I could not find any use of this parameter value. And it arguably makes
understanding of the function more difficult. Setting the parameter default
value to False.
The old x509 test certificates were using cryptographic settings
that are ancient by today's standards, namely 512 bit RSA keys.
To put things in perspective, browsers have been dropping support
for 1024 bit RSA keys.
I think it is important that tests match the realities of the times.
And 2048 bit RSA keys with SHA-2 hashing are what the world is
moving to.
This patch replaces all the x509 certificates with new versions using
modern best practices. In addition, the docs for generating the
keys have been updated, as the existing docs left out a few steps,
namely how to generate certs that were not active yet or expired.
The link is embedded into a div with class="annotate-info" that only shows up
upon hover of the annotate column. To avoid duplicate hover-overs (this new
one and the one coming from link's title), drop "title" attribute from a
element and put it in the annotate-info element.
Some systems don't have a 127/8 address for localhost (I noticed this
on a FreeBSD jail). In order to work around this, use 127.0.0.1 as a
glob pattern. A future commit will update needed output lines and add
a requirement to check-code.py.
Prior to this, check-code wouldn't notice things like (glob)
annotations or similar in a test if they were after a # anywhere in
the line. This resolves a defect in a future change, and also exposed
a couple of small spots that needed some attention.
I'm about to fix a bug in check-code that a # anywhere on a line
treated the rest of the line as a comment, even if it was
meaningful. This test is the one place we explicitly *do* want
hardcoded paths referenced, but we can work around that by specifying
bin as a regular expression.
We already had the match relaxed on Windows, but on Google Compute
Engine VMs I'm seeing "Network is unreachable" instead of "Connection
refused". At this point, just give up and make sure we get an error back.
This is common between chg and vanilla forking server, so move it to
commandserver and unify handle().
It would be debatable whether we really need gc.collect() or not, but that
is beyond the scope of this series. Maybe we can remove gc.collect() once
all resource deallocations are switched to context manager.
HintException is unrelated to the hierarchy of errors. It is an implementation
detail whether a class inherits from HintException or not, a sort of "private
inheritance" in C++.
New Hint isn't an exception class, which prevents catching error by its type:
try:
dosomething()
except error.Hint:
pass
Unfortunately, this passes on PyPy 5.3.1, but not on Python 2, and raises more
detailed TypeError on Python 3.
Previously, every time you asked for the source repo of a shared working copy it
would recreate the repo object, which required calling reposetup. With certain
extension enabled, this can be quite expensive, and it can happen many times
(for instance, share attaches a post transaction hook to update bookmarks that
triggers this).
The fix is to just cache the repo object instead of constantly recreating it.
Rather than put everything into one journal file, split entries up in *shared*
and *local* entries. Working copy changes are local to a specific working copy,
so should remain local only. Other entries are shared with the source if so
configured when the share was created.
When unsharing, any shared journale entries are copied across.
Note that now the default action for `hg journal` is to list the working copy
history, not all bookmarks. In its place is the `--all` switch which lists all
name changes recorded, including the name for which the change was recorded on
each line.
Locking is switched to using a dedicated lock to avoid issues with the dirstate
being written during wlock unlocking (you can't re-lock during that process).
Many Linux distros and other Nixen have CA certificates in well-defined
locations. Rather than potentially fail to load any CA certificates at
all (which will always result in a certificate verification failure),
we scan for paths to known CA certificate files and load one if seen.
Because a proper Mercurial install will have the path to the CA
certificate file defined at install time, we print a warning that
the install isn't proper and provide a URL with instructions to
correct things.
We only perform path-based fallback on Pythons that don't know
how to call into OpenSSL to load the default verify locations. This
is because we trust that Python/OpenSSL is properly configured
and knows better than Mercurial. So this new code effectively only
runs on Python <2.7.9 (technically Pythons without the modern ssl
module).
Previously, failure to load system certificates on OS X would lead
to a certificate verify failure and that's it. We now print a warning
message with a URL that will contain information on how to configure
certificates on OS X.
As the inline comment states, there is room to improve here. I think
we could try harder to detect Homebrew and MacPorts installed
certificate files, for example. It's worth noting that Homebrew's
openssl package uses `security find-certificate -a -p` during package
installation to export the system keychain root CAs to
etc/openssl/cert.pem. This is something we could consider adding
to setup.py. We could also encourage packagers to do this. For now,
I'd just like to get this warning (which matches Windows behavior)
landed. We should have time to improve things before release.
I should have ran the entire test suite on Python 2.6. Since the
hostname matching tests are implemented in Python (not .t tests),
it didn't uncover this warning. I'm not sure why - warnings should
be printed regardless. This is possibly a bug in the test runner.
But that's for another day...
When reverting interactively, we always backup files before prompting the user
to find out if they actually want to revert them. This can create spurious
*.orig files if a user enters an interactive revert session and then doesn't
revert any files. Instead, we should only backup files that are actually being
touched.
Before this patch, using cmdutil.command() for "@command" annotation
prevents perf.py from being loaded by Mercurial earlier than 1.9 (or
d4096ee63f8e), because cmdutil.command() isn't available in such
Mercurial, even though there are some code paths for Mercurial earlier
than 1.9.
For example, setting "_prereadsize" attribute in perfindex() and
perfnodelookup() is effective only with hg earlier than 1.8 (or
1299f0c14572).
In addition to it, "norepo" option of command annotation has been
available since 3.1 (or 9cbb59f03d57), and this is another blocker for
loading perf.py with earlier Mercurial.
============ ============ ======
command of
hg version cmdutil norepo
============ ============ ======
3.1 or later o o
1.9 or later o x
earlier x x
============ ============ ======
This patch defines "command()" for annotation locally as below:
- define wrapper of existing cmdutil.command(), if cmdutil.command()
doesn't support "norepo"
(for Mercurial earlier than 3.1)
- define full command() locally with minimum function, if
cmdutil.command() isn't available at runtime
(for Mercurial earlier than 1.9)
This patch also defines parsealiases() locally without examining
whether it is available or not, because it is small enough to define
locally.
Before this patch, referring commands.formatteropts prevents perf.py
from being loaded by Mercurial earlier than 3.2 (or 44a82ed65df7),
because it isn't available in such Mercurial, even though formatting
itself has been available since 2.2 (or 045c8375c770).
In addition to it, there are some code paths for Mercurial earlier
than 3.2. For example, setting "_prereadsize" attribute in perfindex()
and perfnodelookup() is effective only with hg earlier than 1.8 (or
1299f0c14572).
This patch uses empty option list as formatteropts, if it isn't
available in commands module at runtime.
Disabling -T/--template option for earlier Mercurial should be
reasonable, because:
- since 0c03b2a1206a, -T/--template for formatter has been available
- since 44a82ed65df7, commands.formatteropts has been available
- the latter revision is direct child of the former
Before this patch, referring commands.debugrevlogopts prevents perf.py
from being loaded by Mercurial earlier than 3.7 (or 1a89336e03aa),
because it isn't available in such Mercurial, even though
cmdutil.openrevlog(), a user of these options, has been available
since 1.9 (or f32fd7cab084).
In addition to it, there are some code paths for Mercurial earlier
than 3.7. For example, setting "_prereadsize" attribute in perfindex()
and perfnodelookup() is effective only with hg earlier than 1.8 (or
1299f0c14572).
But just "using locally defined revlog option list" might cause
unexpected behavior at runtime. If --dir option is specified to
cmdutil.openrevlog() of Mercurial earlier than 3.5 (or e3ab0b30c05e),
it is silently ignored without any warning or so.
============ ============ ===== ===============
debugrevlogopts
hg version openrevlog() --dir of commands
============ ============ ===== ===============
3.7 or later o o o
3.5 or later o o x
1.9 or later o x x
earlier x x x
============ ============ ===== ===============
Therefore, this patch does:
- use locally defined option list, if commands.debugrevlogopts isn't
available (for Mercurial earlier than 3.7)
- wrap cmdutil.openrevlog(), if it is ambiguous whether
cmdutil.openrevlog() can recognize --dir option correctly
(for Mercurial earlier than 3.5)
This wrapper function aborts execution, if:
- --dir option is specified, and
- localrepository doesn't have "dirlog" attribute, which indicates
that localrepository has a function for '--dir'
BTW, extensions.wrapfunction() has been available since 1.1 (or
56ba0b824b91), and this seems old enough for "historical
portability" of perf.py, which has been available since 1.1 (or
bca5e7427e89).
Before this patch, using util.safehasattr() prevents perf.py from
being loaded by Mercurial earlier than 1.9.3 (or 36f152380d7d),
because util.safehasattr() isn't available in such Mercurial, even
though there are some code paths for Mercurial earlier than 1.9.3.
For example, setting "_prereadsize" attribute in perfindex() and
perfnodelookup() is effective only with Mercurial earlier than 1.8 (or
1299f0c14572).
This patch is a preparation for using util.safehasattr() safely in
subsequent patches.
This patch defines util.safehasattr() forcibly without examining
whether it is available or not, because:
- examining existence of "safehasattr" safely itself needs similar logic
- safehasattr() is small enough to define locally
Previously, ETag headers from hgweb weren't correctly formed, because rfc2616
(section 14, header definitions) requires double quotes around the content of
the header. str(web.mtime) didn't do that.
Additionally, strong ETags signify that the resource representations are
byte-for-byte identical. That is, they can be reconstructed from byte ranges if
client so wishes. Considering ETags for all hgweb pages is just mtime of
00changelog.i and doesn't consider of e.g. .hg/hgrc with description, contact
and other fields, it's clearly shouldn't be strong. The W/ prefix marks it as
weak, which still allows caching the whole served file/page, but doesn't allow
byte-range requests.
sslutil contains its own hostname matching logic. CPython has code
for the same intent. However, it is only available to Python 2.7.9+
(or distributions that have backported 2.7.9's ssl module
improvements).
This patch effectively imports CPython's hostname matching code
from its ssl.py into sslutil.py. The hostname matching code itself
is pretty similar. However, the DNS name matching code is much more
robust and spec conformant.
As the test changes show, this changes some behavior around
wildcard handling and IDNA matching. The new behavior allows
wildcards in the middle of words (e.g. 'f*.com' matches 'foo.com')
This is spec compliant according to RFC 6125 Section 6.5.3 item 3.
There is one test where the matcher is more strict. Before,
'*.a.com' matched '.a.com'. Now it doesn't match. Strictly speaking
this is a security vulnerability.
CPython has a more comprehensive test suite for it's built-in hostname
matching functionality. This patch adds its tests so we can improve
our hostname matching functionality.
Many of the tests have different results from CPython. These will be
addressed in a subsequent commit.