view tests/md5sum.py @ 29489:54ad81b0665f

sslutil: handle default CA certificate loading on Windows See the inline comment for what's going on here. There is magic built into the "ssl" module that ships with modern CPython that knows how to load the system CA certificates on Windows. Since we're not shipping a CA bundle with Mercurial, if we're running on legacy CPython there's nothing we can do to load CAs on Windows, so it makes sense to print a warning. I don't anticipate many people will see this warning because the official (presumed popular) Mercurial distributions on Windows bundle Python and should be distributing a modern Python capable of loading system CA certs.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Mon, 04 Jul 2016 10:04:11 -0700
parents 6a98f9408a50
children 8d1cdee372e6
line wrap: on
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#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# Based on python's Tools/scripts/md5sum.py
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms
# of the PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2, which is
# GPL-compatible.

from __future__ import absolute_import

import os
import sys

try:
    import hashlib
    md5 = hashlib.md5
except ImportError:
    import md5
    md5 = md5.md5

try:
    import msvcrt
    msvcrt.setmode(sys.stdout.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
    msvcrt.setmode(sys.stderr.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
except ImportError:
    pass

for filename in sys.argv[1:]:
    try:
        fp = open(filename, 'rb')
    except IOError as msg:
        sys.stderr.write('%s: Can\'t open: %s\n' % (filename, msg))
        sys.exit(1)

    m = md5()
    try:
        while True:
            data = fp.read(8192)
            if not data:
                break
            m.update(data)
    except IOError as msg:
        sys.stderr.write('%s: I/O error: %s\n' % (filename, msg))
        sys.exit(1)
    sys.stdout.write('%s  %s\n' % (m.hexdigest(), filename))

sys.exit(0)