view tests/test-audit-path.t @ 41163:0101a35deae2

phabricator: warn if unable to amend, instead of aborting after posting There was a divergence in behavior here between obsolete and strip based amending. I first noticed the abort when testing outside of the test harness, but then had trouble recreating it here after reverting the code changes. It turns out, strip based amend was successfully amending the public commit after it was posted! It looks like the protection is in the `commit --amend` command, not in the underlying code that it calls. I considered doing a preflight check and aborting. But the locks are only acquired at the end, if amending, and this is too large a section of code to be wrapped in a maybe-it's-held-or-not context manager for my tastes. Additionally, some people do post-push reviews, and amending is the default behavior, so they shouldn't see a misleading error message. The lack of a 'Differential Revision' entry in the commit message breaks a {phabreview} test, so it had to be partially conditionalized.
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Sat, 05 Jan 2019 15:20:33 -0500
parents 89630d0b3e23
children f90a5c211251
line wrap: on
line source

The simple store doesn't escape paths robustly and can't store paths
with periods, etc. So much of this test fails with it.
#require no-reposimplestore

  $ hg init

audit of .hg

  $ hg add .hg/00changelog.i
  abort: path contains illegal component: .hg/00changelog.i
  [255]

#if symlink

Symlinks

  $ mkdir a
  $ echo a > a/a
  $ hg ci -Ama
  adding a/a
  $ ln -s a b
  $ echo b > a/b
  $ hg add b/b
  abort: path 'b/b' traverses symbolic link 'b'
  [255]
  $ hg add b

should still fail - maybe

  $ hg add b/b
  abort: path 'b/b' traverses symbolic link 'b'
  [255]

  $ hg commit -m 'add symlink b'


Test symlink traversing when accessing history:
-----------------------------------------------

(build a changeset where the path exists as a directory)

  $ hg up 0
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ mkdir b
  $ echo c > b/a
  $ hg add b/a
  $ hg ci -m 'add directory b'
  created new head

Test that hg cat does not do anything wrong the working copy has 'b' as directory

  $ hg cat b/a
  c
  $ hg cat -r "desc(directory)" b/a
  c
  $ hg cat -r "desc(symlink)" b/a
  b/a: no such file in rev bc151a1f53bd
  [1]

Test that hg cat does not do anything wrong the working copy has 'b' as a symlink (issue4749)

  $ hg up 'desc(symlink)'
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ hg cat b/a
  b/a: no such file in rev bc151a1f53bd
  [1]
  $ hg cat -r "desc(directory)" b/a
  c
  $ hg cat -r "desc(symlink)" b/a
  b/a: no such file in rev bc151a1f53bd
  [1]

#endif


unbundle tampered bundle

  $ hg init target
  $ cd target
  $ hg unbundle "$TESTDIR/bundles/tampered.hg"
  adding changesets
  adding manifests
  adding file changes
  added 5 changesets with 6 changes to 6 files (+4 heads)
  new changesets b7da9bf6b037:fc1393d727bc (5 drafts)
  (run 'hg heads' to see heads, 'hg merge' to merge)

attack .hg/test

  $ hg manifest -r0
  .hg/test
  $ hg update -Cr0
  abort: path contains illegal component: .hg/test
  [255]

attack foo/.hg/test

  $ hg manifest -r1
  foo/.hg/test
  $ hg update -Cr1
  abort: path 'foo/.hg/test' is inside nested repo 'foo'
  [255]

attack back/test where back symlinks to ..

  $ hg manifest -r2
  back
  back/test
#if symlink
  $ hg update -Cr2
  abort: path 'back/test' traverses symbolic link 'back'
  [255]
#else
('back' will be a file and cause some other system specific error)
  $ hg update -Cr2
  abort: $TESTTMP/target/back/test: $ENOTDIR$
  [255]
#endif

attack ../test

  $ hg manifest -r3
  ../test
  $ mkdir ../test
  $ echo data > ../test/file
  $ hg update -Cr3
  abort: path contains illegal component: ../test
  [255]
  $ cat ../test/file
  data

attack /tmp/test

  $ hg manifest -r4
  /tmp/test
  $ hg update -Cr4
  abort: path contains illegal component: /tmp/test
  [255]

  $ cd ..

Test symlink traversal on merge:
--------------------------------

#if symlink

set up symlink hell

  $ mkdir merge-symlink-out
  $ hg init merge-symlink
  $ cd merge-symlink
  $ touch base
  $ hg commit -qAm base
  $ ln -s ../merge-symlink-out a
  $ hg commit -qAm 'symlink a -> ../merge-symlink-out'
  $ hg up -q 0
  $ mkdir a
  $ touch a/poisoned
  $ hg commit -qAm 'file a/poisoned'
  $ hg log -G -T '{rev}: {desc}\n'
  @  2: file a/poisoned
  |
  | o  1: symlink a -> ../merge-symlink-out
  |/
  o  0: base
  

try trivial merge

  $ hg up -qC 1
  $ hg merge 2
  abort: path 'a/poisoned' traverses symbolic link 'a'
  [255]

try rebase onto other revision: cache of audited paths should be discarded,
and the rebase should fail (issue5628)

  $ hg up -qC 2
  $ hg rebase -s 2 -d 1 --config extensions.rebase=
  rebasing 2:e73c21d6b244 "file a/poisoned" (tip)
  abort: path 'a/poisoned' traverses symbolic link 'a'
  [255]
  $ ls ../merge-symlink-out

  $ cd ..

Test symlink traversal on update:
---------------------------------

  $ mkdir update-symlink-out
  $ hg init update-symlink
  $ cd update-symlink
  $ ln -s ../update-symlink-out a
  $ hg commit -qAm 'symlink a -> ../update-symlink-out'
  $ hg rm a
  $ mkdir a && touch a/b
  $ hg ci -qAm 'file a/b' a/b
  $ hg up -qC 0
  $ hg rm a
  $ mkdir a && touch a/c
  $ hg ci -qAm 'rm a, file a/c'
  $ hg log -G -T '{rev}: {desc}\n'
  @  2: rm a, file a/c
  |
  | o  1: file a/b
  |/
  o  0: symlink a -> ../update-symlink-out
  

try linear update where symlink already exists:

  $ hg up -qC 0
  $ hg up 1
  abort: path 'a/b' traverses symbolic link 'a'
  [255]

try linear update including symlinked directory and its content: paths are
audited first by calculateupdates(), where no symlink is created so both
'a' and 'a/b' are taken as good paths. still applyupdates() should fail.

  $ hg up -qC null
  $ hg up 1
  abort: path 'a/b' traverses symbolic link 'a'
  [255]
  $ ls ../update-symlink-out

try branch update replacing directory with symlink, and its content: the
path 'a' is audited as a directory first, which should be audited again as
a symlink.

  $ rm -f a
  $ hg up -qC 2
  $ hg up 1
  abort: path 'a/b' traverses symbolic link 'a'
  [255]
  $ ls ../update-symlink-out

  $ cd ..

#endif