Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/httpconnection.py @ 36958:644a02f6b34f
util: prefer "bytesio" to "stringio"
The io.BytesIO and io.StringIO types enforce the type of
data being operated on. On Python 2, we use cStringIO.StringIO(),
which is lax about mixing types. On Python 3, we actually use
io.BytesIO. Ideally, we'd use io.BytesIO on Python 2. But I believe
its performance is poor compared to cString.StringIO().
Anyway, we canonically define our pycompat type as "stringio."
That name is misleading, especially on Python 3.
This commit renames the canonical symbols to "bytesio."
"stringio" is preserved as an alias for API compatibility. There
are a lot of callers in the repo and I hesitate to take away the
old name. I also don't feel like changing everything at this time.
But at least new callers can use a "proper" name.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2868
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 14 Mar 2018 11:52:35 -0700 |
parents | 6b1eb4c610b4 |
children | 5f9d436cd3b7 |
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# httpconnection.py - urllib2 handler for new http support # # Copyright 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> # Copyright 2006, 2007 Alexis S. L. Carvalho <alexis@cecm.usp.br> # Copyright 2006 Vadim Gelfer <vadim.gelfer@gmail.com> # Copyright 2011 Google, Inc. # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. from __future__ import absolute_import import os from .i18n import _ from . import ( pycompat, util, ) urlerr = util.urlerr urlreq = util.urlreq # moved here from url.py to avoid a cycle class httpsendfile(object): """This is a wrapper around the objects returned by python's "open". Its purpose is to send file-like objects via HTTP. It do however not define a __len__ attribute because the length might be more than Py_ssize_t can handle. """ def __init__(self, ui, *args, **kwargs): self.ui = ui self._data = open(*args, **kwargs) self.seek = self._data.seek self.close = self._data.close self.write = self._data.write self.length = os.fstat(self._data.fileno()).st_size self._pos = 0 self._total = self.length // 1024 * 2 def read(self, *args, **kwargs): ret = self._data.read(*args, **kwargs) if not ret: self.ui.progress(_('sending'), None) return ret self._pos += len(ret) # We pass double the max for total because we currently have # to send the bundle twice in the case of a server that # requires authentication. Since we can't know until we try # once whether authentication will be required, just lie to # the user and maybe the push succeeds suddenly at 50%. self.ui.progress(_('sending'), self._pos // 1024, unit=_('kb'), total=self._total) return ret def __enter__(self): return self def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb): self.close() # moved here from url.py to avoid a cycle def readauthforuri(ui, uri, user): uri = pycompat.bytesurl(uri) # Read configuration groups = {} for key, val in ui.configitems('auth'): if key in ('cookiefile',): continue if '.' not in key: ui.warn(_("ignoring invalid [auth] key '%s'\n") % key) continue group, setting = key.rsplit('.', 1) gdict = groups.setdefault(group, {}) if setting in ('username', 'cert', 'key'): val = util.expandpath(val) gdict[setting] = val # Find the best match scheme, hostpath = uri.split('://', 1) bestuser = None bestlen = 0 bestauth = None for group, auth in groups.iteritems(): if user and user != auth.get('username', user): # If a username was set in the URI, the entry username # must either match it or be unset continue prefix = auth.get('prefix') if not prefix: continue p = prefix.split('://', 1) if len(p) > 1: schemes, prefix = [p[0]], p[1] else: schemes = (auth.get('schemes') or 'https').split() if (prefix == '*' or hostpath.startswith(prefix)) and \ (len(prefix) > bestlen or (len(prefix) == bestlen and \ not bestuser and 'username' in auth)) \ and scheme in schemes: bestlen = len(prefix) bestauth = group, auth bestuser = auth.get('username') if user and not bestuser: auth['username'] = user return bestauth