src/transports/http.c


Log

Author Commit Date CI Message
Edward Thomson 9937967e 2021-08-29T21:29:14 Merge branch 'main' into http-use-eauth
Edward Thomson 28841241 2021-08-05T08:12:28 http: don't require a password Attempt authentication when a username is presented but a password is not; this can happen in particular when users are doing token authentication and specifying the token in the URL itself. For example, `https://token@host/` is a valid URI and should be treated as a username of `token` with an empty password.
Edward Thomson 4f5f1127 2020-11-22T00:01:09 transports: use GIT_ASSERT
Edward Thomson e316b0d3 2020-05-15T11:47:09 runtime: move init/shutdown into the "runtime" Provide a mechanism for system components to register for initialization and shutdown of the libgit2 runtime.
Josh Bleecher Snyder 216165ec 2020-02-07T10:06:28 transports: use GIT_EAUTH for authentication failures When the failure is clearly an auth failure (as opposed to possibly an auth failure), use the error code GIT_EAUTH instead of GIT_ERROR. While we're here, fix a typo and improve an error message. Fixes #5389.
Patrick Steinhardt 46228d86 2020-02-06T11:10:27 transports: http: fix custom headers not being applied In commit b9c5b15a7 (http: use the new httpclient, 2019-12-22), the HTTP code got refactored to extract a generic HTTP client that operates independently of the Git protocol. Part of refactoring was the creation of a new `git_http_request` struct that encapsulates the generation of requests. Our Git-specific HTTP transport was converted to use that in `generate_request`, but during the process we forgot to set up custom headers for the `git_http_request` and as a result we do not send out these headers anymore. Fix the issue by correctly setting up the request's custom headers and add a test to verify we correctly send them.
Edward Thomson 3f54ba8b 2020-01-18T13:51:40 credential: change git_cred to git_credential We avoid abbreviations where possible; rename git_cred to git_credential. In addition, we have standardized on a trailing `_t` for enum types, instead of using "type" in the name. So `git_credtype_t` has become `git_credential_t` and its members have become `GIT_CREDENTIAL` instead of `GIT_CREDTYPE`. Finally, the source and header files have been renamed to `credential` instead of `cred`. Keep previous name and values as deprecated, and include the new header files from the previous ones.
Edward Thomson e9cef7c4 2020-01-11T23:53:45 http: introduce GIT_ERROR_HTTP Disambiguate between general network problems and HTTP problems in error codes.
Edward Thomson 29762e40 2020-01-01T16:14:37 httpclient: use defines for status codes
Edward Thomson 76fd406a 2019-12-26T16:37:01 http: send probe packets When we're authenticating with a connection-based authentication scheme (NTLM, Negotiate), we need to make sure that we're still connected between the initial GET where we did the authentication and the POST that we're about to send. Our keep-alive session may have not kept alive, but more likely, some servers do not authenticate the entire keep-alive connection and may have "forgotten" that we were authenticated, namely Apache and nginx. Send a "probe" packet, that is an HTTP POST request to the upload-pack or receive-pack endpoint, that consists of an empty git pkt ("0000"). If we're authenticated, we'll get a 200 back. If we're not, we'll get a 401 back, and then we'll resend that probe packet with the first step of our authentication (asking to start authentication with the given scheme). We expect _yet another_ 401 back, with the authentication challenge. Finally, we will send our authentication response with the actual POST data. This will allow us to authenticate without draining the POST data in the initial request that gets us a 401.
Edward Thomson b9c5b15a 2019-12-22T14:12:24 http: use the new httpclient Untangle the notion of the http transport from the actual http implementation. The http transport now uses the httpclient.
Edward Thomson 7372573b 2019-10-25T12:22:10 httpclient: support expect/continue Allow users to opt-in to expect/continue handling when sending a POST and we're authenticated with a "connection-based" authentication mechanism like NTLM or Negotiate. If the response is a 100, return to the caller (to allow them to post their body). If the response is *not* a 100, buffer the response for the caller. HTTP expect/continue is generally safe, but some legacy servers have not implemented it correctly. Require it to be opt-in.
Edward Thomson 471daeea 2019-12-01T14:00:49 net: refactor gitno redirect handling Move the redirect handling into `git_net_url` for consistency.
Edward Thomson 917ba762 2020-01-18T14:14:00 auth: update enum type name for consistency libgit2 does not use `type_t` suffixes as it's redundant; thus, rename `git_http_authtype_t` to `git_http_auth_t` for consistency.
Josh Bleecher Snyder 05c1fb8a 2019-12-06T11:04:40 http: avoid generating double slashes in url Prior to this change, given a remote url with a trailing slash, such as http://localhost/a/, service requests would contain a double slash: http://localhost/a//info/refs?service=git-receive-pack. Detect and prevent that. Updates #5321
Etienne Samson 8bf0f7eb 2019-09-09T13:00:27 cred: separate public interface from low-level details
Edward Thomson 39028eb6 2019-09-09T13:00:53 Merge pull request #5212 from libgit2/ethomson/creds_for_scheme Use an HTTP scheme that supports the given credentials
Ian Hattendorf 4de51f9e 2019-08-23T16:05:28 http: ensure the scheme supports the credentials When a server responds with multiple scheme support - for example, Negotiate and NTLM are commonly used together - we need to ensure that we choose a scheme that supports the credentials.
Patrick Steinhardt c2dd895a 2019-08-08T10:47:29 transports: http: check for memory allocation failures When allocating a chunk that is used to write to HTTP streams, we do not check for memory allocation errors. This may lead us to write to a `NULL` pointer and thus cause a segfault. Fix this by adding a call to `GIT_ERROR_CHECK_ALLOC`.
Edward Thomson 1c847169 2019-08-21T16:38:59 http: allow dummy negotiation scheme to fail to act The dummy negotiation scheme is used for known authentication strategies that do not wish to act. For example, when a server requests the "Negotiate" scheme but libgit2 is not built with Negotiate support, and will use the "dummy" strategy which will simply not act. Instead of setting `out` to NULL and returning a successful code, return `GIT_PASSTHROUGH` to indicate that it did not act and catch that error code.
Edward Thomson 0b5ba0d7 2019-06-06T16:36:23 Rename opt init functions to `options_init` In libgit2 nomenclature, when we need to verb a direct object, we name a function `git_directobject_verb`. Thus, if we need to init an options structure named `git_foo_options`, then the name of the function that does that should be `git_foo_options_init`. The previous names of `git_foo_init_options` is close - it _sounds_ as if it's initializing the options of a `foo`, but in fact `git_foo_options` is its own noun that should be respected. Deprecate the old names; they'll now call directly to the new ones.
Edward Thomson 7ea8630e 2019-04-07T20:11:59 http: free auth context on failure When we send HTTP credentials but the server rejects them, tear down the authentication context so that we can start fresh. To maintain this state, additionally move all of the authentication handling into `on_auth_required`.
Edward Thomson 005b5bc2 2019-04-07T17:55:23 http: reconnect to proxy on connection close When we're issuing a CONNECT to a proxy, we expect to keep-alive to the proxy. However, during authentication negotiations, the proxy may close the connection. Reconnect if the server closes the connection.
Edward Thomson d171fbee 2019-04-07T17:40:23 http: allow server to drop a keepalive connection When we have a keep-alive connection to the server, that server may legally drop the connection for any reason once a successful request and response has occurred. It's common for servers to drop the connection after some amount of time or number of requests have occurred.
Edward Thomson 9af1de5b 2019-03-24T20:49:57 http: stop on server EOF We stop the read loop when we have read all the data. We should also consider the server's feelings. If the server hangs up on us, we need to stop our read loop. Otherwise, we'll try to read from the server - and fail - ad infinitum.
Edward Thomson 539e6293 2019-03-22T19:06:46 http: teach auth mechanisms about connection affinity Instead of using `is_complete` to decide whether we have connection or request affinity for authentication mechanisms, set a boolean on the mechanism definition itself.
Edward Thomson 3e0b4b43 2019-03-22T18:52:03 http: maintain authentication across connections For request-based authentication mechanisms (Basic, Digest) we should keep the authentication context alive across socket connections, since the authentication headers must be transmitted with every request. However, we should continue to remove authentication contexts for mechanisms with connection affinity (NTLM, Negotiate) since we need to reauthenticate for every socket connection.
Edward Thomson ce72ae95 2019-03-22T10:53:30 http: simplify authentication mechanisms Hold an individual authentication context instead of trying to maintain all the contexts; we can select the preferred context during the initial negotiation. Subsequent authentication steps will re-use the chosen authentication (until such time as it's rejected) instead of trying to manage multiple contexts when all but one will never be used (since we can only authenticate with a single mechanism at a time.) Also, when we're given a 401 or 407 in the middle of challenge/response handling, short-circuit immediately without incrementing the retry count. The multi-step authentication is expected, and not a "retry" and should not be penalized as such. This means that we don't need to keep the contexts around and ensures that we do not unnecessarily fail for too many retries when we have challenge/response auth on a proxy and a server and potentially redirects in play as well.
Edward Thomson 6d931ba7 2019-03-22T16:35:59 http: don't set the header in the auth token
Edward Thomson 10718526 2019-03-09T13:53:16 http: don't reset replay count after connection A "connection" to a server is transient, and we may reconnect to a server in the midst of authentication failures (if the remote indicates that we should, via `Connection: close`) or in a redirect.
Edward Thomson 3192e3c9 2019-03-07T16:57:11 http: provide an NTLM authentication provider
Edward Thomson 79fc8281 2019-03-21T16:49:25 http: validate server's authentication types Ensure that the server supports the particular credential type that we're specifying. Previously we considered credential types as an input to an auth mechanism - since the HTTP transport only supported default credentials (via negotiate) and username/password credentials (via basic), this worked. However, if we are to add another mechanism that uses username/password credentials, we'll need to be careful to identify the types that are accepted.
Edward Thomson 5ad99210 2019-03-07T16:43:45 http: consume body on proxy auth failure We must always consume the full parser body if we're going to keep-alive. So in the authentication failure case, continue advancing the http message parser until it's complete, then we can retry the connection. Not doing so would mean that we have to tear the connection down and start over. Advancing through fully (even though we don't use the data) will ensure that we can retry a connection with keep-alive.
Edward Thomson 75b20458 2019-03-07T16:34:55 http: always consume body on auth failure When we get an authentication failure, we must consume the entire body of the response. If we only read half of the body (on the assumption that we can ignore the rest) then we will never complete the parsing of the message. This means that we will never set the complete flag, and our replay must actually tear down the connection and try again. This is particularly problematic for stateful authentication mechanisms (SPNEGO, NTLM) that require that we keep the connection alive. Note that the prior code is only a problem when the 401 that we are parsing is too large to be read in a single chunked read from the http parser. But now we will continue to invoke the http parser until we've got a complete message in the authentication failed scenario. Note that we need not do anything with the message, so when we get an authentication failed, we'll stop adding data to our buffer, we'll simply loop in the parser and let it advance its internal state.
Edward Thomson e87f912b 2019-03-21T15:29:52 http: don't realloc the request
Edward Thomson 9050c69c 2019-03-09T17:24:16 http: examine keepalive status at message end We cannot examine the keep-alive status of the http parser in `http_connect`; it's too late and the critical information about whether keep-alive is supported has been destroyed. Per the documentation for `http_should_keep_alive`: > If http_should_keep_alive() in the on_headers_complete or > on_message_complete callback returns 0, then this should be > the last message on the connection. Query then and set the state.
Edward Thomson 956ba48b 2019-03-14T10:36:40 http: increase the replay count Increase the permissible replay count; with multiple-step authentication schemes (NTLM, Negotiate), proxy authentication and redirects, we need to be mindful of the number of steps it takes to get connected. 7 seems high but can be exhausted quickly with just a single authentication failure over a redirected multi-state authentication pipeline.
Edward Thomson ee3d35cf 2019-04-07T19:15:21 http: support https for proxies
Edward Thomson c6ab183e 2019-03-11T11:43:08 net: rename gitno_connection_data to git_net_url "Connection data" is an imprecise and largely incorrect name; these structures are actually parsed URLs. Provide a parser that takes a URL string and produces a URL structure (if it is valid). Separate the HTTP redirect handling logic from URL parsing, keeping a `gitno_connection_data_handle_redirect` whose only job is redirect handling logic and does not parse URLs itself.
Etienne Samson b51789ac 2019-04-16T13:20:08 transports: make use of the `GIT_CONTAINER_OF` macro
Patrick Steinhardt 5265b31c 2019-01-23T15:00:20 streams: fix callers potentially only writing partial data Similar to the write(3) function, implementations of `git_stream_write` do not guarantee that all bytes are written. Instead, they return the number of bytes that actually have been written, which may be smaller than the total number of bytes. Furthermore, due to an interface design issue, we cannot ever write more than `SSIZE_MAX` bytes at once, as otherwise we cannot represent the number of bytes written to the caller. Unfortunately, no caller of `git_stream_write` ever checks the return value, except to verify that no error occurred. Due to this, they are susceptible to the case where only partial data has been written. Fix this by introducing a new function `git_stream__write_full`. In contrast to `git_stream_write`, it will always return either success or failure, without returning the number of bytes written. Thus, it is able to write all `SIZE_MAX` bytes and loop around `git_stream_write` until all data has been written. Adjust all callers except the BIO callbacks in our mbedtls and OpenSSL streams, which already do the right thing and require the amount of bytes written.
Edward Thomson f673e232 2018-12-27T13:47:34 git_error: use new names in internal APIs and usage Move to the `git_error` name in the internal API for error-related functions.
Jason Haslam 35d86c77 2019-01-14T10:14:36 proxy: fix crash on remote connection with GIT_PROXY_AUTO but no proxy is detected
Edward Thomson 30ac46aa 2018-11-28T10:12:43 http: reset replay_count upon connection Reset the replay_count upon a successful connection. It's possible that we could encounter a situation where we connect successfully but need to replay a request - for example, a connection and initial request succeeds without authentication but a subsequent call does require authentication. Reset the replay count upon any successful request to afford subsequent replays room to manuever.
Edward Thomson 52478d7d 2018-11-18T19:54:49 http: don't allow SSL connections to a proxy Temporarily disallow SSL connections to a proxy until we can understand the valgrind warnings when tunneling OpenSSL over OpenSSL.
Edward Thomson 41f620d9 2018-11-18T19:10:50 http: only load proxy configuration during connection Only load the proxy configuration during connection; we need this data when we're going to connect to the server, however we may mutate it after connection (connecting through a CONNECT proxy means that we should send requests like normal). If we reload the proxy configuration but do not actually reconnect (because we're in a keep-alive session) then we will reload the proxy configuration that we should have mutated. Thus, only load the proxy configuration when we know that we're going to reconnect.
Edward Thomson 0467606f 2018-11-18T11:00:11 http: disallow repeated headers from servers Don't allow servers to send us multiple Content-Type, Content-Length or Location headers.
Edward Thomson 21142c5a 2018-10-29T10:04:48 http: remove cURL We previously used cURL to support HTTP proxies. Now that we've added this support natively, we can remove the curl dependency.
Edward Thomson 5d4e1e04 2018-10-28T21:27:56 http: use CONNECT to talk to proxies Natively support HTTPS connections through proxies by speaking CONNECT to the proxy and then adding a TLS connection on top of the socket.
Edward Thomson 43b592ac 2018-10-25T08:49:01 tls: introduce a wrap function Introduce `git_tls_stream_wrap` which will take an existing `stream` with an already connected socket and begin speaking TLS on top of it. This is useful if you've built a connection to a proxy server and you wish to begin CONNECT over it to tunnel a TLS connection. Also update the pluggable TLS stream layer so that it can accept a registration structure that provides an `init` and `wrap` function, instead of a single initialization function.
Edward Thomson b2ed778a 2018-11-18T22:20:10 http transport: reset error message on cert failure Store the error message from the underlying TLS library before calling the certificate callback. If it refuses to act (demonstrated by returning GIT_PASSTHROUGH) then restore the error message. Otherwise, if the callback does not set an error message, set a sensible default that implicates the callback itself.
Edward Thomson 2ce2315c 2018-10-22T17:33:45 http transport: support cert check for proxies Refactor certificate checking so that it can easily be called for proxies or the remote server.
Edward Thomson 74c6e08e 2018-10-22T14:56:53 http transport: provide proxy credentials
Edward Thomson 496da38c 2018-10-22T12:48:45 http transport: refactor storage Create a simple data structure that contains information about the server being connected to, whether that's the actual remote endpoint (git server) or an intermediate proxy. This allows for organization of streams, authentication state, etc.
Edward Thomson 6af8572c 2018-10-22T11:29:01 http transport: cap number of authentication replays Put a limit on the number of authentication replays in the HTTP transport. Standardize on 7 replays for authentication or redirects, which matches the behavior of the WinHTTP transport.
Edward Thomson 22654812 2018-10-22T11:24:05 http transport: prompt for proxy credentials Teach the HTTP transport how to prompt for proxy credentials.
Edward Thomson 0328eef6 2018-10-22T11:14:06 http transport: further refactor credential handling Prepare credential handling to understand both git server and proxy server authentication.
Edward Thomson 32cb56ce 2018-10-22T10:16:54 http transport: refactor credential handling Factor credential handling into its own function. Additionally, add safety checks to ensure that we are in a valid state - that we have received a valid challenge from the server and that we have configuration to respond to that challenge.
Edward Thomson e6e399ab 2018-10-22T09:49:54 http transport: use HTTP proxies when requested The HTTP transport should understand how to apply proxies when configured with `GIT_PROXY_SPECIFIED` and `GIT_PROXY_SPECIFIED`. When a proxy is configured, the HTTP transport will now connect to the proxy (instead of directly to the git server), and will request the properly-formed URL of the git server endpoint.
Edward Thomson e6f1931a 2018-10-22T00:09:24 http: rename http subtransport's `io` to `gitserver_stream` Rename `http_subtransport->io` to `http_subtransport->gitserver_stream` to clarify its use, especially as we might have additional streams (eg for a proxy) in the future.
Edward Thomson c07ff4cb 2018-10-21T14:17:06 http: rename `connection_data` -> `gitserver_data` Rename the `connection_data` struct member to `gitserver_data`, to disambiguate future `connection_data`s that apply to the proxy, not the final server endpoint.
Edward Thomson ed72465e 2018-10-13T19:16:54 proxy: propagate proxy configuration errors
Patrick Steinhardt c97d302d 2018-11-28T13:45:41 Merge pull request #4879 from libgit2/ethomson/defer_cert_cred_cb Allow certificate and credential callbacks to decline to act
Edward Thomson a2e6e0ea 2018-11-06T14:15:43 transport: allow cred/cert callbacks to return GIT_PASSTHROUGH Allow credential and certificate checking callbacks to return GIT_PASSTHROUGH, indicating that they do not want to act. Introduce this to support in both the http and ssh callbacks. Additionally, enable the same mechanism for certificate validation. This is most useful to disambiguate any meaning in the publicly exposed credential and certificate functions (`git_transport_smart_credentials` and `git_transport_smart_certificate_check`) but it may be more generally useful for callers to be able to defer back to libgit2.
Rick Altherr 83b35181 2018-10-19T10:54:38 transport/http: Include non-default ports in Host header When the port is omitted, the server assumes the default port for the service is used (see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Host). In cases where the client provided a non-default port, it should be passed along. This hasn't been an issue so far as the git protocol doesn't include server-generated URIs. I encountered this when implementing Rust registry support for Sonatype Nexus. Rust's registry uses a git repository for the package index. Clients look at a file in the root of the package index to find the base URL for downloading the packages. Sonatype Nexus looks at the incoming HTTP request (Host header and URL) to determine the client-facing URL base as it may be running behind a load balancer or reverse proxy. This client-facing URL base is then used to construct the package download base URL. When libgit2 fetches the index from Nexus on a non-default port, Nexus trusts the incorrect Host header and generates an incorrect package download base URL.
Carlos Martín Nieto 9b6e4081 2018-10-15T17:08:38 Merge commit 'afd10f0' (Follow 308 redirects)
Zander Brown afd10f0b 2018-10-13T09:31:20 Follow 308 redirects (as used by GitLab)
Anders Borum 475db39b 2018-10-06T12:58:06 ignore unsupported http authentication schemes auth_context_match returns 0 instead of -1 for unknown schemes to not fail in situations where some authentication schemes are supported and others are not. apply_credentials is adjusted to handle auth_context_match returning 0 without producing authentication context.
Etienne Samson 1c949ce1 2018-08-21T02:11:32 transport/http: do not return success if we failed to get a scheme Otherwise we return a NULL context, which will get dereferenced in apply_credentials.
Patrick Steinhardt ecf4f33a 2018-02-08T11:14:48 Convert usage of `git_buf_free` to new `git_buf_dispose`
Edward Thomson ee6be190 2018-01-31T08:36:19 http: standardize user-agent addition The winhttp and posix http each need to add the user-agent to their requests. Standardize on a single function to include this so that we do not get the version numbers we're sending out of sync. Assemble the complete user agent in `git_http__user_agent`, returning assembled strings. Co-authored-by: Patrick Steinhardt <ps@pks.im>
Etienne Samson e9369856 2017-03-21T00:25:15 stream: Gather streams to src/streams
Patrick Steinhardt 0c7f49dd 2017-06-30T13:39:01 Make sure to always include "common.h" first Next to including several files, our "common.h" header also declares various macros which are then used throughout the project. As such, we have to make sure to always include this file first in all implementation files. Otherwise, we might encounter problems or even silent behavioural differences due to macros or defines not being defined as they should be. So in fact, our header and implementation files should make sure to always include "common.h" first. This commit does so by establishing a common include pattern. Header files inside of "src" will now always include "common.h" as its first other file, separated by a newline from all the other includes to make it stand out as special. There are two cases for the implementation files. If they do have a matching header file, they will always include this one first, leading to "common.h" being transitively included as first file. If they do not have a matching header file, they instead include "common.h" as first file themselves. This fixes the outlined problems and will become our standard practice for header and source files inside of the "src/" from now on.
tyler wanek 39e76bb3 2017-01-27T16:05:20 Do not discard proxy_options that have been set when auto is specified
Carlos Martín Nieto a6d833a2 2017-01-13T17:05:58 Merge pull request #4049 from libgit2/ethomson/error_msgs giterr_set: consistent error messages
Etienne Samson 9a64e62f 2016-12-21T21:24:33 http: check certificate validity before clobbering the error variable
Edward Thomson 909d5494 2016-12-29T12:25:15 giterr_set: consistent error messages Error messages should be sentence fragments, and therefore: 1. Should not begin with a capital letter, 2. Should not conclude with punctuation, and 3. Should not end a sentence and begin a new one
Carlos Martín Nieto fafafb1f 2016-12-20T16:19:30 http: bump the pretend git version in the User-Agent We want to keep the git UA in order for services to recognise that we're a Git client and not a browser. But in order to stop dumb HTTP some services have blocked UAs that claim to be pre-1.6.6 git. Thread these needles by using the "git/2.0" prefix which is still close enough to git's yet distinct enough that you can tell it's us.
Patrick Steinhardt b1453601 2016-08-17T11:38:26 transports: http: reset `connected` flag when closing transport
Patrick Steinhardt c4cba4e9 2016-08-17T11:00:05 transports: http: reset `connected` flag when re-connecting transport When calling `http_connect` on a subtransport whose stream is already connected, we first close the stream in case no keep-alive is in use. When doing so, we do not reset the transport's connection state, though. Usually, this will do no harm in case the subsequent connect will succeed. But when the connection fails we are left with a substransport which is tagged as connected but which has no valid stream attached. Fix the issue by resetting the subtransport's connected-state when closing its stream in `http_connect`.
wildart bdec62dc 2016-07-06T13:06:25 remove conditions that prevent use of custom TLS stream
David Brooks 6c9eb86f 2016-06-19T11:46:43 HTTP authentication scheme name is case insensitive.
Carlos Martín Nieto 0d72f67f 2016-03-14T17:36:04 proxy: don't specify the protocol in the type We leave this up to the scheme in the url field. The type should only tell us about whether we want a proxy and whether we want to auto-detect it.
Carlos Martín Nieto b373e9a6 2015-09-21T22:38:50 net: use proxy options struct in the stream config
Carlos Martín Nieto 94bac76c 2015-10-02T03:46:34 http: use a custom user-agent if the user has set it We still prefix it with "git/1.0" since that's required in many situations, but we replace the area which mentions libgit2.
Matt Burke d7375662 2015-09-25T10:16:16 Copy custom_headers insteach of referencing the caller's copy
Matt Burke 35969c68 2015-09-10T08:58:23 Ignore NULL headers
Matt Burke 276f6aa0 2015-09-08T14:00:37 Hook up the custom_headers to the http transport
Matt Burke 24f5b4e1 2015-09-08T13:34:42 Drop extra_http_headers from git_remote
Matt Burke 59d6128e 2015-09-04T09:36:50 Allow the world to set HTTP headers for remotes
Matt Burke ac9b5127 2015-09-04T09:20:45 Pull extra_http_headers from the git_remote
Matt Burke 6af6e690 2015-09-04T09:18:32 Put the extra headers on the connection_data instead
Matt Burke c3733e56 2015-09-04T08:56:26 Add more headers to HTTP requests
Carlos Martín Nieto 11bca2d2 2015-08-15T18:15:23 http: propagate the credentials callback's error code When we ask for credentials, the user may choose to return EUSER to indicate that an error has happened on its end and it wants to be given back control. We must therefore pass that back to the user instead of mentioning that it was on_headers_complete() that returned an error code. Since we can, we return the exact error code from the user (other than PASSTHROUGH) since it doesn't cost anything, though using other error codes aren't recommended.
Anders Borum 31a76374 2015-07-29T22:23:00 case-insensitive check for WWW-Authenticate header Fixes issue #3338
Matthew Plough 768f8be3 2015-06-30T19:00:41 Fix #3094 - improve use of portable size_t/ssize_t format specifiers. The header src/cc-compat.h defines portable format specifiers PRIuZ, PRIdZ, and PRIxZ. The original report highlighted the need to use these specifiers in examples/network/fetch.c. For this commit, I checked all C source and header files not in deps/ and transitioned to the appropriate format specifier where appropriate.
Pierre-Olivier Latour 1630981e 2015-06-30T09:03:23 http: fixed leak when asking for credentials again t->cred might have been allocated the previous time and needs to be freed before asking caller for credentials again.
Carlos Martín Nieto 8b380060 2015-06-29T21:12:44 http: don't give up on auth on the first try When the server rejects an authentication request, ask the caller for the credentials again, instead of giving up on the first try.
Carlos Martín Nieto 8443f492 2015-06-11T16:57:04 curl: remove the encrypted param to the constructor We do not want libcurl to perform the TLS negotiation for us, so we don't need to pass this option.
Carlos Martín Nieto f97d5d09 2015-06-11T16:54:48 http: ask for the curl stream for non-encrypted connections The TLS streams talk over the curl stream themselves, so we don't need to ask for it explicitly. Do so in the case of the non-encrypted one so we can still make use proxies in that case.