convert: don't drop missing or corrupt tag entries
Cleaning up the tags file could be a useful feature in some cases, so maybe
there should be a switch for this. However, the default hg -> hg convert tries
to maintain identical hashes (thus convert.hg.saverev is off by default, but is
on by default for other source types). It looks like _rewritesubstate() has a
`continue` in it, and therefore a similar problem.
I ran into this conversion divergence when a coworker "merged" two repositories
by copy/pasting all of the files from the source repo and massaging the code,
and forgetting to revert the .hg* files. That silently emptied the .hgtags file
after the conversion. (This isn't the manifest node bug Yuya has been helping
with- this occurred well after the bzr -> hg conversion and wasn't a merge
commit, which made it extra puzzling. That bug is still an issue.)
Generate a private key (priv.pem):
$ openssl genrsa -out priv.pem 2048
Generate 2 self-signed certificates from this key (pub.pem, pub-other.pem):
$ openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 9000 \
-out pub.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/'
$ openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 9000 \
-out pub-other.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/'
Now generate an expired certificate by turning back the system time:
$ faketime 2016-01-01T00:00:00Z \
openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 1 \
-out pub-expired.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/'
Generate a certificate not yet active by advancing the system time:
$ faketime 2030-01-1T00:00:00Z \
openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 1 \
-out pub-not-yet.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/'
Generate a passphrase protected client certificate private key:
$ openssl genrsa -aes256 -passout pass:1234 -out client-key.pem 2048
Create a copy of the private key without a passphrase:
$ openssl rsa -in client-key.pem -passin pass:1234 -out client-key-decrypted.pem
Create a CSR and sign the key using the server keypair:
$ printf '.\n.\n.\n.\n.\n.\nhg-client@localhost\n.\n.\n' | \
openssl req -new -key client-key.pem -passin pass:1234 -out client-csr.pem
$ openssl x509 -req -days 9000 -in client-csr.pem -CA pub.pem -CAkey priv.pem \
-set_serial 01 -out client-cert.pem
When replacing the certificates, references to certificate fingerprints will
need to be updated in test files.
Fingerprints for certs can be obtained by running:
$ openssl x509 -in pub.pem -noout -sha1 -fingerprint
$ openssl x509 -in pub.pem -noout -sha256 -fingerprint