curl_off_t
multi_socket
This project is split in two. The library and the client. The client part uses the library, but the library is designed to allow other applications to use it.
The largest amount of code and complexity is in the library part.
All changes to the sources are committed to the git repository as soon as they're somewhat verified to work. Changes shall be committed as independently as possible so that individual changes can be easily spotted and tracked afterwards.
Tagging shall be used extensively, and by the time we release new archives we should tag the sources with a name similar to the released version number.
We write curl and libcurl to compile with C89 compilers. On 32bit and up machines. Most of libcurl assumes more or less POSIX compliance but that's not a requirement.
We write libcurl to build and work with lots of third party tools, and we want it to remain functional and buildable with these and later versions (older versions may still work but is not what we work hard to maintain):
On systems where configure runs, we aim at working on them all - if they have a suitable C compiler. On systems that don't run configure, we strive to keep curl running correctly on:
When writing code (mostly for generating stuff included in release tarballs) we use a few "build tools" and we make sure that we remain functional with these versions:
There are a few differences in how to program curl the Unix way compared to the Windows way. Perhaps the four most notable details are:
In curl, this is solved with defines and macros, so that the source looks the same in all places except for the header file that defines them. The macros in use are sclose(), sread() and swrite().
That's taken care of by the curl_global_init()
call, but if other libs
also do it etc there might be reasons for applications to alter that
behaviour.
We avoid this by not trying any funny tricks on file descriptors.
We set stdout to binary under windows
Inside the source code, We make an effort to avoid #ifdef [Your OS]
. All
conditionals that deal with features should instead be in the format
#ifdef HAVE_THAT_WEIRD_FUNCTION
. Since Windows can't run configure scripts,
we maintain a curl_config-win32.h
file in lib directory that is supposed to
look exactly like a curl_config.h
file would have looked like on a Windows
machine!
Generally speaking: always remember that this will be compiled on dozens of operating systems. Don't walk on the edge!
(See Structs in libcurl for the separate section describing all major internal structs and their purposes.)
There are plenty of entry points to the library, namely each publicly defined
function that libcurl offers to applications. All of those functions are
rather small and easy-to-follow. All the ones prefixed with curl_easy
are
put in the lib/easy.c file.
curl_global_init()
and curl_global_cleanup()
should be called by the
application to initialize and clean up global stuff in the library. As of
today, it can handle the global SSL initing if SSL is enabled and it can init
the socket layer on windows machines. libcurl itself has no "global" scope.
All printf()-style functions use the supplied clones in lib/mprintf.c. This makes sure we stay absolutely platform independent.
curl_easy_init()
allocates an internal struct and makes some
initializations. The returned handle does not reveal internals. This is the
Curl_easy
struct which works as an "anchor" struct for all curl_easy
functions. All connections performed will get connect-specific data allocated
that should be used for things related to particular connections/requests.
curl_easy_setopt()
takes three arguments, where the option stuff must
be passed in pairs: the parameter-ID and the parameter-value. The list of
options is documented in the man page. This function mainly sets things in
the Curl_easy
struct.
curl_easy_perform()
is just a wrapper function that makes use of the multi
API. It basically calls curl_multi_init()
, curl_multi_add_handle()
,
curl_multi_wait()
, and curl_multi_perform()
until the transfer is done
and then returns.
Some of the most important key functions in url.c are called from multi.c when certain key steps are to be made in the transfer operation.
Analyzes the URL, it separates the different components and connects to the
remote host. This may involve using a proxy and/or using SSL. The
Curl_resolv()
function in lib/hostip.c is used for looking up host names
(it does then use the proper underlying method, which may vary between
platforms and builds).
When Curl_connect
is done, we are connected to the remote site. Then it
is time to tell the server to get a document/file. Curl_do()
arranges
this.
This function makes sure there's an allocated and initiated 'connectdata'
struct that is used for this particular connection only (although there may
be several requests performed on the same connect). A bunch of things are
inited/inherited from the Curl_easy
struct.
Curl_do()
makes sure the proper protocol-specific function is called. The
functions are named after the protocols they handle.
The protocol-specific functions of course deal with protocol-specific
negotiations and setup. They have access to the Curl_sendf()
(from
lib/sendf.c) function to send printf-style formatted data to the remote
host and when they're ready to make the actual file transfer they call the
Curl_Transfer()
function (in lib/transfer.c) to setup the transfer and
returns.
If this DO function fails and the connection is being re-used, libcurl will then close this connection, setup a new connection and re-issue the DO request on that. This is because there is no way to be perfectly sure that we have discovered a dead connection before the DO function and thus we might wrongly be re-using a connection that was closed by the remote peer.
Some time during the DO function, the Curl_setup_transfer()
function must
be called with some basic info about the upcoming transfer: what socket(s)
to read/write and the expected file transfer sizes (if known).
Called during the transfer of the actual protocol payload.
During transfer, the progress functions in lib/progress.c are called at frequent intervals (or at the user's choice, a specified callback might get called). The speedcheck functions in lib/speedcheck.c are also used to verify that the transfer is as fast as required.
Called after a transfer is done. This function takes care of everything
that has to be done after a transfer. This function attempts to leave
matters in a state so that Curl_do()
should be possible to call again on
the same connection (in a persistent connection case). It might also soon
be closed with Curl_disconnect()
.
When doing normal connections and transfers, no one ever tries to close any
connections so this is not normally called when curl_easy_perform()
is
used. This function is only used when we are certain that no more transfers
are going to be made on the connection. It can be also closed by force, or
it can be called to make sure that libcurl doesn't keep too many
connections alive at the same time.
This function cleans up all resources that are associated with a single connection.
HTTP offers a lot and is the protocol in curl that uses the most lines of code. There is a special file (lib/formdata.c) that offers all the multipart post functions.
base64-functions for user+password stuff (and more) is in (lib/base64.c) and all functions for parsing and sending cookies are found in (lib/cookie.c).
HTTPS uses in almost every case the same procedure as HTTP, with only two
exceptions: the connect procedure is different and the function used to read
or write from the socket is different, although the latter fact is hidden in
the source by the use of Curl_read()
for reading and Curl_write()
for
writing data to the remote server.
http_chunks.c
contains functions that understands HTTP 1.1 chunked transfer
encoding.
An interesting detail with the HTTP(S) request, is the Curl_add_buffer()
series of functions we use. They append data to one single buffer, and when
the building is finished the entire request is sent off in one single write. This is done this way to overcome problems with flawed firewalls and lame servers.
The Curl_if2ip()
function can be used for getting the IP number of a
specified network interface, and it resides in lib/if2ip.c.
Curl_ftpsendf()
is used for sending FTP commands to the remote server. It
was made a separate function to prevent us programmers from forgetting that
they must be CRLF terminated. They must also be sent in one single write() to
make firewalls and similar happy.
Kerberos support is mainly in lib/krb5.c and lib/security.c but also
curl_sasl_sspi.c
and curl_sasl_gssapi.c
for the email protocols and
socks_gssapi.c
and socks_sspi.c
for SOCKS5 proxy specifics.
Telnet is implemented in lib/telnet.c.
The file:// protocol is dealt with in lib/file.c.
The smb:// protocol is dealt with in lib/smb.c.
Everything LDAP is in lib/ldap.c and lib/openldap.c
The e-mail related source code is in lib/imap.c, lib/pop3.c and lib/smtp.c.
URL encoding and decoding, called escaping and unescaping in the source code, is found in lib/escape.c.
While transferring data in Transfer() a few functions might get used.
curl_getdate()
in lib/parsedate.c is for HTTP date comparisons (and more).
lib/getenv.c offers curl_getenv()
which is for reading environment
variables in a neat platform independent way. That's used in the client, but
also in lib/url.c when checking the proxy environment variables. Note that
contrary to the normal unix getenv(), this returns an allocated buffer that
must be free()ed after use.
lib/netrc.c holds the .netrc parser
lib/timeval.c features replacement functions for systems that don't have gettimeofday() and a few support functions for timeval conversions.
A function named curl_version()
that returns the full curl version string
is found in lib/version.c.
The persistent connection support in libcurl requires some considerations on how to do things inside of the library.
The Curl_easy
struct returned in the curl_easy_init()
call
must never hold connection-oriented data. It is meant to hold the root data
as well as all the options etc that the library-user may choose.
The Curl_easy
struct holds the "connection cache" (an array of
pointers to 'connectdata' structs).
This enables the 'curl handle' to be reused on subsequent transfers.
When libcurl is told to perform a transfer, it first checks for an already existing connection in the cache that we can use. Otherwise it creates a new one and adds that to the cache. If the cache is full already when a new connection is added, it will first close the oldest unused one.
When the transfer operation is complete, the connection is left open. Particular options may tell libcurl not to, and protocols may signal closure on connections and then they won't be kept open, of course.
When curl_easy_cleanup()
is called, we close all still opened connections,
unless of course the multi interface "owns" the connections.
The curl handle must be re-used in order for the persistent connections to work.
The multi interface is a non-blocking interface to the library. To make that interface work as well as possible, no low-level functions within libcurl must be written to work in a blocking manner. (There are still a few spots violating this rule.)
One of the primary reasons we introduced c-ares support was to allow the name resolve phase to be perfectly non-blocking as well.
The FTP and the SFTP/SCP protocols are examples of how we adapt and adjust the code to allow non-blocking operations even on multi-stage command- response protocols. They are built around state machines that return when they would otherwise block waiting for data. The DICT, LDAP and TELNET protocols are crappy examples and they are subject for rewrite in the future to better fit the libcurl protocol family.
Originally libcurl supported SSLeay for SSL/TLS transports, but that was then extended to its successor OpenSSL but has since also been extended to several other SSL/TLS libraries and we expect and hope to further extend the support in future libcurl versions.
To deal with this internally in the best way possible, we have a generic SSL function API as provided by the vtls/vtls.[ch] system, and they are the only SSL functions we must use from within libcurl. vtls is then crafted to use the appropriate lower-level function calls to whatever SSL library that is in use. For example vtls/openssl.[ch] for the OpenSSL library.
All symbols used internally in libcurl must use a Curl_
prefix if they're
used in more than a single file. Single-file symbols must be made static.
Public ("exported") symbols must use a curl_
prefix. (There are exceptions,
but they are to be changed to follow this pattern in future versions.) Public
API functions are marked with CURL_EXTERN
in the public header files so
that all others can be hidden on platforms where this is possible.
I've made things simple. Almost every function in libcurl returns a CURLcode,
that must be CURLE_OK
if everything is OK or otherwise a suitable error
code as the curl/curl.h include file defines. The very spot that detects an
error must use the Curl_failf()
function to set the human-readable error
description.
In aiding the user to understand what's happening and to debug curl usage, we
must supply a fair number of informational messages by using the
Curl_infof()
function. Those messages are only displayed when the user
explicitly asks for them. They are best used when revealing information that
isn't otherwise obvious.
We make an effort to not export or show internals or how internals work, as that makes it easier to keep a solid API/ABI over time. See docs/libcurl/ABI for our promise to users.
main() resides in src/tool_main.c
.
src/tool_hugehelp.c
is automatically generated by the mkhelp.pl perl script
to display the complete "manual" and the src/tool_urlglob.c
file holds the
functions used for the URL-"globbing" support. Globbing in the sense that the
{} and [] expansion stuff is there.
The client mostly sets up its 'config' struct properly, then
it calls the curl_easy_*()
functions of the library and when it gets back
control after the curl_easy_perform()
it cleans up the library, checks
status and exits.
When the operation is done, the ourWriteOut() function in src/writeout.c may
be called to report about the operation. That function is using the
curl_easy_getinfo()
function to extract useful information from the curl
session.
It may loop and do all this several times if many URLs were specified on the command line or config file.
The file lib/memdebug.c contains debug-versions of a few functions. Functions such as malloc, free, fopen, fclose, etc that somehow deal with resources that might give us problems if we "leak" them. The functions in the memdebug system do nothing fancy, they do their normal function and then log information about what they just did. The logged data can then be analyzed after a complete session,
memanalyze.pl is the perl script present in tests/ that analyzes a log file generated by the memory tracking system. It detects if resources are allocated but never freed and other kinds of errors related to resource management.
Internally, definition of preprocessor symbol DEBUGBUILD restricts code which is only compiled for debug enabled builds. And symbol CURLDEBUG is used to differentiate code which is only used for memory tracking/debugging.
Use -DCURLDEBUG when compiling to enable memory debugging, this is also switched on by running configure with --enable-curldebug. Use -DDEBUGBUILD when compiling to enable a debug build or run configure with --enable-debug.
curl --version will list 'Debug' feature for debug enabled builds, and will list 'TrackMemory' feature for curl debug memory tracking capable builds. These features are independent and can be controlled when running the configure script. When --enable-debug is given both features will be enabled, unless some restriction prevents memory tracking from being used.
The test suite is placed in its own subdirectory directly off the root in the curl archive tree, and it contains a bunch of scripts and a lot of test case data.
The main test script is runtests.pl that will invoke test servers like httpserver.pl and ftpserver.pl before all the test cases are performed. The test suite currently only runs on Unix-like platforms.
You'll find a description of the test suite in the tests/README file, and the test case data files in the tests/FILEFORMAT file.
The test suite automatically detects if curl was built with the memory debugging enabled, and if it was, it will detect memory leaks, too.
libcurl can be built to do name resolves asynchronously, using either the normal resolver in a threaded manner or by using c-ares.
First I compiled c-ares. I changed the default C runtime library to be the single-threaded rather than the multi-threaded (this seems to be required to prevent linking errors later on). Then I simply build the areslib project (the other projects adig/ahost seem to fail under MSVC).
Next was libcurl. I opened lib/config-win32.h and I added a:
#define USE_ARES 1
Next thing I did was I added the path for the ares includes to the include path, and the libares.lib to the libraries.
Lastly, I also changed libcurl to be single-threaded rather than multi-threaded, again this was to prevent some duplicate symbol errors. I'm not sure why I needed to change everything to single-threaded, but when I didn't I got redefinition errors for several CRT functions (malloc, stricmp, etc.)
curl_off_t
curl_off_t
is a data type provided by the external libcurl include
headers. It is the type meant to be used for the curl_easy_setopt()
options that end with LARGE. The type is 64bit large on most modern
platforms.
The libcurl source code offers a few functions by source only. They are not part of the official libcurl API, but the source files might be useful for others so apps can optionally compile/build with these sources to gain additional functions.
We provide them through a single header file for easy access for apps: "curlx.h"
curlx_strtoofft()
A macro that converts a string containing a number to a curl_off_t
number.
This might use the curlx_strtoll()
function which is provided as source
code in strtoofft.c. Note that the function is only provided if no
strtoll() (or equivalent) function exist on your platform. If curl_off_t
is only a 32 bit number on your platform, this macro uses strtol().
curlx_tvnow()
returns a struct timeval for the current time.
curlx_tvdiff()
returns the difference between two timeval structs, in number of milliseconds.
curlx_tvdiff_secs()
returns the same as curlx_tvdiff
but with full usec resolution (as a
double)
Several functions will be removed from the public curl_
name space in a
future libcurl release. They will then only become available as curlx_
functions instead. To make the transition easier, we already today provide
these functions with the curlx_
prefix to allow sources to be built
properly with the new function names. The concerned functions are:
curlx_getenv
curlx_strequal
curlx_strnequal
curlx_mvsnprintf
curlx_msnprintf
curlx_maprintf
curlx_mvaprintf
curlx_msprintf
curlx_mprintf
curlx_mfprintf
curlx_mvsprintf
curlx_mvprintf
curlx_mvfprintf
HTTP/1.1 specifies that a client may request that a server encode its response. This is usually used to compress a response using one of a set of commonly available compression techniques. These schemes are 'deflate' (the zlib algorithm), 'gzip' and 'compress'. A client requests that the server perform an encoding by including an Accept-Encoding header in the request document. The value of the header should be one of the recognized tokens 'deflate', ... (there's a way to register new schemes/tokens, see sec 3.5 of the spec). A server MAY honor the client's encoding request. When a response is encoded, the server includes a Content-Encoding header in the response. The value of the Content-Encoding header indicates which scheme was used to encode the data.
A client may tell a server that it can understand several different encoding schemes. In this case the server may choose any one of those and use it to encode the response (indicating which one using the Content-Encoding header). It's also possible for a client to attach priorities to different schemes so that the server knows which it prefers. See sec 14.3 of RFC 2616 for more information on the Accept-Encoding header.
The 'deflate' and 'gzip' content encoding are supported by libcurl. Both regular and chunked transfers work fine. The zlib library is required for this feature.
To cause libcurl to request a content encoding use:
curl_easy_setopt
(curl, CURLOPT_ACCEPT_ENCODING
, string)
where string is the intended value of the Accept-Encoding header.
Currently, libcurl only understands how to process responses that use the
"deflate" or "gzip" Content-Encoding, so the only values for
CURLOPT_ACCEPT_ENCODING
that will work (besides "identity," which does
nothing) are "deflate" and "gzip" If a response is encoded using the
"compress" or methods, libcurl will return an error indicating that the
response could not be decoded. If is NULL no Accept-Encoding header
is generated. If is a zero-length string, then an Accept-Encoding
header containing all supported encodings will be generated.
The CURLOPT_ACCEPT_ENCODING
must be set to any non-NULL value for
content to be automatically decoded. If it is not set and the server still
sends encoded content (despite not having been asked), the data is returned
in its raw form and the Content-Encoding type is not checked.
Use the --compressed option with curl to cause it to ask servers to compress responses using any format supported by curl.
The main compile-time defines to keep in mind when reading the host*.c source file are these:
CURLRES_IPV6
this host has getaddrinfo() and family, and thus we use that. The host may
not be able to resolve IPv6, but we don't really have to take that into
account. Hosts that aren't IPv6-enabled have CURLRES_IPV4
defined.
CURLRES_ARES
is defined if libcurl is built to use c-ares for asynchronous name resolves. This can be Windows or *nix.
CURLRES_THREADED
is defined if libcurl is built to use threading for asynchronous name resolves. The name resolve will be done in a new thread, and the supported asynch API will be the same as for ares-builds. This is the default under (native) Windows.
If any of the two previous are defined, CURLRES_ASYNCH
is defined too. If
libcurl is not built to use an asynchronous resolver, CURLRES_SYNCH
is
defined.
The host*.c sources files are split up like this:
The hostip.h is the single united header file for all this. It defines the
CURLRES_*
defines based on the config*.h and curl_setup.h
defines.
Please note that this memory leak system is not adjusted to work in more than one thread. If you want/need to use it in a multi-threaded app. Please adjust accordingly.
Rebuild libcurl with -DCURLDEBUG (usually, rerunning configure with --enable-debug fixes this). 'make clean' first, then 'make' so that all files are actually rebuilt properly. It will also make sense to build libcurl with the debug option (usually -g to the compiler) so that debugging it will be easier if you actually do find a leak in the library.
This will create a library that has memory debugging enabled.
Add a line in your application code:
`curl_memdebug("dump");`
This will make the malloc debug system output a full trace of all resource using functions to the given file name. Make sure you rebuild your program and that you link with the same libcurl you built for this purpose as described above.
Run your program as usual. Watch the specified memory trace file grow.
Make your program exit and use the proper libcurl cleanup functions etc. So that all non-leaks are returned/freed properly.
Use the tests/memanalyze.pl perl script to analyze the dump file:
tests/memanalyze.pl dump
This now outputs a report on what resources that were allocated but never freed etc. This report is very fine for posting to the list!
If this doesn't produce any output, no leak was detected in libcurl. Then the leak is mostly likely to be in your code.
multi_socket
Implementation of the curl_multi_socket
API
The main ideas of this API are simply:
1 - The application can use whatever event system it likes as it gets info
from libcurl about what file descriptors libcurl waits for what action
on. (The previous API returns `fd_sets` which is very select()-centric).
2 - When the application discovers action on a single socket, it calls
libcurl and informs that there was action on this particular socket and
libcurl can then act on that socket/transfer only and not care about
any other transfers. (The previous API always had to scan through all
the existing transfers.)
The idea is that curl_multi_socket_action()
calls a given callback
with information about what socket to wait for what action on, and the
callback only gets called if the status of that socket has changed.
We also added a timer callback that makes libcurl call the application when
the timeout value changes, and you set that with curl_multi_setopt()
and the CURLMOPT_TIMERFUNCTION
option. To get this to work,
Internally, there's an added struct to each easy handle in which we store
an "expire time" (if any). The structs are then "splay sorted" so that we
can add and remove times from the linked list and yet somewhat swiftly
figure out both how long there is until the next nearest timer expires
and which timer (handle) we should take care of now. Of course, the upside
of all this is that we get a curl_multi_timeout()
that should also
work with old-style applications that use curl_multi_perform()
.
We created an internal "socket to easy handles" hash table that given a socket (file descriptor) returns the easy handle that waits for action on that socket. This hash is made using the already existing hash code (previously only used for the DNS cache).
To make libcurl able to report plain sockets in the socket callback, we had
to re-organize the internals of the curl_multi_fdset()
etc so that
the conversion from sockets to fd_sets
for that function is only done in
the last step before the data is returned. I also had to extend c-ares to
get a function that can return plain sockets, as that library too returned
only fd_sets
and that is no longer good enough. The changes done to c-ares
are available in c-ares 1.3.1 and later.
This section should cover 7.32.0 pretty accurately, but will make sense even for older and later versions as things don't change drastically that often.
The Curl_easy
struct is the one returned to the outside in the external API
as a "CURL *". This is usually known as an easy handle in API documentations
and examples.
Information and state that is related to the actual connection is in the
'connectdata' struct. When a transfer is about to be made, libcurl will
either create a new connection or re-use an existing one. The particular
connectdata that is used by this handle is pointed out by
Curl_easy->easy_conn
.
Data and information that regard this particular single transfer is put in the SingleRequest sub-struct.
When the Curl_easy
struct is added to a multi handle, as it must be in
order to do any transfer, the ->multi member will point to the Curl_multi
struct it belongs to. The ->prev and ->next members will then be used by the
multi code to keep a linked list of Curl_easy
structs that are added to
that same multi handle. libcurl always uses multi so ->multi will point to
a Curl_multi
when a transfer is in progress.
->mstate is the multi state of this particular Curl_easy
. When
multi_runsingle()
is called, it will act on this handle according to which
state it is in. The mstate is also what tells which sockets to return for a
specific Curl_easy
when curl_multi_fdset()
is called etc.
The libcurl source code generally use the name 'data' for the variable that
points to the Curl_easy
.
When doing multiplexed HTTP/2 transfers, each Curl_easy
is associated with
an individual stream, sharing the same connectdata struct. Multiplexing
makes it even more important to keep things associated with the right thing!
A general idea in libcurl is to keep connections around in a connection "cache" after they have been used in case they will be used again and then re-use an existing one instead of creating a new as it creates a significant performance boost.
Each 'connectdata' identifies a single physical connection to a server. If the connection can't be kept alive, the connection will be closed after use and then this struct can be removed from the cache and freed.
Thus, the same Curl_easy
can be used multiple times and each time select
another connectdata struct to use for the connection. Keep this in mind, as
it is then important to consider if options or choices are based on the
connection or the Curl_easy
.
Functions in libcurl will assume that connectdata->data points to the
Curl_easy
that uses this connection (for the moment).
As a special complexity, some protocols supported by libcurl require a
special disconnect procedure that is more than just shutting down the
socket. It can involve sending one or more commands to the server before
doing so. Since connections are kept in the connection cache after use, the
original Curl_easy
may no longer be around when the time comes to shut down
a particular connection. For this purpose, libcurl holds a special dummy
closure_handle
Curl_easy
in the Curl_multi
struct to use when needed.
FTP uses two TCP connections for a typical transfer but it keeps both in this single struct and thus can be considered a single connection for most internal concerns.
The libcurl source code generally use the name 'conn' for the variable that points to the connectdata.
Internally, the easy interface is implemented as a wrapper around multi interface functions. This makes everything multi interface.
Curl_multi
is the multi handle struct exposed as "CURLM *" in external
APIs.
This struct holds a list of Curl_easy
structs that have been added to this
handle with curl_multi_add_handle()
. The start of the list is
->easyp
and ->num_easy
is a counter of added Curl_easy
s.
->msglist
is a linked list of messages to send back when
curl_multi_info_read()
is called. Basically a node is added to that
list when an individual Curl_easy
's transfer has completed.
->hostcache
points to the name cache. It is a hash table for looking up
name to IP. The nodes have a limited life time in there and this cache is
meant to reduce the time for when the same name is wanted within a short
period of time.
->timetree
points to a tree of Curl_easy
s, sorted by the remaining time
until it should be checked - normally some sort of timeout. Each Curl_easy
has one node in the tree.
->sockhash
is a hash table to allow fast lookups of socket descriptor for
which Curl_easy
uses that descriptor. This is necessary for the
multi_socket
API.
->conn_cache
points to the connection cache. It keeps track of all
connections that are kept after use. The cache has a maximum size.
->closure_handle
is described in the 'connectdata' section.
The libcurl source code generally use the name 'multi' for the variable that
points to the Curl_multi
struct.
Each unique protocol that is supported by libcurl needs to provide at least
one Curl_handler
struct. It defines what the protocol is called and what
functions the main code should call to deal with protocol specific issues.
In general, there's a source file named [protocol].c in which there's a
"struct Curl_handler
Curl_handler_[protocol]
" declared. In url.c there's
then the main array with all individual Curl_handler
structs pointed to
from a single array which is scanned through when a URL is given to libcurl
to work with.
->scheme
is the URL scheme name, usually spelled out in uppercase. That's
"HTTP" or "FTP" etc. SSL versions of the protocol need their own Curl_handler
setup so HTTPS separate from HTTP.
->setup_connection
is called to allow the protocol code to allocate
protocol specific data that then gets associated with that Curl_easy
for
the rest of this transfer. It gets freed again at the end of the transfer.
It will be called before the 'connectdata' for the transfer has been
selected/created. Most protocols will allocate its private
'struct [PROTOCOL]' here and assign Curl_easy->req.protop
to point to it.
->connect_it
allows a protocol to do some specific actions after the TCP
connect is done, that can still be considered part of the connection phase.
Some protocols will alter the connectdata->recv[]
and
connectdata->send[]
function pointers in this function.
->connecting
is similarly a function that keeps getting called as long as
the protocol considers itself still in the connecting phase.
->do_it
is the function called to issue the transfer request. What we call
the DO action internally. If the DO is not enough and things need to be kept
getting done for the entire DO sequence to complete, ->doing
is then
usually also provided. Each protocol that needs to do multiple commands or
similar for do/doing need to implement their own state machines (see SCP,
SFTP, FTP). Some protocols (only FTP and only due to historical reasons) has
a separate piece of the DO state called DO_MORE
.
->doing
keeps getting called while issuing the transfer request command(s)
->done
gets called when the transfer is complete and DONE. That's after the
main data has been transferred.
->do_more
gets called during the DO_MORE
state. The FTP protocol uses
this state when setting up the second connection.
->proto_getsock
->doing_getsock
->domore_getsock
->perform_getsock
Functions that return socket information. Which socket(s) to wait for which
action(s) during the particular multi state.
->disconnect is called immediately before the TCP connection is shutdown.
->readwrite gets called during transfer to allow the protocol to do extra reads/writes
->defport is the default report TCP or UDP port this protocol uses
->protocol is one or more bits in the CURLPROTO_*
set. The SSL versions
have their "base" protocol set and then the SSL variation. Like
"HTTP|HTTPS".
->flags is a bitmask with additional information about the protocol that will make it get treated differently by the generic engine:
PROTOPT_SSL
- will make it connect and negotiate SSL
PROTOPT_DUAL
- this protocol uses two connections
PROTOPT_CLOSEACTION
- this protocol has actions to do before closing the
connection. This flag is no longer used by code, yet still set for a bunch
of protocol handlers.
PROTOPT_DIRLOCK
- "direction lock". The SSH protocols set this bit to
limit which "direction" of socket actions that the main engine will
concern itself with.
PROTOPT_NONETWORK
- a protocol that doesn't use network (read file:)
PROTOPT_NEEDSPWD
- this protocol needs a password and will use a default
one unless one is provided
PROTOPT_NOURLQUERY
- this protocol can't handle a query part on the URL
(?foo=bar)
Is a hash table with connections for later re-use. Each Curl_easy
has a
pointer to its connection cache. Each multi handle sets up a connection
cache that all added Curl_easy
s share by default.
The libcurl share API allocates a Curl_share
struct, exposed to the
external API as "CURLSH *".
The idea is that the struct can have a set of its own versions of caches and
pools and then by providing this struct in the CURLOPT_SHARE
option, those
specific Curl_easy
s will use the caches/pools that this share handle
holds.
Then individual Curl_easy
structs can be made to share specific things
that they otherwise wouldn't, such as cookies.
The Curl_share
struct can currently hold cookies, DNS cache and the SSL
session cache.
This is the main cookie struct. It holds all known cookies and related
information. Each Curl_easy
has its own private CookieInfo even when
they are added to a multi handle. They can be made to share cookies by using
the share API.