view tests/test-module-imports.t @ 22506:6e1fbcb18a75 stable

hgweb: fail if an invalid command was supplied in url path (issue4071) Traditionally, the way to specify a command for hgweb was to use url query arguments (e.g. "?cmd=batch"). If the command is unknown to hgweb, it gives an error (e.g. "400 no such method: badcmd"). But there's also another way to specify a command: as a url path fragment (e.g. "/graph"). Before, hgweb was made forgiving (looks like it was made in 44c5157474e7) and user could put any unknown command in the url. If hgweb couldn't understand it, it would just silently fall back to the default command, which depends on the actual style (e.g. for paper it's shortlog, for monoblue it's summary). This was inconsistent and was breaking some tools that rely on http status codes (as noted in the issue4071). So this patch changes that behavior to the more consistent one, i.e. hgweb will now return "400 no such method: badcmd". So if some tool was relying on having an invalid command return http status code 200 and also have some information, then it will stop working. That is, if somebody typed foobar when they really meant shortlog (and the user was lucky enough to choose a style where the default command is shortlog too), that fact will now be revealed. Code-wise, the changed if block is only relevant when there's no "?cmd" query parameter (i.e. only when command is specified as a url path fragment), and looks like the removed else branch was there only for falling back to default command. With that removed, the rest of the code works as expected: it looks at the command, and if it's not known, raises a proper ErrorResponse exception with an appropriate message. Evidently, there were no tests that required the old behavior. But, frankly, I don't know any way to tell if anyone actually exploited such forgiving behavior in some in-house tool.
author Anton Shestakov <engored@ya.ru>
date Mon, 22 Sep 2014 23:46:38 +0900
parents cda9d2b6beab
children c63a09b6b337
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This code uses the ast module, which was new in 2.6, so we'll skip
this test on anything earlier.
  $ python -c 'import sys ; assert sys.version_info >= (2, 6)' || exit 80

  $ import_checker="$TESTDIR"/../contrib/import-checker.py
Run the doctests from the import checker, and make sure
it's working correctly.
  $ TERM=dumb
  $ export TERM
  $ python -m doctest $import_checker

  $ cd "$TESTDIR"/..
  $ if hg identify -q > /dev/null 2>&1; then :
  > else
  >     echo "skipped: not a Mercurial working dir" >&2
  >     exit 80
  > fi

There are a handful of cases here that require renaming a module so it
doesn't overlap with a stdlib module name. There are also some cycles
here that we should still endeavor to fix, and some cycles will be
hidden by deduplication algorithm in the cycle detector, so fixing
these may expose other cycles.

  $ hg locate 'mercurial/**.py' | sed 's-\\-/-g' | xargs python "$import_checker"
  mercurial/dispatch.py mixed imports
     stdlib:    commands
     relative:  error, extensions, fancyopts, hg, hook, util
  mercurial/fileset.py mixed imports
     stdlib:    parser
     relative:  error, merge, util
  mercurial/revset.py mixed imports
     stdlib:    parser
     relative:  discovery, error, hbisect, phases, util
  mercurial/templater.py mixed imports
     stdlib:    parser
     relative:  config, error, templatefilters, templatekw, util
  mercurial/ui.py mixed imports
     stdlib:    formatter
     relative:  config, error, scmutil, util
  Import cycle: mercurial.cmdutil -> mercurial.context -> mercurial.subrepo -> mercurial.cmdutil -> mercurial.cmdutil