view tests/blacklists/README @ 29619:53e80179bd6a stable

sslutil: improve messaging around unsupported protocols (issue5303) There are various causes for the inability to negotiate common SSL/TLS protocol between client and server. Previously, we had a single, not very actionable warning message for all of them. As people encountered TLS 1.0 servers in real life, it was quickly obvious that the existing messaging was inadequate to help users rectify the situation. This patch makes the warning messages much more verbose in hopes of making them more actionable while simultaneously encouraging users and servers to adopt better security practices. This messaging flirts with the anti-pattern of "never blame the user" by signaling out poorly-configured servers. But if we're going to disallow TLS 1.0 by default, I think we need to say *something* or people are just going to blame Mercurial for not being able to connect. The messaging tries to exonerate Mercurial from being the at fault party by pointing out the server is the entity that doesn't support proper security (when appropriate, of course).
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Tue, 19 Jul 2016 21:09:58 -0700
parents c437745f50ec
children
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Put here definitions of blacklists for run-tests.py

Create a file per blacklist. Each file should list the names of tests that you
want to be skipped.
File names are meant to be used as targets for run-tests.py --blacklist
option.
Lines starting with # are ignored. White spaces are stripped.

e.g. if you create a blacklist/example file containing:
 test-hgrc
 # some comment
 test-help
then calling "run-tests.py --blacklist blacklists/example" will exclude
test-hgrc and test-help from the list of tests to run.