* Corrections of Find, FindUntil and FindMulti
Find has some bug that is not working with Ethernet.find() so, I copied code from Stream.h and Stream.cpp in AVR-CORE library and now it's working perfectly.
I don't know where was the error, but an Ethernet.find compiled to MEGA2560 was working but not working when compiled to esp32, after corrections of code (copy of AVR-Core libraries) it's working perfect.
So probably has some error on original ESP32-Core library.
Below is part of code that was working with MEGA2560 and not with ESP32 libraries.
client.find never return TRUE with ESP32 original library and with AVR it's works.
boolean esp32_fw_update(EthernetClient &client, DecodedHeader &header, const String &field_filename, const String &field_crc) {
char bound[header.boundary.length()+3];
char term[]="\r\n";
strcpy(bound,header.boundary.c_str());
strcat(bound,term);
while (client.find(bound)) {
String line=client.readStringUntil('\r');
* Update Stream.h
* Update Stream.cpp
Co-authored-by: Me No Dev <me-no-dev@users.noreply.github.com>
* Add an aditional (void *) arg to the RMT callback - to allow more flexible handling of the callback (e.g. by passing a private struct or a class pointer). Same pattern as used by the Ticker() and many others. Example updated & new example with a trapoline added.
* Fix example for new API
* Fix lint warnings
* Add a second missed example.
* Correct timeout & improve socket error handling.
I met problem while I was working with the WiFiClientSecure.
I tried to found the source of the problem, and I found it in the sll_client.cpp.
Please check my contribution.
I've open this problem in #4335 but received no response.
I spent quite a while today figuring out how to get an OTA update over HTTPS on a custom port working. A part of my problem was not putting a slash before the .bin filename, since it wasn't there in the example. This produced invalid HTTP requests. Adding the slash would make it clear that it needs to be there.
Given that the URL in line 53 contains the same words "server" and "file.bin", one might assume that in line 55, the slash after the port number would get added automatically, however I have found out that without a slash you get an invalid request. Adding the slash removes any doubt.
I was playing with the mDNS service and noticed the method MDNSResponder::addService could return a Boolean with the way it is implemented just like other functions in this library.
This would be handy to know at a higher level weather or not the service was added correctly to the mDNS server of the ESP32.
This is a fix for missing scan responses after a first successfull scan.
While running the BLE_scan.ino sketch with wantDuplicates=false, i got
only one result with correct advertising and scan response length (31,26):
pBLEScan->setAdvertisedDeviceCallbacks(new MyAdvertisedDeviceCallbacks(), false);
pBLEScan->start(scanTime, false);
...
[W][BLEScan.cpp:109] handleGAPEvent(): bytes length: 31 + 26, addr type: 1
All following calls to start() just returned the advertising data without
scan response data:
pBLEScan->start(scanTime, false);
[W][BLEScan.cpp:109] handleGAPEvent(): bytes length: 31 + 0, addr type: 1
With "wantDuplicates=true" i got:
pBLEScan->setAdvertisedDeviceCallbacks(new MyAdvertisedDeviceCallbacks(), true);
pBLEScan->start(scanTime, false);
[W][BLEScan.cpp:109] handleGAPEvent(): bytes length: 31 + 26, addr type: 1
[W][BLEScan.cpp:109] handleGAPEvent(): bytes length: 31 + 26, addr type: 1
[W][BLEScan.cpp:73] handleGAPEvent(): ESP_GAP_SEARCH_INQ_CMPL_EVT
Devices found: 1
Scan done!
pBLEScan->start(scanTime, false);
[W][BLEScan.cpp:109] handleGAPEvent(): bytes length: 31 + 0, addr type: 1
[W][BLEScan.cpp:109] handleGAPEvent(): bytes length: 0 + 26, addr type: 1
[W][BLEScan.cpp:109] handleGAPEvent(): bytes length: 31 + 0, addr type: 1
[W][BLEScan.cpp:109] handleGAPEvent(): bytes length: 0 + 26, addr type: 1
Explicitly initializing m_scan_params.scan_duplicate of BLEScan solves
this issue (In my case the un-initialized value was
m_scan_params.scan_duplicate == 1073599044).
Co-authored-by: Me No Dev <me-no-dev@users.noreply.github.com>
* If WebServer.handleClient is run in a tight loop, it will starve other processes. So, if there is no connection, throw in a delay(1). Fixes#4348
* Made a variable to control the delay behavior
Fixes crash on ESP32 when I2C FiFo overflows and interrupt function is unable to handle crash and throws this error:
[E][esp32-hal-i2c.c:1013] i2c_isr_handler_default(): unknown int=4
Co-authored-by: 0xDEADBEEF <0xde4dbeef@gmail.com>
* Update Parsing.cpp
When uploading TLS cert files the end of file "-----END CERTIFICATE-----" (or any kind of file with the sequence "CRLF--") is taken as posible end boundary. Then it is compared to the start boundary string. As it is expected, comparison turns to be false, and the whole end boundary string is put to _currentUpload->buf through _uploadWriteByte(). Here you have the problem: if you read boundary.length() bytes from HTTP request and you have some of the actual end boundary bytes in it, when you put all those bytes into _currentUpload->buf you are making a mistake. You will miss the actual end boundary string because some of those bytes were put in _currentUpload->buf.
* Update Parsing.cpp
The latest versions of Arduino IDE shifted the responsibility for precompiled libraries support to the core developers, which breaks precompiled library support in esp32 Arduino core. See https://github.com/arduino/ArduinoCore-avr/pull/52 for more details:
```
In this new version of the builder we are not doing any heuristics to find the right spot where the ldflags should be inserted (this was causing many bugs on its own); instead, we fully trust the core makers to add explicit support to precompiled libs.
```
This chage re-enables precompiled library support in the esp32 Arduino core.
SPIFFS causes crashes if you attempt to rmdir. Since there are no true directories in spiffs, this ought to be a noop. It looks like @me-no-dev worked around this by using unlink instead of rmdir, which works in fatfs and doesn't panic spiffs. This behavior is not universal. In order to get littlefs working, it would be good to get this back to conformity. Rather than digging deep into the upstream spiffs, I just check the mountpoint and noop if it is "/spiffs". So, if the user has changed the mountpoint, this will not work, but I think it's a pretty good tradeoff.
Successful exploitation could lead to arbitrary code execution.
The bug can be reproduced by running the following in a browser:
```
const formData = new FormData();
for (let i = 0;i < 33;++i) { formData.append("foo", i.toString()); }
await fetch("http://esp.local", { method: 'POST', body: formData });
```
Informed by the discussion in the bug and the code in 'that other branch'
the fix was clear. Just set a flag if we start handling a write, and
use that flag to guard the long write complete call.