'ssh://' has an exploit that will pass the url blindly to the ssh
command, allowing a malicious person to have a subrepo with
'-oProxyCommand' which could run arbitrary code on a user's machine. In
addition, at least on Windows, a pipe '|' is able to execute arbitrary
commands.
When this happens, let's throw a big abort into the user's face so that
they can inspect what's going on.
'ssh://' has an exploit that will pass the url blindly to the ssh
command, allowing a malicious person to have a subrepo with
'-oProxyCommand' which could run arbitrary code on a user's machine. In
addition, at least on Windows, a pipe '|' is able to execute arbitrary
commands.
When this happens, let's throw a big abort into the user's face so that
they can inspect what's going on.
This is done by a script [2] using RedBaron [1], a tool designed for doing
code refactoring. All "default" values are decided by the script and are
strongly consistent with the existing code.
There are 2 changes done manually to fix tests:
[warn] mercurial/exchange.py: experimental.bundle2-output-capture: default needs manual removal
[warn] mercurial/localrepo.py: experimental.hook-track-tags: default needs manual removal
Since RedBaron is not confident about how to indent things [2].
[1]: https://github.com/PyCQA/redbaron
[2]: https://github.com/PyCQA/redbaron/issues/100
[3]:
#!/usr/bin/env python
# codemod_configitems.py - codemod tool to fill configitems
#
# Copyright 2017 Facebook, Inc.
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import os
import sys
import redbaron
def readpath(path):
with open(path) as f:
return f.read()
def writepath(path, content):
with open(path, 'w') as f:
f.write(content)
_configmethods = {'config', 'configbool', 'configint', 'configbytes',
'configlist', 'configdate'}
def extractstring(rnode):
"""get the string from a RedBaron string or call_argument node"""
while rnode.type != 'string':
rnode = rnode.value
return rnode.value[1:-1] # unquote, "'str'" -> "str"
def uiconfigitems(red):
"""match *.ui.config* pattern, yield (node, method, args, section, name)"""
for node in red.find_all('atomtrailers'):
entry = None
try:
obj = node[-3].value
method = node[-2].value
args = node[-1]
section = args[0].value
name = args[1].value
if (obj in ('ui', 'self') and method in _configmethods
and section.type == 'string' and name.type == 'string'):
entry = (node, method, args, extractstring(section),
extractstring(name))
except Exception:
pass
else:
if entry:
yield entry
def coreconfigitems(red):
"""match coreconfigitem(...) pattern, yield (node, args, section, name)"""
for node in red.find_all('atomtrailers'):
entry = None
try:
args = node[1]
section = args[0].value
name = args[1].value
if (node[0].value == 'coreconfigitem' and section.type == 'string'
and name.type == 'string'):
entry = (node, args, extractstring(section),
extractstring(name))
except Exception:
pass
else:
if entry:
yield entry
def registercoreconfig(cfgred, section, name, defaultrepr):
"""insert coreconfigitem to cfgred AST
section and name are plain string, defaultrepr is a string
"""
# find a place to insert the "coreconfigitem" item
entries = list(coreconfigitems(cfgred))
for node, args, nodesection, nodename in reversed(entries):
if (nodesection, nodename) < (section, name):
# insert after this entry
node.insert_after(
'coreconfigitem(%r, %r,\n'
' default=%s,\n'
')' % (section, name, defaultrepr))
return
def main(argv):
if not argv:
print('Usage: codemod_configitems.py FILES\n'
'For example, FILES could be "{hgext,mercurial}/*/**.py"')
dirname = os.path.dirname
reporoot = dirname(dirname(dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__))))
# register configitems to this destination
cfgpath = os.path.join(reporoot, 'mercurial', 'configitems.py')
cfgred = redbaron.RedBaron(readpath(cfgpath))
# state about what to do
registered = set((s, n) for n, a, s, n in coreconfigitems(cfgred))
toregister = {} # {(section, name): defaultrepr}
coreconfigs = set() # {(section, name)}, whether it's used in core
# first loop: scan all files before taking any action
for i, path in enumerate(argv):
print('(%d/%d) scanning %s' % (i + 1, len(argv), path))
iscore = ('mercurial' in path) and ('hgext' not in path)
red = redbaron.RedBaron(readpath(path))
# find all repo.ui.config* and ui.config* calls, and collect their
# section, name and default value information.
for node, method, args, section, name in uiconfigitems(red):
if section == 'web':
# [web] section has some weirdness, ignore them for now
continue
defaultrepr = None
key = (section, name)
if len(args) == 2:
if key in registered:
continue
if method == 'configlist':
defaultrepr = 'list'
elif method == 'configbool':
defaultrepr = 'False'
else:
defaultrepr = 'None'
elif len(args) >= 3 and (args[2].target is None or
args[2].target.value == 'default'):
# try to understand the "default" value
dnode = args[2].value
if dnode.type == 'name':
if dnode.value in {'None', 'True', 'False'}:
defaultrepr = dnode.value
elif dnode.type == 'string':
defaultrepr = repr(dnode.value[1:-1])
elif dnode.type in ('int', 'float'):
defaultrepr = dnode.value
# inconsistent default
if key in toregister and toregister[key] != defaultrepr:
defaultrepr = None
# interesting to rewrite
if key not in registered:
if defaultrepr is None:
print('[note] %s: %s.%s: unsupported default'
% (path, section, name))
registered.add(key) # skip checking it again
else:
toregister[key] = defaultrepr
if iscore:
coreconfigs.add(key)
# second loop: rewrite files given "toregister" result
for path in argv:
# reconstruct redbaron - trade CPU for memory
red = redbaron.RedBaron(readpath(path))
changed = False
for node, method, args, section, name in uiconfigitems(red):
key = (section, name)
defaultrepr = toregister.get(key)
if defaultrepr is None or key not in coreconfigs:
continue
if len(args) >= 3 and (args[2].target is None or
args[2].target.value == 'default'):
try:
del args[2]
changed = True
except Exception:
# redbaron fails to do the rewrite due to indentation
# see https://github.com/PyCQA/redbaron/issues/100
print('[warn] %s: %s.%s: default needs manual removal'
% (path, section, name))
if key not in registered:
print('registering %s.%s' % (section, name))
registercoreconfig(cfgred, section, name, defaultrepr)
registered.add(key)
if changed:
print('updating %s' % path)
writepath(path, red.dumps())
if toregister:
print('updating configitems.py')
writepath(cfgpath, cfgred.dumps())
if __name__ == "__main__":
sys.exit(main(sys.argv[1:]))
Well, mostly. The annotation on subrepo functions tacks on a parenthetical to
the abort message, which seems reasonable for a generic mechanism. But now all
messages consistently spell out 'subrepository', and double quote the name of
the repo. I noticed the inconsistency in the change for the last commit.
This simply passes the 'missing' argument down from the context of the parent
repo, so the same rules apply. subrepo.bailifchanged() is hardcoded to care
about missing files, because cmdutil.bailifchanged() is too.
In the end, it looks like this addresses inconsistencies with 'archive',
'identify', blackbox logs, 'merge', and 'update --check'. I wasn't sure how to
implement this in git, so that's left for someone more familiar with it.
opts in add command were passed again to cmdutil.add() as kwargs so we need
to convert them again to str. Intstead we convert them to bytes when passing
scmutil.match(). Opts handling is also corrected for all the functions which
are called from cmdutil.add().
I've been using `hg serve --web-conf ...` with a simple '/=projects/**' [paths]
configuration for awhile without issue. Let's ditch the need for the manual
configuration in this case, and limit the repos served to the actual subrepos.
This doesn't attempt to handle the case where a new subrepo appears while the
server is running. That could probably be handled with a hook if somebody wants
it. But it's such a rare case, it probably doesn't matter for the temporary
serves.
The main repo is served at '/', just like a repository without subrepos. I'm
not sure why the duplicate 'adding ...' lines appear on Linux. They don't
appear on Windows (see 3f4ff1bdf101), so they are optional.
Subrepositories that are configured with '../path' or absolute paths are not
cloneable from the server. (They aren't cloneable locally either, unless they
also exist at their configured source, perhaps via the share extension.) They
are still served, so that they can be browsed, or cloned individually. If we
care about that cloning someday, we can probably just add the extra entries to
the webconf dictionary. Even if the entries use '../' to escape the root, only
the related subrepositories would end up in the dictionary.
Detailed hint message is now provided when 'pull --rebase' operation detects
unclean working dir, for example:
abort: uncommitted changes
(cannot pull with rebase: please commit or shelve your changes first)
Added tests for uncommitted merge, and for subrepo support verifying that same
hint is also passed to subrepo state check.
os.name returns unicodes on py3 and we have pycompat.osname which returns
bytes. This series of 2 patches will change every ocurrence of os.name with
pycompat.osname.
Now that the 'vfs' classes moved in their own module, lets use the new module
directly. We update code iteratively to help with possible bisect needs in the
future.
Now that all ui instance carry a '_colormode' attribute, we can access and
comply to it directly in the subrepo code. The actual implementation could
probably be a bit smarter, but we stick close to the current one for the sake
of simplicity.
The decoders were already run by default for the main repo, so this seemed like
an oversight.
The extdiff extension has been using 'archive' since a80ec1ea2694 to support -S,
and a colleague noticed that after diffing, making changes, and closing it, the
line endings were wrong for the diff-tool modified files in the subrepository.
(Files in the parent repo were correct, with the same .hgeol settings.) The
editor (Visual Studio in this case) reloads the file, but doesn't notice the EOL
change. It still adds new lines with the original EOL setting, and the file
ends up inconsistent.
Without this change, the first file `cat`d in the test prints '\r (esc)' EOL,
but the second doesn't on Windows or Linux.
All versions of Python we support or hope to support make the hash
functions available in the same way under the same name, so we may as
well drop the util forwards.
This message has been overlooked by check-code, because it starts with
non-alphabet character ('%').
This is also a part of preparation for making "missing _() in ui
message" detection of check-code more exact.
Initializing a subrepo when one doesn't exist is the right thing to do when the
parent is being updated, but in few other cases. Unfortunately, there isn't
enough context in the subrepo module to distinguish this case. This same issue
can be caused with other subrepo aware commands, so there is a general issue
here beyond the scope of this fix.
A simpler attempt I tried was to add an '_updating' boolean to localrepo, and
set/clear it around the call to mergemod.update() in hg.updaterepo(). That
mostly worked, but doesn't handle the case where archive will clone the subrepo
if it is missing. (I vaguely recall that there may be other commands that will
clone if needed like this, but certainly not all do. It seems both handy, and a
bit surprising for what should be a read only operation. It might be nice if
all commands did this consistently, but we probably need Angel's subrepo caching
first, to not make a mess of the working directory.)
I originally handled 'Exception' in order to pick up the Aborts raised in
subrepo.state(), but this turns out to be unnecessary because that is called
once and cached by ctx.sub() when iterating the subrepos.
It was suggested in the bug discussion to skip looking at the subrepo links
unless -S is specified. I don't really like that idea because missing a subrepo
or (less likely, but worse) a corrupt .hgsubstate is a problem of the parent
repo when checking out a revision. The -S option seems like a better fit for
functionality that would recurse into each subrepo and do a full verification.
Ultimately, the default value for 'allowcreate' should probably be flipped, but
since the default behavior was to allow creation, this is less risky for now.
CVE-2016-3068 (1/1)
Git's git-remote-ext remote helper provides an ext:: URL scheme that
allows running arbitrary shell commands. This feature allows
implementing simple git smart transports with a single shell shell
command. However, git submodules could clone arbitrary URLs specified
in the .gitmodules file. This was reported as CVE-2015-7545 and fixed
in git v2.6.1.
However, if a user directly clones a malicious ext URL, the git client
will still run arbitrary shell commands.
Mercurial is similarly effected. Mercurial allows specifying git
repositories as subrepositories. Git ext:: URLs can be specified as
Mercurial subrepositories allowing arbitrary shell commands to be run
on `hg clone ...`.
The Mercurial community would like to thank Blake Burkhart for
reporting this issue. The description of the issue is copied from
Blake's report.
This commit changes submodules to pass the GIT_ALLOW_PROTOCOL env
variable to git commands with the same list of allowed protocols that
git submodule is using.
When the GIT_ALLOW_PROTOCOL env variable is already set, we just pass it
to git without modifications.
Git turned on renames by default in commit 5404c11 (diff: activate
diff.renames by default, 2016-02-25). The change is destined for
release in git 2.8.0. The change breaks test-subrepo-git, which test
specifically that a moved file is reported as a removal and an
addition. Fix by passing --no-renames (available in git since mid
2006) to the diff commands that don't use --quiet (should make no
difference for those).
Before this change, warnings were interspersed with (and easily drowned out by)
status messages.
API:
abstractsubrepo.removefiles has an extra argument warnings,
into which callees should append their warnings.
Note: Callees should not assume that there will be items in the list,
today, I'm lazily including any other subrepos warnings, but
that may change.
cmdutil.remove has an extra optional argument warnings,
into which it will place warnings.
If warnings is omitted, warnings will be reported via ui.warn()
as before this change (albeit, after any status messages).
This patch improves the error messages raised when an OSError occurs, since
simply re-raising the exception can be both confusing and misleading. For
example, if "hg identify" is run inside a repository that contains a Git
subrepository and the git binary could not be found, it'll exit with the message
"abort: No such file or directory". That implies "identify" has a problem
reading the repository itself. There's no way for the user to know what the
real problem is unless they dive into the Mercurial source, which is what I
ended up doing after spending hours debugging errors while provisioning a VM
with Ansible (turns out I forgot to install Git on it).
Descriptive errors are especially important on Windows, since it's common for
Windows users to forget to set the "Path" system variable after installing Git.
The home of 'Abort' is 'error' not 'util' however, a lot of code seems to be
confused about that and gives all the credit to 'util' instead of the
hardworking 'error'. In a spirit of equity, we break the cycle of injustice and
give back to 'error' the respect it deserves. And screw that 'util' poser.
For great justice.
This patch uses "wvfs of the parent repository" ('pwvfs') instead of
'wvfs' of own repository, because 'self._path' is the path to this
subrepository as seen from the parent repository.
Python 2.6 introduced the "except type as instance" syntax, replacing
the "except type, instance" syntax that came before. Python 3 dropped
support for the latter syntax. Since we no longer support Python 2.4 or
2.5, we have no need to continue supporting the "except type, instance".
This patch mass rewrites the exception syntax to be Python 2.6+ and
Python 3 compatible.
This patch was produced by running `2to3 -f except -w -n .`.
Python 2.6 introduced a new octal syntax: "0oXXX", replacing "0XXX". The
old syntax is not recognized in Python 3 and will result in a parse
error.
Mass rewrite all instances of the old octal syntax to the new syntax.
This patch was generated by `2to3 -f numliterals -w -n .` and the diff
was selectively recorded to exclude changes to "<N>l" syntax conversion,
which will be handled separately.
This is a step toward replacing the extdiff internals with archive, in order to
support 'extdiff -S'. Only Mercurial subrepos are supported for now.
If a file is missing from the filesystem, it is silently skipped. Perhaps it
should warn, but it cannot abort when working with extdiff because deleting a
file is a legitimate diff.