Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/httpconnection.py @ 19518:12843143663d stable
rebase: allow aborting when descendants detected
With this, all aborts will succeed in removing the state, rather than
leaving the user in 'what do I do now?' limbo.
author | Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 01 Aug 2013 17:54:12 -0500 |
parents | 98347af64593 |
children | 50d721553198 |
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# httpconnection.py - urllib2 handler for new http support # # Copyright 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> # Copyright 2006, 2007 Alexis S. L. Carvalho <alexis@cecm.usp.br> # Copyright 2006 Vadim Gelfer <vadim.gelfer@gmail.com> # Copyright 2011 Google, Inc. # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. import logging import socket import urllib import urllib2 import os from mercurial import httpclient from mercurial import sslutil from mercurial import util from mercurial.i18n import _ # moved here from url.py to avoid a cycle class httpsendfile(object): """This is a wrapper around the objects returned by python's "open". Its purpose is to send file-like objects via HTTP. It do however not define a __len__ attribute because the length might be more than Py_ssize_t can handle. """ def __init__(self, ui, *args, **kwargs): # We can't just "self._data = open(*args, **kwargs)" here because there # is an "open" function defined in this module that shadows the global # one self.ui = ui self._data = open(*args, **kwargs) self.seek = self._data.seek self.close = self._data.close self.write = self._data.write self.length = os.fstat(self._data.fileno()).st_size self._pos = 0 self._total = self.length // 1024 * 2 def read(self, *args, **kwargs): try: ret = self._data.read(*args, **kwargs) except EOFError: self.ui.progress(_('sending'), None) self._pos += len(ret) # We pass double the max for total because we currently have # to send the bundle twice in the case of a server that # requires authentication. Since we can't know until we try # once whether authentication will be required, just lie to # the user and maybe the push succeeds suddenly at 50%. self.ui.progress(_('sending'), self._pos // 1024, unit=_('kb'), total=self._total) return ret # moved here from url.py to avoid a cycle def readauthforuri(ui, uri, user): # Read configuration config = dict() for key, val in ui.configitems('auth'): if '.' not in key: ui.warn(_("ignoring invalid [auth] key '%s'\n") % key) continue group, setting = key.rsplit('.', 1) gdict = config.setdefault(group, dict()) if setting in ('username', 'cert', 'key'): val = util.expandpath(val) gdict[setting] = val # Find the best match if '://' in uri: scheme, hostpath = uri.split('://', 1) else: # Python 2.4.1 doesn't provide the full URI scheme, hostpath = 'http', uri bestuser = None bestlen = 0 bestauth = None for group, auth in config.iteritems(): if user and user != auth.get('username', user): # If a username was set in the URI, the entry username # must either match it or be unset continue prefix = auth.get('prefix') if not prefix: continue p = prefix.split('://', 1) if len(p) > 1: schemes, prefix = [p[0]], p[1] else: schemes = (auth.get('schemes') or 'https').split() if (prefix == '*' or hostpath.startswith(prefix)) and \ (len(prefix) > bestlen or (len(prefix) == bestlen and \ not bestuser and 'username' in auth)) \ and scheme in schemes: bestlen = len(prefix) bestauth = group, auth bestuser = auth.get('username') if user and not bestuser: auth['username'] = user return bestauth # Mercurial (at least until we can remove the old codepath) requires # that the http response object be sufficiently file-like, so we # provide a close() method here. class HTTPResponse(httpclient.HTTPResponse): def close(self): pass class HTTPConnection(httpclient.HTTPConnection): response_class = HTTPResponse def request(self, method, uri, body=None, headers={}): if isinstance(body, httpsendfile): body.seek(0) httpclient.HTTPConnection.request(self, method, uri, body=body, headers=headers) _configuredlogging = False LOGFMT = '%(levelname)s:%(name)s:%(lineno)d:%(message)s' # Subclass BOTH of these because otherwise urllib2 "helpfully" # reinserts them since it notices we don't include any subclasses of # them. class http2handler(urllib2.HTTPHandler, urllib2.HTTPSHandler): def __init__(self, ui, pwmgr): global _configuredlogging urllib2.AbstractHTTPHandler.__init__(self) self.ui = ui self.pwmgr = pwmgr self._connections = {} loglevel = ui.config('ui', 'http2debuglevel', default=None) if loglevel and not _configuredlogging: _configuredlogging = True logger = logging.getLogger('mercurial.httpclient') logger.setLevel(getattr(logging, loglevel.upper())) handler = logging.StreamHandler() handler.setFormatter(logging.Formatter(LOGFMT)) logger.addHandler(handler) def close_all(self): """Close and remove all connection objects being kept for reuse.""" for openconns in self._connections.values(): for conn in openconns: conn.close() self._connections = {} # shamelessly borrowed from urllib2.AbstractHTTPHandler def do_open(self, http_class, req, use_ssl): """Return an addinfourl object for the request, using http_class. http_class must implement the HTTPConnection API from httplib. The addinfourl return value is a file-like object. It also has methods and attributes including: - info(): return a mimetools.Message object for the headers - geturl(): return the original request URL - code: HTTP status code """ # If using a proxy, the host returned by get_host() is # actually the proxy. On Python 2.6.1, the real destination # hostname is encoded in the URI in the urllib2 request # object. On Python 2.6.5, it's stored in the _tunnel_host # attribute which has no accessor. tunhost = getattr(req, '_tunnel_host', None) host = req.get_host() if tunhost: proxyhost = host host = tunhost elif req.has_proxy(): proxyhost = req.get_host() host = req.get_selector().split('://', 1)[1].split('/', 1)[0] else: proxyhost = None if proxyhost: if ':' in proxyhost: # Note: this means we'll explode if we try and use an # IPv6 http proxy. This isn't a regression, so we # won't worry about it for now. proxyhost, proxyport = proxyhost.rsplit(':', 1) else: proxyport = 3128 # squid default proxy = (proxyhost, proxyport) else: proxy = None if not host: raise urllib2.URLError('no host given') connkey = use_ssl, host, proxy allconns = self._connections.get(connkey, []) conns = [c for c in allconns if not c.busy()] if conns: h = conns[0] else: if allconns: self.ui.debug('all connections for %s busy, making a new ' 'one\n' % host) timeout = None if req.timeout is not socket._GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT: timeout = req.timeout h = http_class(host, timeout=timeout, proxy_hostport=proxy) self._connections.setdefault(connkey, []).append(h) headers = dict(req.headers) headers.update(req.unredirected_hdrs) headers = dict( (name.title(), val) for name, val in headers.items()) try: path = req.get_selector() if '://' in path: path = path.split('://', 1)[1].split('/', 1)[1] if path[0] != '/': path = '/' + path h.request(req.get_method(), path, req.data, headers) r = h.getresponse() except socket.error, err: # XXX what error? raise urllib2.URLError(err) # Pick apart the HTTPResponse object to get the addinfourl # object initialized properly. r.recv = r.read resp = urllib.addinfourl(r, r.headers, req.get_full_url()) resp.code = r.status resp.msg = r.reason return resp # httplib always uses the given host/port as the socket connect # target, and then allows full URIs in the request path, which it # then observes and treats as a signal to do proxying instead. def http_open(self, req): if req.get_full_url().startswith('https'): return self.https_open(req) def makehttpcon(*args, **kwargs): k2 = dict(kwargs) k2['use_ssl'] = False return HTTPConnection(*args, **k2) return self.do_open(makehttpcon, req, False) def https_open(self, req): # req.get_full_url() does not contain credentials and we may # need them to match the certificates. url = req.get_full_url() user, password = self.pwmgr.find_stored_password(url) res = readauthforuri(self.ui, url, user) if res: group, auth = res self.auth = auth self.ui.debug("using auth.%s.* for authentication\n" % group) else: self.auth = None return self.do_open(self._makesslconnection, req, True) def _makesslconnection(self, host, port=443, *args, **kwargs): keyfile = None certfile = None if args: # key_file keyfile = args.pop(0) if args: # cert_file certfile = args.pop(0) # if the user has specified different key/cert files in # hgrc, we prefer these if self.auth and 'key' in self.auth and 'cert' in self.auth: keyfile = self.auth['key'] certfile = self.auth['cert'] # let host port take precedence if ':' in host and '[' not in host or ']:' in host: host, port = host.rsplit(':', 1) port = int(port) if '[' in host: host = host[1:-1] if keyfile: kwargs['keyfile'] = keyfile if certfile: kwargs['certfile'] = certfile kwargs.update(sslutil.sslkwargs(self.ui, host)) con = HTTPConnection(host, port, use_ssl=True, ssl_validator=sslutil.validator(self.ui, host), **kwargs) return con