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This is a commit which simply ran all C source code files
through GNU indent. No other modifications were made.
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The notices have been changed to a more GNU look. Documentation
comments have been separated from the copyright header. I've tried to
keep all copyright notices intact. Some author contact details have
been updated.
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I re-indented the source code using indent with the following options:
indent -kr -bad -bap -nut -i8 -l80 -psl -sob -ss -ncs
There are now _no_ tabs in the source files, and all indentation is
eight spaces. Lines are 80 characters long, and the procedure type is
on it's own line. Read the indent manual for more information about
what each option means.
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Updated the copyright email addresses for Robert James Kaes. The
users.sourceforge.net address should always exist.
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This allows tinyproxy to respond to a request bound to the same
interface that the request came in on. As Oswald explains:
"attached is a patch that adds the BindSame option. it causes
binding an outgoing connection to the ip address of the respective
incoming connection. that way one can simulate an entire proxy farm
with a single instance of tinyproxy on a multi-homed machine."
Cool.
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should never have added them in the first place. They don't really
buy anything, and they can hide bugs.
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this addition follow:
The patch implements a simple reverse proxy (with one funky extra
feature). It has all the regular features: mapping remote servers to local
namespace (ReversePath), disabling forward proxying (ReverseOnly) and HTTP
redirect rewriting (ReverseBaseURL).
The funky feature is this: You map Google to /google/ and the Google front
page opens up fine. Type in stuff and click "Google Search" and you'll get
an error from tinyproxy. Reason for this is that Google's form submits to
"/search" which unfortunately bypasses our /google/ mapping (if they'd
submit to "search" without the slash it would have worked ok). Turn on
ReverseMagic and it starts working....
ReverseMagic "hijacks" one cookie which it sends to the client browser.
This cookie contains the current reverse proxy path mapping (in the above
case /google/) so that even if the site uses absolute links the reverse
proxy still knows where to map the request.
And yes, it works. No, I've never seen this done before - I couldn't find
_any_ working OSS reverse proxies, and the commercial ones I've seen try
to parse the page and fix all links (in the above case changing "/search"
to "/google/search"). The problem with modifying the html is that it might
not be parsable (very common) or it might be encoded so that the proxy
can't read it (mod_gzip or likes).
Hope you like that patch. One caveat - I haven't coded with C in like
three years so my code might be a bit messy.... There shouldn't be any
security problems thou, but you never know. I did all the stuff out of my
memory without reading any RFC's, but I tested everything with Moz, Konq,
IE6, Links and Lynx and they all worked fine.
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manage the HTML error pages. It simplifies the source, and also make
the object file smaller. Nice. Also added any casting from (void*)
to ensure that the code compiles using a C++ compiler.
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cleanly with a C++ compiler. (Tested using GCC 3.3)
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The change was recommended in the C/C++ User Journal magazine.
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safefree() call. Basically, destroy_conn() was trying to free memory
not allocated by malloc. [Fix by David T. Pierson]
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replaced it with a smaller structure containing both the remote/server
and the local/client content-length fields if they're present in the
HTTP response headers.
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.html files displayed to the client [Steven Young]
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are closed.
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information is passed along during the initialization of the structure.
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headers before sending the HTTP response back. This should be more
standards compliant.
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error code. We're storing this information because tinyproxy doesn't
output the error information until _after_ the client has sent it's
information.
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remote server is supposed to be transmiting to the client.
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easier to read in the variable department.
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files.
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which included commits to RCS files with non-trunk default branches.
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