Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/sslutil.py @ 27432:77d25b913f80
changegroup: introduce cg3, which has support for exchanging treemanifests
I'm not entirely happy with using a trailing / on a "file" entry for
transferring a treemanifest. We've discussed putting some flags on
each file header[0], but I'm unconvinced that's actually any better:
if we were going to add another feature to the cg format we'd still be
doing a version bump anyway to cg4, so I'm inclined to not spend time
coming up with a more sophisticated format until we actually know what
the next feature we want to stuff in a changegroup will be.
Test changes outside test-treemanifest.t are only due to the new CG3
bundlecap showing up in the wire protocol.
Many thanks to adgar@google.com and martinvonz@google.com for helping
me with various odd corners of the changegroup and treemanifest API.
0: It's not hard refactoring, nor is it a lot of work. I'm just
disinclined to do speculative work when it's not clear what the
customer would actually be.
author | Augie Fackler <augie@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 11 Dec 2015 11:23:49 -0500 |
parents | 9e15286609ae |
children | 6c7d26cef0cd |
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# sslutil.py - SSL handling for mercurial # # 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> # # 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 import ssl import sys from .i18n import _ from . import error, util hassni = getattr(ssl, 'HAS_SNI', False) _canloaddefaultcerts = False try: ssl_context = ssl.SSLContext _canloaddefaultcerts = util.safehasattr(ssl_context, 'load_default_certs') def wrapsocket(sock, keyfile, certfile, ui, cert_reqs=ssl.CERT_NONE, ca_certs=None, serverhostname=None): # Allow any version of SSL starting with TLSv1 and # up. Note that specifying TLSv1 here prohibits use of # newer standards (like TLSv1_2), so this is the right way # to do this. Note that in the future it'd be better to # support using ssl.create_default_context(), which sets # up a bunch of things in smart ways (strong ciphers, # protocol versions, etc) and is upgraded by Python # maintainers for us, but that breaks too many things to # do it in a hurry. sslcontext = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv23) sslcontext.options &= ssl.OP_NO_SSLv2 & ssl.OP_NO_SSLv3 if certfile is not None: def password(): f = keyfile or certfile return ui.getpass(_('passphrase for %s: ') % f, '') sslcontext.load_cert_chain(certfile, keyfile, password) sslcontext.verify_mode = cert_reqs if ca_certs is not None: sslcontext.load_verify_locations(cafile=ca_certs) elif _canloaddefaultcerts: sslcontext.load_default_certs() sslsocket = sslcontext.wrap_socket(sock, server_hostname=serverhostname) # check if wrap_socket failed silently because socket had been # closed # - see http://bugs.python.org/issue13721 if not sslsocket.cipher(): raise error.Abort(_('ssl connection failed')) return sslsocket except AttributeError: def wrapsocket(sock, keyfile, certfile, ui, cert_reqs=ssl.CERT_NONE, ca_certs=None, serverhostname=None): sslsocket = ssl.wrap_socket(sock, keyfile, certfile, cert_reqs=cert_reqs, ca_certs=ca_certs, ssl_version=ssl.PROTOCOL_TLSv1) # check if wrap_socket failed silently because socket had been # closed # - see http://bugs.python.org/issue13721 if not sslsocket.cipher(): raise error.Abort(_('ssl connection failed')) return sslsocket def _verifycert(cert, hostname): '''Verify that cert (in socket.getpeercert() format) matches hostname. CRLs is not handled. Returns error message if any problems are found and None on success. ''' if not cert: return _('no certificate received') dnsname = hostname.lower() def matchdnsname(certname): return (certname == dnsname or '.' in dnsname and certname == '*.' + dnsname.split('.', 1)[1]) san = cert.get('subjectAltName', []) if san: certnames = [value.lower() for key, value in san if key == 'DNS'] for name in certnames: if matchdnsname(name): return None if certnames: return _('certificate is for %s') % ', '.join(certnames) # subject is only checked when subjectAltName is empty for s in cert.get('subject', []): key, value = s[0] if key == 'commonName': try: # 'subject' entries are unicode certname = value.lower().encode('ascii') except UnicodeEncodeError: return _('IDN in certificate not supported') if matchdnsname(certname): return None return _('certificate is for %s') % certname return _('no commonName or subjectAltName found in certificate') # CERT_REQUIRED means fetch the cert from the server all the time AND # validate it against the CA store provided in web.cacerts. def _plainapplepython(): """return true if this seems to be a pure Apple Python that * is unfrozen and presumably has the whole mercurial module in the file system * presumably is an Apple Python that uses Apple OpenSSL which has patches for using system certificate store CAs in addition to the provided cacerts file """ if sys.platform != 'darwin' or util.mainfrozen() or not sys.executable: return False exe = os.path.realpath(sys.executable).lower() return (exe.startswith('/usr/bin/python') or exe.startswith('/system/library/frameworks/python.framework/')) def _defaultcacerts(): """return path to CA certificates; None for system's store; ! to disable""" if _plainapplepython(): dummycert = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), 'dummycert.pem') if os.path.exists(dummycert): return dummycert if _canloaddefaultcerts: return None return '!' def sslkwargs(ui, host): kws = {'ui': ui} hostfingerprint = ui.config('hostfingerprints', host) if hostfingerprint: return kws cacerts = ui.config('web', 'cacerts') if cacerts == '!': pass elif cacerts: cacerts = util.expandpath(cacerts) if not os.path.exists(cacerts): raise error.Abort(_('could not find web.cacerts: %s') % cacerts) else: cacerts = _defaultcacerts() if cacerts and cacerts != '!': ui.debug('using %s to enable OS X system CA\n' % cacerts) ui.setconfig('web', 'cacerts', cacerts, 'defaultcacerts') if cacerts != '!': kws.update({'ca_certs': cacerts, 'cert_reqs': ssl.CERT_REQUIRED, }) return kws class validator(object): def __init__(self, ui, host): self.ui = ui self.host = host def __call__(self, sock, strict=False): host = self.host cacerts = self.ui.config('web', 'cacerts') hostfingerprint = self.ui.config('hostfingerprints', host) if not sock.cipher(): # work around http://bugs.python.org/issue13721 raise error.Abort(_('%s ssl connection error') % host) try: peercert = sock.getpeercert(True) peercert2 = sock.getpeercert() except AttributeError: raise error.Abort(_('%s ssl connection error') % host) if not peercert: raise error.Abort(_('%s certificate error: ' 'no certificate received') % host) peerfingerprint = util.sha1(peercert).hexdigest() nicefingerprint = ":".join([peerfingerprint[x:x + 2] for x in xrange(0, len(peerfingerprint), 2)]) if hostfingerprint: if peerfingerprint.lower() != \ hostfingerprint.replace(':', '').lower(): raise error.Abort(_('certificate for %s has unexpected ' 'fingerprint %s') % (host, nicefingerprint), hint=_('check hostfingerprint configuration')) self.ui.debug('%s certificate matched fingerprint %s\n' % (host, nicefingerprint)) elif cacerts != '!': msg = _verifycert(peercert2, host) if msg: raise error.Abort(_('%s certificate error: %s') % (host, msg), hint=_('configure hostfingerprint %s or use ' '--insecure to connect insecurely') % nicefingerprint) self.ui.debug('%s certificate successfully verified\n' % host) elif strict: raise error.Abort(_('%s certificate with fingerprint %s not ' 'verified') % (host, nicefingerprint), hint=_('check hostfingerprints or web.cacerts ' 'config setting')) else: self.ui.warn(_('warning: %s certificate with fingerprint %s not ' 'verified (check hostfingerprints or web.cacerts ' 'config setting)\n') % (host, nicefingerprint))