Mercurial > hg
view tests/dummysmtpd.py @ 41855:2dbdb9abcc4b
inno: remove w9xpopen.exe
w9xpopen.exe is a utility program shipped with Python <3.4
(https://bugs.python.org/issue14470 tracked its removal).
The program was used by subprocess to wrap invoked processes
on Windows 95 and 98 or when command.com was used in order to
work around a redirect bug.
The workaround is only used on ancient Windows versions -
versions that we shouldn't see in 2019.
While Python 2.7's subprocess module still references
w9xpopen.exe, not shipping it shouldn't matter unless we're
running an ancient version of Windows. Python will raise
an exception if w9xpopen.exe can't be found.
It's highly unlikely anyone is using current Mercurial releases
on these ancient Windows versions. So remove w9xpopen.exe
from the Inno installer.
.. bc::
The 32-bit Windows Inno installers no longer distribute
w9xpopen.exe. This should only impact people running
Mercurial on Windows 95, 98, or ME.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6068
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 03 Mar 2019 17:22:03 -0800 |
parents | 78f1899e4202 |
children | 2372284d9457 |
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#!/usr/bin/env python """dummy SMTP server for use in tests""" from __future__ import absolute_import import asyncore import optparse import smtpd import ssl import sys import traceback from mercurial import ( pycompat, server, sslutil, ui as uimod, ) def log(msg): sys.stdout.write(msg) sys.stdout.flush() class dummysmtpserver(smtpd.SMTPServer): def __init__(self, localaddr): smtpd.SMTPServer.__init__(self, localaddr, remoteaddr=None) def process_message(self, peer, mailfrom, rcpttos, data, **kwargs): log('%s from=%s to=%s\n' % (peer[0], mailfrom, ', '.join(rcpttos))) def handle_error(self): # On Windows, a bad SSL connection sometimes generates a WSAECONNRESET. # The default handler will shutdown this server, and then both the # current connection and subsequent ones fail on the client side with # "No connection could be made because the target machine actively # refused it". If we eat the error, then the client properly aborts in # the expected way, and the server is available for subsequent requests. traceback.print_exc() class dummysmtpsecureserver(dummysmtpserver): def __init__(self, localaddr, certfile): dummysmtpserver.__init__(self, localaddr) self._certfile = certfile def handle_accept(self): pair = self.accept() if not pair: return conn, addr = pair ui = uimod.ui.load() try: # wrap_socket() would block, but we don't care conn = sslutil.wrapserversocket(conn, ui, certfile=self._certfile) except ssl.SSLError: log('%s ssl error\n' % addr[0]) conn.close() return smtpd.SMTPChannel(self, conn, addr) def run(): try: asyncore.loop() except KeyboardInterrupt: pass def _encodestrsonly(v): if isinstance(v, type(u'')): return v.encode('ascii') return v def bytesvars(obj): unidict = vars(obj) bd = {k.encode('ascii'): _encodestrsonly(v) for k, v in unidict.items()} if bd[b'daemon_postexec'] is not None: bd[b'daemon_postexec'] = [ _encodestrsonly(v) for v in bd[b'daemon_postexec']] return bd def main(): op = optparse.OptionParser() op.add_option('-d', '--daemon', action='store_true') op.add_option('--daemon-postexec', action='append') op.add_option('-p', '--port', type=int, default=8025) op.add_option('-a', '--address', default='localhost') op.add_option('--pid-file', metavar='FILE') op.add_option('--tls', choices=['none', 'smtps'], default='none') op.add_option('--certificate', metavar='FILE') opts, args = op.parse_args() if opts.tls == 'smtps' and not opts.certificate: op.error('--certificate must be specified') addr = (opts.address, opts.port) def init(): if opts.tls == 'none': dummysmtpserver(addr) else: dummysmtpsecureserver(addr, opts.certificate) log('listening at %s:%d\n' % addr) server.runservice( bytesvars(opts), initfn=init, runfn=run, runargs=[pycompat.sysexecutable, pycompat.fsencode(__file__)] + pycompat.sysargv[1:]) if __name__ == '__main__': main()