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
- 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
Create a set of routines for TLS key log file handling to enable reuse
with other TLS backends. Simplify the OpenSSL backend as follows:
- Drop the ENABLE_SSLKEYLOGFILE macro as it is unconditionally enabled.
- Do not perform dynamic memory allocation when preparing a log entry.
Unless the TLS specifications change we can suffice with a reasonable
fixed-size buffer.
- Simplify state tracking when SSL_CTX_set_keylog_callback is
unavailable. My original sslkeylog.c code included this tracking in
order to handle multiple calls to SSL_connect and detect new keys
after renegotiation (via SSL_read/SSL_write). For curl however we can
be sure that a single master secret eventually becomes available
after SSL_connect, so a simple flag is sufficient. An alternative to
the flag is examining SSL_state(), but this seems more complex and is
not pursued. Capturing keys after server renegotiation was already
unsupported in curl and remains unsupported.
Tested with curl built against OpenSSL 0.9.8zh, 1.0.2u, and 1.1.1f
(`SSLKEYLOGFILE=keys.txt curl -vkso /dev/null https://localhost:4433`)
against an OpenSSL 1.1.1f server configured with:
# Force non-TLSv1.3, use TLSv1.0 since 0.9.8 fails with 1.1 or 1.2
openssl s_server -www -tls1
# Likewise, but fail the server handshake.
openssl s_server -www -tls1 -Verify 2
# TLS 1.3 test. No need to test the failing server handshake.
openssl s_server -www -tls1_3
Verify that all secrets (1 for TLS 1.0, 4 for TLS 1.3) are correctly
written using Wireshark. For the first and third case, expect four
matches per connection (decrypted Server Finished, Client Finished, HTTP
Request, HTTP Response). For the second case where the handshake fails,
expect a decrypted Server Finished only.
tshark -i lo -pf tcp -otls.keylog_file:keys.txt -Tfields \
-eframe.number -eframe.time -etcp.stream -e_ws.col.Info \
-dtls.port==4433,http -ohttp.desegment_body:FALSE \
-Y 'tls.handshake.verify_data or http'
A single connection can easily be identified via the `tcp.stream` field.