Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-url.py @ 40417:49c7b701fdc2 stable
phase: add an archived phase
This phase allows for hidden changesets in the "user space". It differs from
the "internal" phase which is intended for internal by-product only. There
have been discussions at the 4.8 sprint to use such phase to speedup cleanup
after history rewriting operation.
Shipping it in the same release as the 'internal-phase' groups the associated
`requires` entry. The important bit is to have support for this phase in the
earliest version of mercurial possible. Adding the UI to manipulate this new
phase later seems fine.
The current plan for archived usage and user interface are as follow. On a
repository with internal-phase on and evolution off:
* history rewriting command set rewritten changeset in the archived phase.
(This mean updating the cleanupnodes method).
* keep `hg unbundle .hg/strip-backup/X.hg` as a way to restore changeset for
now
(backup bundle need to contains phase data)
* [maybe] add a `hg strip --soft` advance flag
(a light way to expose the feature without getting in the way of a better
UI)
Mercurial 4.8 freeze is too close to get the above in by then.
We don't introduce a new repository `requirement` as we reuse the one
introduced with the 'archived' phase during the 4.8 cycle.
author | Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 17 Oct 2018 14:47:01 +0200 |
parents | d088810c496e |
children | 2372284d9457 |
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# coding=utf-8 from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import doctest import os def check(a, b): if a != b: print((a, b)) def cert(cn): return {'subject': ((('commonName', cn),),)} from mercurial import ( sslutil, ) _verifycert = sslutil._verifycert # Test non-wildcard certificates check(_verifycert(cert('example.com'), 'example.com'), None) check(_verifycert(cert('example.com'), 'www.example.com'), b'certificate is for example.com') check(_verifycert(cert('www.example.com'), 'example.com'), b'certificate is for www.example.com') # Test wildcard certificates check(_verifycert(cert('*.example.com'), 'www.example.com'), None) check(_verifycert(cert('*.example.com'), 'example.com'), b'certificate is for *.example.com') check(_verifycert(cert('*.example.com'), 'w.w.example.com'), b'certificate is for *.example.com') # Test subjectAltName san_cert = {'subject': ((('commonName', 'example.com'),),), 'subjectAltName': (('DNS', '*.example.net'), ('DNS', 'example.net'))} check(_verifycert(san_cert, 'example.net'), None) check(_verifycert(san_cert, 'foo.example.net'), None) # no fallback to subject commonName when subjectAltName has DNS check(_verifycert(san_cert, 'example.com'), b'certificate is for *.example.net, example.net') # fallback to subject commonName when no DNS in subjectAltName san_cert = {'subject': ((('commonName', 'example.com'),),), 'subjectAltName': (('IP Address', '8.8.8.8'),)} check(_verifycert(san_cert, 'example.com'), None) # Avoid some pitfalls check(_verifycert(cert('*.foo'), 'foo'), b'certificate is for *.foo') check(_verifycert(cert('*o'), 'foo'), None) check(_verifycert({'subject': ()}, 'example.com'), b'no commonName or subjectAltName found in certificate') check(_verifycert(None, 'example.com'), b'no certificate received') # Unicode (IDN) certname isn't supported check(_verifycert(cert(u'\u4f8b.jp'), 'example.jp'), b'IDN in certificate not supported') # The following tests are from CPython's test_ssl.py. check(_verifycert(cert('example.com'), 'example.com'), None) check(_verifycert(cert('example.com'), 'ExAmple.cOm'), None) check(_verifycert(cert('example.com'), 'www.example.com'), b'certificate is for example.com') check(_verifycert(cert('example.com'), '.example.com'), b'certificate is for example.com') check(_verifycert(cert('example.com'), 'example.org'), b'certificate is for example.com') check(_verifycert(cert('example.com'), 'exampleXcom'), b'certificate is for example.com') check(_verifycert(cert('*.a.com'), 'foo.a.com'), None) check(_verifycert(cert('*.a.com'), 'bar.foo.a.com'), b'certificate is for *.a.com') check(_verifycert(cert('*.a.com'), 'a.com'), b'certificate is for *.a.com') check(_verifycert(cert('*.a.com'), 'Xa.com'), b'certificate is for *.a.com') check(_verifycert(cert('*.a.com'), '.a.com'), b'certificate is for *.a.com') # only match one left-most wildcard check(_verifycert(cert('f*.com'), 'foo.com'), None) check(_verifycert(cert('f*.com'), 'f.com'), None) check(_verifycert(cert('f*.com'), 'bar.com'), b'certificate is for f*.com') check(_verifycert(cert('f*.com'), 'foo.a.com'), b'certificate is for f*.com') check(_verifycert(cert('f*.com'), 'bar.foo.com'), b'certificate is for f*.com') # NULL bytes are bad, CVE-2013-4073 check(_verifycert(cert('null.python.org\x00example.org'), 'null.python.org\x00example.org'), None) check(_verifycert(cert('null.python.org\x00example.org'), 'example.org'), b'certificate is for null.python.org\x00example.org') check(_verifycert(cert('null.python.org\x00example.org'), 'null.python.org'), b'certificate is for null.python.org\x00example.org') # error cases with wildcards check(_verifycert(cert('*.*.a.com'), 'bar.foo.a.com'), b'certificate is for *.*.a.com') check(_verifycert(cert('*.*.a.com'), 'a.com'), b'certificate is for *.*.a.com') check(_verifycert(cert('*.*.a.com'), 'Xa.com'), b'certificate is for *.*.a.com') check(_verifycert(cert('*.*.a.com'), '.a.com'), b'certificate is for *.*.a.com') check(_verifycert(cert('a.*.com'), 'a.foo.com'), b'certificate is for a.*.com') check(_verifycert(cert('a.*.com'), 'a..com'), b'certificate is for a.*.com') check(_verifycert(cert('a.*.com'), 'a.com'), b'certificate is for a.*.com') # wildcard doesn't match IDNA prefix 'xn--' idna = u'püthon.python.org'.encode('idna').decode('ascii') check(_verifycert(cert(idna), idna), None) check(_verifycert(cert('x*.python.org'), idna), b'certificate is for x*.python.org') check(_verifycert(cert('xn--p*.python.org'), idna), b'certificate is for xn--p*.python.org') # wildcard in first fragment and IDNA A-labels in sequent fragments # are supported. idna = u'www*.pythön.org'.encode('idna').decode('ascii') check(_verifycert(cert(idna), u'www.pythön.org'.encode('idna').decode('ascii')), None) check(_verifycert(cert(idna), u'www1.pythön.org'.encode('idna').decode('ascii')), None) check(_verifycert(cert(idna), u'ftp.pythön.org'.encode('idna').decode('ascii')), b'certificate is for www*.xn--pythn-mua.org') check(_verifycert(cert(idna), u'pythön.org'.encode('idna').decode('ascii')), b'certificate is for www*.xn--pythn-mua.org') c = { 'notAfter': 'Jun 26 21:41:46 2011 GMT', 'subject': (((u'commonName', u'linuxfrz.org'),),), 'subjectAltName': ( ('DNS', 'linuxfr.org'), ('DNS', 'linuxfr.com'), ('othername', '<unsupported>'), ) } check(_verifycert(c, 'linuxfr.org'), None) check(_verifycert(c, 'linuxfr.com'), None) # Not a "DNS" entry check(_verifycert(c, '<unsupported>'), b'certificate is for linuxfr.org, linuxfr.com') # When there is a subjectAltName, commonName isn't used check(_verifycert(c, 'linuxfrz.org'), b'certificate is for linuxfr.org, linuxfr.com') # A pristine real-world example c = { 'notAfter': 'Dec 18 23:59:59 2011 GMT', 'subject': ( ((u'countryName', u'US'),), ((u'stateOrProvinceName', u'California'),), ((u'localityName', u'Mountain View'),), ((u'organizationName', u'Google Inc'),), ((u'commonName', u'mail.google.com'),), ), } check(_verifycert(c, 'mail.google.com'), None) check(_verifycert(c, 'gmail.com'), b'certificate is for mail.google.com') # Only commonName is considered check(_verifycert(c, 'California'), b'certificate is for mail.google.com') # Neither commonName nor subjectAltName c = { 'notAfter': 'Dec 18 23:59:59 2011 GMT', 'subject': ( ((u'countryName', u'US'),), ((u'stateOrProvinceName', u'California'),), ((u'localityName', u'Mountain View'),), ((u'organizationName', u'Google Inc'),), ), } check(_verifycert(c, 'mail.google.com'), b'no commonName or subjectAltName found in certificate') # No DNS entry in subjectAltName but a commonName c = { 'notAfter': 'Dec 18 23:59:59 2099 GMT', 'subject': ( ((u'countryName', u'US'),), ((u'stateOrProvinceName', u'California'),), ((u'localityName', u'Mountain View'),), ((u'commonName', u'mail.google.com'),), ), 'subjectAltName': (('othername', 'blabla'),), } check(_verifycert(c, 'mail.google.com'), None) # No DNS entry subjectAltName and no commonName c = { 'notAfter': 'Dec 18 23:59:59 2099 GMT', 'subject': ( ((u'countryName', u'US'),), ((u'stateOrProvinceName', u'California'),), ((u'localityName', u'Mountain View'),), ((u'organizationName', u'Google Inc'),), ), 'subjectAltName': (('othername', 'blabla'),), } check(_verifycert(c, 'google.com'), b'no commonName or subjectAltName found in certificate') # Empty cert / no cert check(_verifycert(None, 'example.com'), b'no certificate received') check(_verifycert({}, 'example.com'), b'no certificate received') # avoid denials of service by refusing more than one # wildcard per fragment. check(_verifycert({'subject': (((u'commonName', u'a*b.com'),),)}, 'axxb.com'), None) check(_verifycert({'subject': (((u'commonName', u'a*b.co*'),),)}, 'axxb.com'), b'certificate is for a*b.co*') check(_verifycert({'subject': (((u'commonName', u'a*b*.com'),),)}, 'axxbxxc.com'), b'too many wildcards in certificate DNS name: a*b*.com') def test_url(): """ >>> from mercurial import error, pycompat >>> from mercurial.util import url >>> from mercurial.utils.stringutil import forcebytestr This tests for edge cases in url.URL's parsing algorithm. Most of these aren't useful for documentation purposes, so they aren't part of the class's doc tests. Query strings and fragments: >>> url(b'http://host/a?b#c') <url scheme: 'http', host: 'host', path: 'a', query: 'b', fragment: 'c'> >>> url(b'http://host/a?') <url scheme: 'http', host: 'host', path: 'a'> >>> url(b'http://host/a#b#c') <url scheme: 'http', host: 'host', path: 'a', fragment: 'b#c'> >>> url(b'http://host/a#b?c') <url scheme: 'http', host: 'host', path: 'a', fragment: 'b?c'> >>> url(b'http://host/?a#b') <url scheme: 'http', host: 'host', path: '', query: 'a', fragment: 'b'> >>> url(b'http://host/?a#b', parsequery=False) <url scheme: 'http', host: 'host', path: '?a', fragment: 'b'> >>> url(b'http://host/?a#b', parsefragment=False) <url scheme: 'http', host: 'host', path: '', query: 'a#b'> >>> url(b'http://host/?a#b', parsequery=False, parsefragment=False) <url scheme: 'http', host: 'host', path: '?a#b'> IPv6 addresses: >>> url(b'ldap://[2001:db8::7]/c=GB?objectClass?one') <url scheme: 'ldap', host: '[2001:db8::7]', path: 'c=GB', query: 'objectClass?one'> >>> url(b'ldap://joe:xxx@[2001:db8::7]:80/c=GB?objectClass?one') <url scheme: 'ldap', user: 'joe', passwd: 'xxx', host: '[2001:db8::7]', port: '80', path: 'c=GB', query: 'objectClass?one'> Missing scheme, host, etc.: >>> url(b'://192.0.2.16:80/') <url path: '://192.0.2.16:80/'> >>> url(b'https://mercurial-scm.org') <url scheme: 'https', host: 'mercurial-scm.org'> >>> url(b'/foo') <url path: '/foo'> >>> url(b'bundle:/foo') <url scheme: 'bundle', path: '/foo'> >>> url(b'a?b#c') <url path: 'a?b', fragment: 'c'> >>> url(b'http://x.com?arg=/foo') <url scheme: 'http', host: 'x.com', query: 'arg=/foo'> >>> url(b'http://joe:xxx@/foo') <url scheme: 'http', user: 'joe', passwd: 'xxx', path: 'foo'> Just a scheme and a path: >>> url(b'mailto:John.Doe@example.com') <url scheme: 'mailto', path: 'John.Doe@example.com'> >>> url(b'a:b:c:d') <url path: 'a:b:c:d'> >>> url(b'aa:bb:cc:dd') <url scheme: 'aa', path: 'bb:cc:dd'> SSH examples: >>> url(b'ssh://joe@host//home/joe') <url scheme: 'ssh', user: 'joe', host: 'host', path: '/home/joe'> >>> url(b'ssh://joe:xxx@host/src') <url scheme: 'ssh', user: 'joe', passwd: 'xxx', host: 'host', path: 'src'> >>> url(b'ssh://joe:xxx@host') <url scheme: 'ssh', user: 'joe', passwd: 'xxx', host: 'host'> >>> url(b'ssh://joe@host') <url scheme: 'ssh', user: 'joe', host: 'host'> >>> url(b'ssh://host') <url scheme: 'ssh', host: 'host'> >>> url(b'ssh://') <url scheme: 'ssh'> >>> url(b'ssh:') <url scheme: 'ssh'> Non-numeric port: >>> url(b'http://example.com:dd') <url scheme: 'http', host: 'example.com', port: 'dd'> >>> url(b'ssh://joe:xxx@host:ssh/foo') <url scheme: 'ssh', user: 'joe', passwd: 'xxx', host: 'host', port: 'ssh', path: 'foo'> Bad authentication credentials: >>> url(b'http://joe@joeville:123@4:@host/a?b#c') <url scheme: 'http', user: 'joe@joeville', passwd: '123@4:', host: 'host', path: 'a', query: 'b', fragment: 'c'> >>> url(b'http://!*#?/@!*#?/:@host/a?b#c') <url scheme: 'http', host: '!*', fragment: '?/@!*#?/:@host/a?b#c'> >>> url(b'http://!*#?@!*#?:@host/a?b#c') <url scheme: 'http', host: '!*', fragment: '?@!*#?:@host/a?b#c'> >>> url(b'http://!*@:!*@@host/a?b#c') <url scheme: 'http', user: '!*@', passwd: '!*@', host: 'host', path: 'a', query: 'b', fragment: 'c'> File paths: >>> url(b'a/b/c/d.g.f') <url path: 'a/b/c/d.g.f'> >>> url(b'/x///z/y/') <url path: '/x///z/y/'> >>> url(b'/foo:bar') <url path: '/foo:bar'> >>> url(b'\\\\foo:bar') <url path: '\\\\foo:bar'> >>> url(b'./foo:bar') <url path: './foo:bar'> Non-localhost file URL: >>> try: ... u = url(b'file://mercurial-scm.org/foo') ... except error.Abort as e: ... forcebytestr(e) 'file:// URLs can only refer to localhost' Empty URL: >>> u = url(b'') >>> u <url path: ''> >>> str(u) '' Empty path with query string: >>> str(url(b'http://foo/?bar')) 'http://foo/?bar' Invalid path: >>> u = url(b'http://foo/bar') >>> u.path = b'bar' >>> str(u) 'http://foo/bar' >>> u = url(b'file:/foo/bar/baz') >>> u <url scheme: 'file', path: '/foo/bar/baz'> >>> str(u) 'file:///foo/bar/baz' >>> pycompat.bytestr(u.localpath()) '/foo/bar/baz' >>> u = url(b'file:///foo/bar/baz') >>> u <url scheme: 'file', path: '/foo/bar/baz'> >>> str(u) 'file:///foo/bar/baz' >>> pycompat.bytestr(u.localpath()) '/foo/bar/baz' >>> u = url(b'file:///f:oo/bar/baz') >>> u <url scheme: 'file', path: 'f:oo/bar/baz'> >>> str(u) 'file:///f:oo/bar/baz' >>> pycompat.bytestr(u.localpath()) 'f:oo/bar/baz' >>> u = url(b'file://localhost/f:oo/bar/baz') >>> u <url scheme: 'file', host: 'localhost', path: 'f:oo/bar/baz'> >>> str(u) 'file://localhost/f:oo/bar/baz' >>> pycompat.bytestr(u.localpath()) 'f:oo/bar/baz' >>> u = url(b'file:foo/bar/baz') >>> u <url scheme: 'file', path: 'foo/bar/baz'> >>> str(u) 'file:foo/bar/baz' >>> pycompat.bytestr(u.localpath()) 'foo/bar/baz' """ if 'TERM' in os.environ: del os.environ['TERM'] doctest.testmod(optionflags=doctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE)