return for all connection filter `adjust_pollset()`
callbacks, since they too can now fail.
- use appropriately in multi.c and multi_ev.c
- fix unit2600 to trigger pollset growth
Closes#18164
Since the content varies during connection setup and while doing it
(eyeballing), remove these strcut from `connectdata` and replace use
with querying the connection filters. Those keep that information
already.
Change the info logging of established connections to also give the
local address and port.
Closes#17960
The `transport` to use for a transfer, e.g. TCP/QUIC/UNIX/UDP, is
initially selected by options and protocol used. This is set at the
`struct connectdata` as `transport` member.
During connection establishment, this transport may change due to
Alt-Svc or Happy-Eyeballing. Most common is the switch from TCP to QUIC.
Rename the connection member to `transport_wanted` and add a way to
query the connection for the transport in use via a new connection
filter query.
The filter query can also be used in the happy eyeballing attempts when
code needs to know which transport is used by the "filter below". This
happens in wolfssl initialization, as one example.
Closes#17923
Eliminating the socket readability check in the socket connection
filters for the 'data_pending' callback. Improves performance of
handling of transfers, up to ~30%, depending on parallelism and response
size.
Whatever `data_pending()` once was, its semantics are now:
"Is there anything buffered in the connection filters that needs
receive?"
Any checks of the socket's readability are done via `multi_wait()`
and friends.
Fix the one place in HTTP/1 proxy code that checked `data_pending()` and
did an early return if false. Remove that check and actually try to
receive data every time.
Closes#17785
Connection filters had a method `get_host()` which had not really been
documented. Since then, the cf had the `query()` method added. Replace
the separate get_host with query.
Add `CF_QUERY_HOST_PORT` as query to connection filters to retrieve
which remote hostname and port the filter (or its sub-filter) is talking
to. The query is implemented by HTTP and SOCKS filters, all others pass
it through.
Add `Curl_conn_get_current_host()` to retrieve the remote host and port
for a connection. During connect, this will return the host the
connection is talking to right now. Before/After connect, this will
return `conn->host.name`.
This is used by SASL authentication.
Closes#17419
Used to be a pointer set (and cleared) by the socket connection filters
to a struct in their contexts. Instead, add a filter query method to
obtain the pointer when needed.
Closes#17385
cfilter/conn: change send/recv function signatures. Unify the
calling/return conventions in our send/receive handling.
Curl_conn_recv(), adjust pnread type
Parameter `pnread` was a `ssize_t *`, but `size_t *` is better since the
function returns any error in its `CURLcode` return value.
Closes#17546
Move curlx_ functions into its own subdir.
The idea is to use the curlx_ prefix proper on these functions, and use
these same function names both in tool, lib and test suite source code.
Stop the previous special #define setup for curlx_ names.
The printf defines are now done for the library alone. Tests no longer
use the printf defines. The tool code sets its own defines. The printf
functions are not curlx, they are publicly available.
The strcase defines are not curlx_ functions and should not be used by
tool or server code.
dynbuf, warnless, base64, strparse, timeval, timediff are now proper
curlx functions.
When libcurl is built statically, the functions from the library can be
used as-is. The key is then that the functions must work as-is, without
having to be recompiled for use in tool/tests. This avoids symbol
collisions - when libcurl is built statically, we use those functions
directly when building the tool/tests. When libcurl is shared, we
build/link them separately for the tool/tests.
Assisted-by: Jay Satiro
Closes#17253
"asyn" is the internal name under which both c-ares and threaded
resolver operate. Make the naming more consistent. Implement the c-ares
resolver in `asyn-ares.*` and the threaded resolver in `asyn-thrdd.*`.
The common functions are in `asyn-base.c`.
When `CURLRES_ASYNCH` is defined, either of the two is used and
`data->state.async` exists. Members of that struct vary for the selected
implementation, but have the fields `hostname`, `port` and `ip_version`
always present. This are populated when the async resolving starts and
eliminate the need to pass them again when checking on the status and
processing the results of the resolving.
Add a `Curl_resolv_blocking()` to `hostip.h` that relieves FTP and SOCKS
from having to repeat the same code.
`Curl_resolv_check()` remains the function to check for status of
ongoing resolving. Now it also performs internally the check if the
needed DNS entry exists in the dnscache and if so, aborts the asnyc
operation. (libcurl right now does not check for duplicate resolve
attempts. an area for future improvements).
The number of functions in `asyn.h` has been reduced. There were subtle
difference in "cancel()" and "kill()" calls, both replaced by
`Curl_async_shutdown()` now. This changes behaviour for threaded
resolver insofar as the resolving thread is now always joined unless
`data->set.quick_exit` is set. Before this was only done on some code
paths. A future improvement would be a thread pool that keeps a limit
and also could handle joins more gracefully.
DoH, not previously tagged under "asny", has its struct `doh_probes` now
also in `data->state.async`, moved there from `data->req` because it
makes more sense. Further integration of DoH underneath the "asyn"
umbrella seems like a good idea.
Closes#16963
- cmake: disable test bundles for clang-tidy builds.
clang-tidy ignores #included .c sources, and incompatible with unity
and bundles. It caused clang-tidy ignoring all test sources. It also
means this is the first time tests sources are checked with
clang-tidy. (autotools doesn't run it on tests.)
- cmake: update description for `CURL_TEST_BUNDLES` option.
- fix tests using special `CURLE_*` enums that were missing from
`curl/curl.h`. Add them as reserved codes.
- fix about ~50 other issues detected by clang-tidy: unchecked results,
NULL derefs, memory leaks, casts to enums, unused assigments,
uninitialized `errno` uses, unchecked `open`, indent, and more.
- drop unnecessary casts (lib1533, lib3207).
- suppress a few impossible cases with detailed `NOLINT`s.
- lib/escape.c: drop `NOLINT` no longer necessary.
Follow-up to 72abf7c13a#13862 (possibly)
- extend two existing `NOLINT` comments with details.
Follow-up to fabfa8e402#15825Closes#16756
Before this patch, standard `E*` errno codes were redefined on Windows,
onto matching winsock2 `WSA*` error codes, which have different values.
This broke uses where using the `E*` value in non-socket context, or
other places expecting a POSIX `errno`, e.g. file I/O, threads, IDN or
interfacing with dependencies.
Fix it by introducing a curl-specific `SOCKE*` set of macros that map to
`WSA*` on Windows and standard POSIX codes on other platforms. Then
verify and update the code to use `SOCKE*` or `E*` macro depending on
context.
- Add `SOCKE*` macros that map to either winsock2 or POSIX error codes.
And use them with `SOCKERRNO` or in contexts requiring
platform-dependent socket error codes.
This fixes `E*` uses which were supposed be POSIX values, not `WSA*`
socket errors, on Windows:
- lib/curl_multibyte.c
- lib/curl_threads.c
- lib/idn.c
- lib/vtls/gtls.c
- lib/vtls/rustls.c
- src/tool_cb_wrt.c
- src/tool_dirhie.c
- Ban `E*` codes having a `SOCKE*` mapping, via checksrc.
Authored-by: Daniel Stenberg
- Add exceptions for `E*` codes used in file I/O, or other contexts
requiring POSIX error codes.
Also:
- ftp: fix missing `SOCKEACCES` mapping for Windows.
- add `SOCKENOMEM` for `Curl_getaddrinfo()` via `asyn-thread.c`.
- tests/server/sockfilt: fix to set `SOCKERRNO` in local `select()`
override on Windows.
- lib/inet_ntop: fix to return `WSAEINVAL` on Windows, where `ENOSPC` is
used on other platforms. To simulate Windows' built-in `inet_ntop()`,
as tested on a Win10 machine.
Note:
- WINE returns `STATUS_INVALID_PARAMETER` = `0xC000000D`.
- Microsoft documentation says it returns `WSA_INVALID_PARAMETER`
(= `ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER`) 87:
https://learn.microsoft.com/windows/win32/api/ws2tcpip/nf-ws2tcpip-inet_ntop#return-value
- lib/inet_ntop: drop redundant `CURL_SETERRNO(ENOSPC)`.
`inet_ntop4()` already sets it before returning `NULL`.
- replace stray `WSAEWOULDBLOCK` with `USE_WINSOCK` macro to detect
winsock2.
- move existing `SOCKE*` mappings from `tests/server` to
`curl_setup_once.h`.
- add missing `EINTR`, `EINVAL` constants for WinCE.
Follow-up to abf80aae38#16612
Follow-up to d69425ed7d#16615
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/16553#issuecomment-2704679377Closes#16621
The issues found fell into these categories, with the applied fixes:
- const was accidentally stripped.
Adjust code to not cast or cast with const.
- const/volatile missing from arguments, local variables.
Constify arguments or variables, adjust/delete casts. Small code
changes in a few places.
- const must be stripped because an API dependency requires it.
Strip `const` with `CURL_UNCONST()` macro to silence the warning out
of our control. These happen at API boundaries. Sometimes they depend
on dependency version, which this patch handles as necessary. Also
enable const support for the zlib API, using `ZLIB_CONST`. Supported
by zlib 1.2.5.2 and newer.
- const must be stripped because a curl API requires it.
Strip `const` with `CURL_UNCONST()` macro to silence the warning out
of our immediate control. For example we promise to send a non-const
argument to a callback, though the data is const internally.
- other cases where we may avoid const stripping by code changes.
Also silenced with `CURL_UNCONST()`.
- there are 3 places where `CURL_UNCONST()` is cast again to const.
To silence this type of warning:
```
lib/vquic/curl_osslq.c:1015:29: error: to be safe all intermediate
pointers in cast from 'unsigned char **' to 'const unsigned char **'
must be 'const' qualified [-Werror=cast-qual]
lib/cf-socket.c:734:32: error: to be safe all intermediate pointers in
cast from 'char **' to 'const char **' must be 'const' qualified
[-Werror=cast-qual]
```
There may be a better solution, but I couldn't find it.
These cases are handled in separate subcommits, but without further
markup.
If you see a `-Wcast-qual` warning in curl, we appreciate your report
about it.
Closes#16142
Rework the event based handling of transfers and connections to
be "localized" into a single source file with clearer dependencies.
- add multi_ev.c and multi_ev.h
- add docs/internal/MULTI-EV.md to explain the overall workings
- only do event handling book keeping when the socket callback
is set
- add handling for "connection only" event tracking, when internal
easy handles are used that are not really tied to a connection.
Used in connection pool.
- remove transfer member "last_poll" and connections "shutdown_poll"
and keep all that internal to multi_ev.c
- add CURL_TRC_M() for tracing of "multi" related things, including
event handling and connection pool operations. Add new trace
feature "multi" for trace config.
multi traces will show exactly what is going on in regard to
event handling.
- multi: trace transfers "mstate" in every CURL_TRC_M() call
- make internal trace buffer 2048 bytes and end the silliness
with +n here -m there. Adjust test 1652 expectations of resulting
length and input edge cases.
- add trace feature "lib-ids" to perfix libcurl traces with transfer
and connection ids. Useful for debugging libcurl applications.
Closes#16308
Make it possible to build curl for Windows CE using the CeGCC toolchain.
With both CMake and autotools, including tests and examples, also in CI.
The build configuration is the default one with Schannel enabled. No
3rd-party dependencies have been tested.
Also revive old code to make Schannel build with Windows CE, including
certificate verification.
Builds have been throughougly tested. But, I've made no functional tests
for this PR. Some parts (esp. file operations, like truncate and seek)
are stubbed out and likely broken as a result. Test servers build, but
they do not work on Windows CE. This patch substitutes `fstat()` calls
with `stat()`, which operate on filenames, not file handles. This may or
may not work and/or may not be secure.
About CeGCC: I used the latest available macOS binary build v0.59.1
r1397 from 2009, in native `mingw32ce` build mode. CeGCC is in effect
MinGW + GCC 4.4.0 + old/classic-mingw Windows headers. It targets
Windows CE v3.0 according to its `_WIN32_WCE` value. It means this PR
restores portions of old/classic-mingw support. It makes the Windows CE
codepath compatible with GCC 4.4.0. It also adds workaround for CMake,
which cannot identify and configure this toolchain out of the box.
Notes:
- CMake doesn't recognize CeGCC/mingw32ce, necessitating tricks as seen
with Amiga and MS-DOS.
- CMake doesn't set `MINGW` for mingw32ce. Set it and `MINGW32CE`
manually as a helper variable, in addition to `WINCE` which CMake sets
based on `CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME`.
- CMake fails to create an implib for `libcurl.dll`, due to not
recognizing the platform as a Windowsy one. This patch adds the
necessary workaround to make it work.
- headers shipping with CeGCC miss some things curl needs for Schannel
support. Fixed by restoring and renovating code previously deleted
old-mingw code.
- it's sometime non-trivial to figure out if a fallout is WinCE,
mingw32ce, old-mingw, or GCC version-specific.
- WinCE is always Unicode. With exceptions: no `wmain`,
`GetProcAddress()`.
- `_fileno()` is said to convert from `FILE *` to `void *` which is
a Win32 file `HANDLE`. (This patch doesn't use this, but with further
effort it probably could be.)
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3989545/how-do-i-get-the-file-handle-from-the-fopen-file-structure
- WinCE has no signals, current directory, stdio/CRT file handles, no
`_get_osfhandle()`, no `errno`, no `errno.h`. Some of this stuff is
standard C89, yet missing from this platform. Microsoft expects
Windows CE apps to use Win32 file API and `FILE *` exclusively.
- revived CeGCC here (not tested for this PR):
https://building.enlyze.com/posts/a-new-windows-ce-x86-compiler-in-2024/
On `UNDER_CE` vs. `_WIN32_WCE`: (This patch settled on `UNDER_CE`)
- A custom VS2008 WinCE toolchain does not set any of these.
The compiler binaries don't contain these strings, and has no compiler
option for targeting WinCE, hinting that a vanilla toolchain isn't
setting any of them either.
- `UNDER_CE` is automatically defined by the CeGCC compiler.
https://cegcc.sourceforge.net/docs/details.html
- `UNDER_CE` is similar to `_WIN32`, except it's not set automatically
by all compilers. It's not supposed to have any value, like a version.
(Though e.g. OpenSSL sets it to a version)
- `_WIN32_WCE` is the CE counterpart of the non-CE `_WIN32_WINNT` macro.
That does return the targeted Windows CE version.
- `_WIN32_WCE` is not defined by compilers, and relies on a header
setting it to a default, or the build to set it to the desired target
version. This is also how `_WIN32_WINNT` works.
- `_WIN32_WCE` default is set by `windef.h` in CeGCC.
- `_WIN32_WCE` isn't set to a default by MSVC Windows CE headers (the
ones I checked at least).
- CMake sets `_WIN32_WCE=<ver>`, `UNDER_CE`, `WINCE` for MSVC WinCE.
- `_WIN32_WCE` seems more popular in other projects, including CeGCC
itself. `zlib` is a notable exception amongst curl dependencies,
which uses `UNDER_CE`.
- Since `_WIN32_WCE` needs "certain" headers to have it defined, it's
undefined depending on headers included beforehand.
- `curl/curl.h` re-uses `_WIN32_WCE`'s as a self-guard, relying on
its not-(necessarily)-defined-by-default property:
25b445e479/include/curl/curl.h (L77)
Toolchain downloads:
- Windows:
https://downloads.sourceforge.net/cegcc/cegcc/0.59.1/cegcc_mingw32ce_cygwin1.7_r1399.tar.bz2
- macOS Intel:
https://downloads.sourceforge.net/cegcc/cegcc/0.59.1/cegcc_mingw32ce_snowleopard_r1397.tar.bz2Closes#15975
Remove `blocking` argument from cfilter's connect method.
Implement blocking behaviour in Curl_conn_connect() instead for all
filter chains.
Update filters implementations. Several of which did never use the
paramter (QUIC for example). Simplifies connect handling in TLS filters
that no longer need to loop
Fixed a blocking connect call in FTP when waiting on a socket accept()
which only worked because the filter did not implement it.
Closes#16397
Around 2.3x speed-up parsing many large hexadecimal numbers. The decimal and
octal parser get marginally faster.
Still very readable, compact and easy to follow code.
Tweaks
- combine the max and the overflow check, gains 3ns/num (use a separate
check outside of the loop instead for max < base)
- one less indirection in the pointer, gains 3ns/num
- using the table lookup for hex nums, gains 5ns/num
- unfold the num_digit() macro, gains 3s/num
- use the hexasciitable unconditionally, gains 2ns/num
- use post-increment pointer in the table lookup, gains 1ns/num
- improved valid_digit() using the table for the hex case,
gains 26 ns/num
- use "max char" in valid_digit(), gains 3ns/num
Behavior changes:
- no longer returns STRE_TOO_BIG - only STRE_OVERFLOW
- does not move the char ** on error, which is probably better
Updated and extended test 1664 (significantly).
Closes#16374
- add hex and octal parsers to the Curl_str_* family
- make curlx_strtoofft use these parsers
- remove all use of strtol() and strtoul() in library code
- generally use Curl_str_* more than strtoofft, for stricter parsing
- supports 64-bit universally, instead of 'long' which differs in size
between platforms
Extended the unit test 1664 to verify hex and octal parsing.
Closes#16336