Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-narrow-clone-non-narrow-server.t @ 40034:393e44324037
httppeer: report http statistics
Now that keepalive.py records HTTP request count and the
number of bytes sent and received as part of performing those
requests, we can easily print a report on the activity when
closing a peer instance!
Exact byte counts are globbed in tests because they are influenced
by non-deterministic things, such as hostnames and port numbers.
Plus, the exact byte count isn't too important anyway.
I feel obliged to note that printing the byte count could have
security implications. e.g. if sending a password via HTTP basic
auth, the length of that password will influence the byte count
and the reporting of the byte count could be a side-channel leak
of the password length. I /think/ this is beyond our threshold
for concern. But if we think it poses a problem, we can teach the
byte count logging code to e.g. ignore sensitive HTTP request
headers. We could also consider not reporting the byte count of
request headers altogether. But since the wire protocol uses HTTP
headers for sending command arguments, it is kind of important to
report their size.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4858
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 01 Oct 2018 13:17:38 -0700 |
parents | 06e75fbf9d6b |
children | 30a7d3b6b281 |
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Test attempting a narrow clone against a server that doesn't support narrowhg. $ . "$TESTDIR/narrow-library.sh" $ hg init master $ cd master $ for x in `$TESTDIR/seq.py 10`; do > echo $x > "f$x" > hg add "f$x" > hg commit -m "Add $x" > done $ hg serve -a localhost -p $HGPORT1 --config extensions.narrow=! -d \ > --pid-file=hg.pid $ cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS" $ hg serve -a localhost -p $HGPORT2 -d --pid-file=hg.pid $ cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS" Verify that narrow is advertised in the bundle2 capabilities: $ cat >> unquote.py <<EOF > from __future__ import print_function > import sys > if sys.version[0] == '3': > import urllib.parse as up > unquote = up.unquote_plus > else: > import urllib > unquote = urllib.unquote_plus > print(unquote(list(sys.stdin)[1])) > EOF $ echo hello | hg -R . serve --stdio | \ > "$PYTHON" unquote.py | tr ' ' '\n' | grep narrow narrow=v0 exp-narrow-1 $ cd .. $ hg clone --narrow --include f1 http://localhost:$HGPORT1/ narrowclone requesting all changes abort: server does not support narrow clones [255] Make a narrow clone (via HGPORT2), then try to narrow and widen into it (from HGPORT1) to prove that narrowing is fine and widening fails gracefully: $ hg clone -r 0 --narrow --include f1 http://localhost:$HGPORT2/ narrowclone adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files new changesets * (glob) updating to branch default 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ cd narrowclone $ hg tracked --addexclude f2 http://localhost:$HGPORT1/ comparing with http://localhost:$HGPORT1/ searching for changes looking for local changes to affected paths $ hg tracked --addinclude f1 http://localhost:$HGPORT1/ comparing with http://localhost:$HGPORT1/ abort: server does not support narrow clones [255]