master-server/deps/curl/tests/data/test1474
2023-12-11 20:30:44 -05:00

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<testcase>
# This test is quite timing dependent and tricky to set up. The time line of
# test operations looks like this:
#
# 1. curl sends a PUT request with Expect: 100-continue and waits only 1 msec
# for a 100 response.
# 2. The HTTP server accepts the connection but waits 500 msec before acting
# on the request.
# 3. curl doesn't receive the expected 100 response before its timeout expires,
# so it starts sending the body. It is throttled by a --limit-rate, so it
# sends the first 64 KiB then stops for 1000 msec due to this
# throttling.
# 4. The server sends its 417 response while curl is throttled.
# 5. curl responds to this 417 response by closing the connection (because it
# has a half-completed response outstanding) and starting a new one. This
# new request does not have an Expect: header so it is sent without delay.
# It's still throttled, however, so it takes about 16 seconds to finish
# sending.
# 6. The server receives the response and this time acks it with 200.
#
# Because of the timing sensitivity (scheduling delays of 500 msec can cause
# the test to fail), this test is marked flaky to avoid it being run in the CI
# builds which are often run on overloaded servers.
# Increasing the --limit-rate would decrease the test time, but at the cost of
# becoming even more sensitive to delays (going from 500 msec to 250 msec or
# less of accepted delay before failure). Adding a --speed-time would increase
# the 1 second delay between writes to longer, but it would also increase the
# total time needed by the test, which is already quite high.
#
# The assumption in step 3 is also broken on NetBSD 9.3, OpenBSD 7.3 and
# Solaris 10 as they only usually send about half the requested amount of data
# (see https://curl.se/mail/lib-2023-09/0021.html).
<info>
<keywords>
HTTP
HTTP PUT
Expect
flaky
timing-dependent
</keywords>
</info>
# Server-side
<reply>
# 417 means the server didn't like the Expect header
<data>
HTTP/1.1 417 BAD swsbounce
Date: Tue, 09 Nov 2010 14:49:00 GMT
Server: test-server/fake
Content-Length: 0
</data>
<data1>
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Tue, 09 Nov 2010 14:49:00 GMT
Server: test-server/fake
Content-Length: 10
blablabla
</data1>
<datacheck>
HTTP/1.1 417 BAD swsbounce
Date: Tue, 09 Nov 2010 14:49:00 GMT
Server: test-server/fake
Content-Length: 0
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Tue, 09 Nov 2010 14:49:00 GMT
Server: test-server/fake
Content-Length: 10
blablabla
</datacheck>
<servercmd>
no-expect
delay: 500
connection-monitor
</servercmd>
</reply>
# Client-side
<client>
<server>
http
</server>
<name>
HTTP PUT with Expect: 100-continue and 417 response during upload
</name>
<command>
http://%HOSTIP:%HTTPPORT/we/want/%TESTNUMBER -T %LOGDIR/test%TESTNUMBER.txt --limit-rate 64K --expect100-timeout 0.001
</command>
<precheck>
perl -e "print 'Test does not work on this BSD system' if ( $^O eq 'netbsd' || $^O eq 'openbsd' || ($^O eq 'solaris' && qx/uname -r/ * 100 <= 510));"
</precheck>
# Must be large enough to trigger curl's automatic 100-continue behaviour
<file name="%LOGDIR/test%TESTNUMBER.txt">
%repeat[132 x S]%%repeat[16462 x xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx%0a]%
</file>
</client>
# Verify data after the test has been "shot"
<verify>
<protocol>
PUT /we/want/%TESTNUMBER HTTP/1.1
Host: %HOSTIP:%HTTPPORT
User-Agent: curl/%VERSION
Accept: */*
Content-Length: 1053701
Expect: 100-continue
%repeat[132 x S]%%repeat[1021 x xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx%0a]%%repeat[60 x x]%[DISCONNECT]
PUT /we/want/%TESTNUMBER HTTP/1.1
Host: %HOSTIP:%HTTPPORT
User-Agent: curl/%VERSION
Accept: */*
Content-Length: 1053701
%repeat[132 x S]%%repeat[16462 x xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx%0a]%
[DISCONNECT]
</protocol>
</verify>
</testcase>