For `GetLastError()` and `SECURITY_STATUS`:
0x-prefixed, 8-digit, lowercase, hex: 0x1234abcd
Also: say `GetLastError()` instead of `errno` in one message.
Closes#18877
- curlx_get_winapi_error: accept DWORD (was: int), move casts one level
up the callstack.
- sspi: bump some types to `SECURITY_STATUS` (int -> LONG).
- digest_sspi: drop unnecessary cast.
Closes#18868
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
Drop the interim macro `PRESERVE_WINDOWS_ERROR_CODE` and always preserve
error code for `_WIN32`. To make sure this is always done in
`curlx_winapi_strerror()`.
Follow-up to c74d3e10d2#17299Closes#17302
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
- 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
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
Use 'banfunc' and 'allowfunc' in .checksrc to specify which functions to
ban or allow to be used. This saves us from having to edit the script
going forward when we want to ban or allow specific functions.
This replaces a set of previous rules and all banned functions are now
checked with the BANNEDFUNC rule.
There is a set of default banned functions, shown by invoking
./checksrc.
Also, -a and -b options are added to specify allowed or banned functions
on the command line.
Closes#15835
Based on the standards and guidelines we use for our documentation.
- expand contractions (they're => they are etc)
- host name = > hostname
- file name => filename
- user name = username
- man page => manpage
- run-time => runtime
- set-up => setup
- back-end => backend
- a HTTP => an HTTP
- Two spaces after a period => one space after period
Closes#14073
A new error code to be used when an internal field grows too large, like
when a dynbuf reaches its maximum. Previously it would return
CURLE_OUT_OF_MEMORY for this, which is highly misleading.
Ref: #12268Closes#12269
Windows compilers define `_WIN32` automatically. Windows SDK headers
or build env defines `WIN32`, or we have to take care of it. The
agreement seems to be that `_WIN32` is the preferred practice here.
Make the source code rely on that to detect we're building for Windows.
Public `curl.h` was using `WIN32`, `__WIN32__` and `CURL_WIN32` for
Windows detection, next to the official `_WIN32`. After this patch it
only uses `_WIN32` for this. Also, make it stop defining `CURL_WIN32`.
There is a slight chance these break compatibility with Windows
compilers that fail to define `_WIN32`. I'm not aware of any obsolete
or modern compiler affected, but in case there is one, one possible
solution is to define this macro manually.
grepping for `WIN32` remains useful to discover Windows-specific code.
Also:
- extend `checksrc` to ensure we're not using `WIN32` anymore.
- apply minor formatting here and there.
- delete unnecessary checks for `!MSDOS` when `_WIN32` is present.
Co-authored-by: Jay Satiro
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stenberg
Closes#12376
- Add these revocation errors to sspi error list:
CRYPT_E_NO_REVOCATION_DLL, CRYPT_E_NO_REVOCATION_CHECK,
CRYPT_E_REVOCATION_OFFLINE and CRYPT_E_NOT_IN_REVOCATION_DATABASE.
Prior to this change those error codes were not matched to their macro
name and instead shown as "unknown error".
Before:
schannel: next InitializeSecurityContext failed:
Unknown error (0x80092013) - The revocation function was
unable to check revocation because the revocation server was offline.
After:
schannel: next InitializeSecurityContext failed:
CRYPT_E_REVOCATION_OFFLINE (0x80092013) - The revocation function was
unable to check revocation because the revocation server was offline.
Bug: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/12239
Reported-by: Niracler Li
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/12241
- they are mostly pointless in all major jurisdictions
- many big corporations and projects already don't use them
- saves us from pointless churn
- git keeps history for us
- the year range is kept in COPYING
checksrc is updated to allow non-year using copyright statements
Closes#10205
Add licensing and copyright information for all files in this repository. This
either happens in the file itself as a comment header or in the file
`.reuse/dep5`.
This commit also adds a Github workflow to check pull requests and adapts
copyright.pl to the changes.
Closes#8869
Adds two new error codes: CURLE_UNRECOVERABLE_POLL and
CURLM_UNRECOVERABLE_POLL one each for the easy and the multi interfaces.
Reported-by: Harry Sintonen
Fixes#8921Closes#8961
For consistency, use the same return code for URL malformats,
independently of what scheme that is used. Previously this would return
CURLE_LDAP_INVALID_URL, but starting now that error cannot be returned.
Closes#8170
The callbacks were partially documented to support this. Now the
behavior is documented and returning error from either of these
callbacks will effectively kill all currently ongoing transfers.
Added test 530 to verify
Reported-by: Marcelo Juchem
Fixes#8083Closes#8089
Previously, the return code CURLUE_MALFORMED_INPUT was used for almost
30 different URL format violations. This made it hard for users to
understand why a particular URL was not acceptable. Since the API cannot
point out a specific position within the URL for the problem, this now
instead introduces a number of additional and more fine-grained error
codes to allow the API to return more exactly in what "part" or section
of the URL a problem was detected.
Also bug-fixes curl_url_get() with CURLUPART_ZONEID, which previously
returned CURLUE_OK even if no zoneid existed.
Test cases in 1560 have been adjusted and extended. Tests 1538 and 1559
have been updated.
Updated libcurl-errors.3 and curl_url_strerror() accordingly.
Closes#8049
Add curl_url_strerror() to convert CURLUcode into readable string and
facilitate easier troubleshooting in programs using URL API.
Extend CURLUcode with CURLU_LAST for iteration in unit tests.
Update man pages with a mention of new function.
Update example code and tests with new functionality where it fits.
Closes#7605
We have and provide Curl_strerror() internally for a reason: strerror()
is not necessarily thread-safe so we should always try to avoid it.
Extended checksrc to warn for this, but feature the check disabled by
default and only enable it in lib/
Closes#7685
For options that pass in lists or strings that are subsequently parsed
and must be correct. This broadens the scope for the option previously
known as CURLE_TELNET_OPTION_SYNTAX but the old name is of course still
provided as a #define for existing applications.
Closes#7175
When a TLS server requests a client certificate during handshake and
none can be provided, libcurl now returns this new error code
CURLE_SSL_CLIENTCERT
Only supported by Secure Transport and OpenSSL for TLS 1.3 so far.
Closes#6721
On Windows an error number may be greater than INT_MAX and negative once
cast to int.
The assertion is checked only in debug builds.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/6504
- Change get_winapi_error() to return the error string in the local
codepage instead of UTF-8 encoding.
Two weeks ago bed5f84 fixed get_winapi_error() to work on xbox, but it
also changed the error string's encoding from local codepage to UTF-8.
We return the local codepage version of the error string because if it
is output to the user's terminal it will likely be with functions which
expect the local codepage (eg fprintf, failf, infof).
This is essentially a partial revert of bed5f84. The support for xbox
remains but the error string is reverted back to local codepage.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/6005
Reviewed-by: Marcel Raad
Closes#6065