RFC 7231 states that status code 307 should keep the POST method upon
redirect. RFC 7538 does the same for code 308. Although it's not
mandated by the RFCs that PATCH is also kept (we can choose), it seems
like keeping PATCH will be the most consistent and understandable behaviour.
This patch also changes an existing test because it was testing for the
wrong behaviour.
Closes GH-11275.
It's possible that the server already sent in more data than just the headers.
Since the stream only accepts progress increments after the headers are
processed, the already read data is never added to the process.
We account for this by adjusting the progress counter by the difference of
already read header data and the body.
For the test:
Co-authored-by: aetonsi <18366087+aetonsi@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes GH-10492.
A negative value like -1 may overflow and cause incorrect results in the
timeout variable, which causes an immediate timeout. As this is caused
by undefined behaviour the exact behaviour depends on the compiler, its
version, and the platform.
A large overflow is also possible, if an extremely large timeout value
is passed we also set an indefinite timeout. This is because the timeout
value is at least a 64-bit number and waiting for UINT64_MAX/1000000
seconds is waiting about 584K years.
Closes GH-11183.
* PHP-8.1:
Fix GH-10990: mail() throws TypeError after iterating over $additional_headers array by reference
Fix GH-8841: php-cli core dump calling a badly formed function
This change restores the old behaviour for the server socket streams
that don't support IO. This is now stored in the stream flags so it can
be later used to do some other decisions and possibly introduce some
better error reporting.
Closes GH-10877
atoi()'s return value is actually undefined when an underflow or
overflow occurs. For example on 32-bit on my system the overflow test
which inputs "h2147483648" results in repetitions==2147483647 and on
64-bit this gives repetitions==-2147483648. The reason the test works on
32-bit is because there's a second undefined behaviour problem:
in case 'h' when repetitions==2147483647, we add 1 and divide by 2.
This is signed-wrap undefined behaviour and accidentally triggers the
overflow check like we wanted to.
Avoid all this trouble and use strtol with explicit error checking.
This also fixes a semantic bug where repetitions==INT_MAX would result
in the overflow check to trigger, even though there is no overflow.
Closes GH-10943.
Signed multiply overflow is undefined behaviour.
If you run the CI tests with UBSAN enabled on a 32-bit platform, this is
quite easy to hit. On 64-bit it's more difficult to hit though, but not
impossible.
Closes GH-10942.
At least on 32-bit, the address computations overflow in running the
test on CI with UBSAN enabled. Fix it by reordering the arithmetic.
Since a part of the expression is already used in the code above the
computation, this should not negatively affect performance.
Closes GH-10936.
get_browser() implements a lazy parse system for the browscap
INI configuration. There are two possible moments when a browscap
configuration can be loaded: during module startup or during request.
In case of module startup, the strings are persistent strings, while for
the request they are not.
The INI parser must therefore know whether to create persistent or
non-persistent strings. It does this by looking at
CG(ini_parser_unbuffered_errors). If that value is 1 it's persistent,
otherwise non-persistent. Note that this also controls how the errors
are reported: if it's 1 then the errors are sent to stderr, otherwise we
get E_WARNINGs.
Currently, a hardcoded value of 1 is always used for that CG value in
browscap_read_file(). This means we'll always create persistent strings
*and* we'll not report parse errors correctly as E_WARNINGs.
We fix both the crash and the lack of warnings by passing the value of
persistent instead of a hardcoded 1.
This is also in line with how other INI parsing code is called in
ext/standard: they also make sure that during request a value of 0 is
passed.
Closes GH-10883.
pcre2_match() returns error codes < 0, but only the "no match" error
code was handled. Fix it by changing the check to >= 0.
Closes GH-10632
Signed-off-by: George Peter Banyard <girgias@php.net>
PHP’s implementation of crypt_blowfish differs from the upstream Openwall
version by adding a “PHP Hack”, which allows one to cut short the BCrypt salt
by including a `$` character within the characters that represent the salt.
Hashes that are affected by the “PHP Hack” may erroneously validate any
password as valid when used with `password_verify` and when comparing the
return value of `crypt()` against the input.
The PHP Hack exists since the first version of PHP’s own crypt_blowfish
implementation that was added in 1e820eca02.
No clear reason is given for the PHP Hack’s existence. This commit removes it,
because BCrypt hashes containing a `$` character in their salt are not valid
BCrypt hashes.
(And any PECLs returning `zend_empty_array` in the handler->get_properties
overrides)
Closes GH-9697
This is similar to the fix used in d9651a9419
for array_walk.
This should make it safer for php-src (and PECLs, long-term) to return
the empty immutable array in `handler->get_properties` to avoid wasting memory.
See https://github.com/php/php-src/issues/9697#issuecomment-1273613175
The only possible internal iterator position for the empty array is at the end
of the empty array (nInternalPointer=0).
The `zend_hash*del*` helpers will always set nInternalPointer to 0 when an
array becomes empty,
regardless of previous insertions/deletions/updates to the array.