All CR and LF bytes should be stripped, as documented, and all other
bytes are inluded in the data. Starting now, it also excludes null bytes
as they would otherwise also cut the data short.
Reported-by: Simon K
Fixes#13063Closes#13064
https://best.openssf.org/Compiler-Hardening-Guides/Compiler-Options-Hardening-Guide-for-C-and-C++.html
as of 2023-11-29 [1].
Enable new recommended warnings (except `-Wsign-conversion`):
- enable `-Wformat=2` for clang (in both cmake and autotools).
- add `CURL_PRINTF()` internal attribute and mark functions accepting
printf arguments with it. This is a copy of existing
`CURL_TEMP_PRINTF()` but using `__printf__` to make it compatible
with redefinting the `printf` symbol:
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-3.0.4/gcc_5.html#SEC94
- fix `CURL_PRINTF()` and existing `CURL_TEMP_PRINTF()` for
mingw-w64 and enable it on this platform.
- enable `-Wimplicit-fallthrough`.
- enable `-Wtrampolines`.
- add `-Wsign-conversion` commented with a FIXME.
- cmake: enable `-pedantic-errors` the way we do it with autotools.
Follow-up to d5c0351055#2747
- lib/curl_trc.h: use `CURL_FORMAT()`, this also fixes it to enable format
checks. Previously it was always disabled due to the internal `printf`
macro.
Fix them:
- fix bug where an `set_ipv6_v6only()` call was missed in builds with
`--disable-verbose` / `CURL_DISABLE_VERBOSE_STRINGS=ON`.
- add internal `FALLTHROUGH()` macro.
- replace obsolete fall-through comments with `FALLTHROUGH()`.
- fix fallthrough markups: Delete redundant ones (showing up as
warnings in most cases). Add missing ones. Fix indentation.
- silence `-Wformat-nonliteral` warnings with llvm/clang.
- fix one `-Wformat-nonliteral` warning.
- fix new `-Wformat` and `-Wformat-security` warnings.
- fix `CURL_FORMAT_SOCKET_T` value for mingw-w64. Also move its
definition to `lib/curl_setup.h` allowing use in `tests/server`.
- lib: fix two wrongly passed string arguments in log outputs.
Co-authored-by: Jay Satiro
- fix new `-Wformat` warnings on mingw-w64.
[1] 56c0fde389/docs/Compiler-Hardening-Guides/Compiler-Options-Hardening-Guide-for-C-and-C%2B%2B.mdCloses#12489
The open paren check wants to warn for spaces before open parenthesis
for if/while/for but also for any function call. In order to avoid
catching function pointer declarations, the logic allows a space if the
first character after the open parenthesis is an asterisk.
I also spotted what we did not include "switch" in the check but we should.
This check is a little lame, but we reduce this problem by not allowing
that space for if/while/for/switch.
Reported-by: Emanuele Torre
Closes#11044
- 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
The read callback can timeout if there's nothing to read within the
given maximum period. Example use case is when doing "curl -m 3
telnet://example.com" or anything else that expects input on stdin or
similar that otherwise would "hang" until something happens and then not
respect the timeout.
This fixes KNOWN_BUG 8.1, first filed in July 2009.
Bug: https://sourceforge.net/p/curl/bugs/846/Closes#9815
The two defines MAX_FILE2MEMORY and MAX_FILE2STRING define the largest
strings accepted when loading files into memory, but as the size is
later used as input to functions that take the size as 'int' as
argument, the sizes must not be larger than INT_MAX.
These two new assert()s make the code error out if someone would bump
the sizes without this consideration.
Reported-by Trail of Bits
Closes#9719
Replace bit mask protocol sets by null-terminated arrays of protocol
tokens. These are the addresses of the protocol names returned by
curl_version_info().
Protocol names are sorted case-insensitively before output to satisfy CI
tests matches consistency.
The protocol list returned by curl_version_info() is augmented with all
RTMP protocol variants.
Test 1401 adjusted for new alpha ordered output.
Closes#9546
As they are now rejected by the library, take care of not passing
disabled protocol names to CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS_STR and
CURLOPT_REDIR_PROTOCOLS_STR.
Rather than using the CURLPROTO_* constants, dynamically assign protocol
numbers based on the order they are listed by curl_version_info().
New type proto_set_t implements prototype bit masks: it should therefore
be large enough to accomodate all library-enabled protocols. If not,
protocol numbers beyond the bit count of proto_set_t are recognized but
"inaccessible": when used, a warning is displayed and the value is
ignored. Should proto_set_t overflows, enabled protocols are reordered to
force those having a public CURLPROTO_* representation to be accessible.
Code has been added to subordinate RTMP?* protocols to the presence of
RTMP in the enabled protocol list, being returned by curl_version_info()
or not.
Regression since 9e5669f.
Make sure the "cleaning" of command line arguments is done on the
original argv[] pointers. As a bonus, it also exits better on out of
memory error.
Reported-by: Litter White
Fixes#9128Closes#9130
... as replacements for deprecated CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS and
CURLOPT_REDIR_PROTOCOLS as these new ones do not risk running into the
32 bit limit the old ones are facing.
CURLINFO_PROTCOOL is now deprecated.
The curl tool is updated to use the new options.
Added test 1597 to verify the libcurl protocol parser.
Closes#8992
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
This loop was using the number of bytes read from the file as condition
to keep reading.
From Linux's fread(3) man page:
> On success, fread() and fwrite() return the number of items read or
> written. This number equals the number of bytes transferred only when
> size is 1. If an error occurs, or the end of the file is reached, the
> return value is a short item count (or zero).
>
> The file position indicator for the stream is advanced by the number
> of bytes successfully read or written.
>
> fread() does not distinguish between end-of-file and error, and
> callers must use feof(3) and ferror(3) to determine which occurred.
This means that nread!=0 doesn't make much sense as an end condition for
the loop: nread==0 doesn't necessarily mean that EOF has been reached or
an error has occured (but that is usually the case) and nread!=0 doesn't
necessarily mean that EOF has not been reached or that no read errors
have occured. feof(3) and ferror(3) should be uses when using fread(3).
Currently curl has to performs an extra fread(3) call to get a return
value equal to 0 to stop looping.
This usually "works" (even though nread==0 shouldn't be interpreted as
EOF) if stdin is a pipe because EOF usually marks the "real" end of the
stream, so the extra fread(3) call will return immediately and the extra
read syscall won't be noticeable:
bash-5.1$ strace -e read curl -s -F file=@- 0x0.st <<< a 2>&1 |
> tail -n 5
read(0, "a\n", 4096) = 2
read(0, "", 4096) = 0
read(0, "", 4096) = 0
http://0x0.st/oRs.txt
+++ exited with 0 +++
bash-5.1$
But this doesn't work if curl is reading from stdin, stdin is a
terminal, and the EOF is being emulated using a shell with ^D. Two
consecutive ^D will be required in this case to actually make curl stop
reading:
bash-5.1$ curl -F file=@- 0x0.st
a
^D^D
http://0x0.st/oRs.txt
bash-5.1$
A possible workaround to this issue is to use a program that handles EOF
correctly to indirectly send data to curl's stdin:
bash-5.1$ cat - | curl -F file=@- 0x0.st
a
^D
http://0x0.st/oRs.txt
bash-5.1$
This patch makes curl handle EOF properly when using fread(3) in
file2memory() so that the workaround is not necessary.
Since curl was previously ignoring read errors caused by this fread(3),
ferror(3) is also used in the condition of the loop: read errors and EOF
will have the same meaning; this is done to somewhat preserve the old
behaviour instead of making the command fail when a read error occurs.
Closes#8701
Adds these test cases:
383 - simple single command line option
384 - reading it from stdin
385 - getting two --json options on command line
386 - --next works after --json
Closes#8314
The homedir() function is now renamed into findfile() and iterates over
all the environment variables trying to access the file in question
until it finds it. Last resort is then getpwuid() if
available. Previously it would first try to find a home directory and if
that was set, insist on checking only that directory for the file. This
now returns the full file name it finds.
The Windows specific checks are now done differently too and in this
order:
1 - %USERPROFILE%
2 - %APPDATA%
3 - %USERPROFILE%\\Application Data
The windows order is modified to match how the Windows 10 ssh tool works
when it searches for .ssh/known_hosts.
Reported-by: jeffrson on github
Co-authored-by: Jay Satiro
Fixes#8033Closes#8035
In particular, these ones can help a user to create its own error
message when one or transfers fail.
writeout: add 'onerror', 'url', 'urlnum', 'exitcode', 'errormsg'
onerror - lets a user only show the rest on non-zero exit codes
url - the input URL used for this transfer
urlnum - the numerical URL counter (0 indexed) for this transfer
exitcode - the numerical exit code for the transfer
errormsg - obvious
Reported-by: Earnestly on github
Fixes#6199Closes#6207
This option sets the (octal) mode to use for the remote file when one is
created, using the SFTP, SCP or FILE protocols. When not set, the
default is 0644.
Closes#6244
... to use the maximum value for 'size_t' when detecting integer overflow.
Changed the limit to max/4 as already that seems unreasonably large.
Codacy didn't like the previous approach.
Closes#5683
Previously it would end up with an uninitialized memory buffer that
would lead to a crash or junk getting output.
Added test 1271 to verify.
Reported-by: Brian Carpenter
Closes#4786
Change series of error outputs to use errorf().
Only errors that are due to mistakes in command line option usage should
use helpf(), other types of errors in the tool should rather use
errorf().
Closes#4691
... to avoid integer overflows later when multiplying with 1000 to
convert seconds to milliseconds.
Added test 1269 to verify.
Reported-by: Jason Lee
Closes#4166
- Get rid of variable that was generating false positive warning
(unitialized)
- Fix issues in tests
- Reduce scope of several variables all over
etc
Closes#2631
... previously it would store a return value even when it returned
error, which could make the value get used anyway!
Reported-by: Brian Carpenter
Closes#1893
The fix for this in 8661a0aacc wasn't
complete: if the parsed number in num is larger than will fit in a long,
the conversion is undefined behaviour (causing test1427 to fail for me
on IA32 with GCC 7.1, although it passes on AMD64 and ARMv7). Getting
rid of the cast means the comparison will be done using doubles.
It might make more sense for the max argument to also be a double...
Fixes#1750Closes#1749
Make the number parser aware of the maximum limit curl accepts for a
value and return an error immediately if larger, instead of running an
integer overflow later.
Fixes#1730Closes#1736