tests/heredoctest.py
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
Sat, 28 May 2016 11:12:02 -0700
changeset 29258 6315c1e14f75
parent 27297 4179d054b3e9
child 29485 6a98f9408a50
permissions -rw-r--r--
sslutil: introduce a function for determining host-specific settings This patch marks the beginning of a series that introduces a new, more configurable, per-host security settings mechanism. Currently, we have global settings (like web.cacerts and the --insecure argument). We also have per-host settings via [hostfingerprints]. Global security settings are good for defaults, but they don't provide the amount of control often wanted. For example, an organization may want to require a particular CA is used for a particular hostname. [hostfingerprints] is nice. But it currently assumes SHA-1. Furthermore, there is no obvious place to put additional per-host settings. Subsequent patches will be introducing new mechanisms for defining security settings, some on a per-host basis. This commits starts the transition to that world by introducing the _hostsettings function. It takes a ui and hostname and returns a dict of security settings. Currently, it limits itself to returning host fingerprint info. We foreshadow the future support of non-SHA1 hashing algorithms for verifying the host fingerprint by making the "certfingerprints" key a list of tuples instead of a list of hashes. We add this dict to the hgstate property on the socket and use it during socket validation for checking fingerprints. There should be no change in behavior.

from __future__ import absolute_import

import sys

globalvars = {}
lines = sys.stdin.readlines()
while lines:
    l = lines.pop(0)
    if l.startswith('SALT'):
        print(l[:-1])
    elif l.startswith('>>> '):
        snippet = l[4:]
        while lines and lines[0].startswith('... '):
            l = lines.pop(0)
            snippet += l[4:]
        c = compile(snippet, '<heredoc>', 'single')
        try:
            exec(c, globalvars)
        except Exception as inst:
            print(repr(inst))