Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/worker.py @ 29288:7dee15dee53c
sslutil: add devel.disableloaddefaultcerts to disable CA loading
There are various tests for behavior when CA certs aren't loaded.
Previously, we would pass --insecure to disable loading of CA
certs. This has worked up to this point because the error message
for --insecure and no CAs loaded is the same. Upcoming commits will
change the error message for --insecure and will change behavior
when CAs aren't loaded.
This commit introduces the ability to disable loading of CA certs
by setting devel.disableloaddefaultcerts. This allows a testing
backdoor to disable loading of CA certs even if system/default
CA certs are available. The flag is purposefully not exposed to
end-users because there should not be a need for this in the wild:
certificate pinning and --insecure provide workarounds to disable
cert loading/validation.
Tests have been updated to use the new method. The variable used
to disable CA certs has been renamed because the method is not
OS X specific.
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 01 Jun 2016 19:57:20 -0700 |
parents | 3eb7faf6d958 |
children | 78a58dcf8853 |
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# worker.py - master-slave parallelism support # # Copyright 2013 Facebook, 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 errno import os import signal import sys import threading from .i18n import _ from . import error def countcpus(): '''try to count the number of CPUs on the system''' # posix try: n = int(os.sysconf('SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN')) if n > 0: return n except (AttributeError, ValueError): pass # windows try: n = int(os.environ['NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS']) if n > 0: return n except (KeyError, ValueError): pass return 1 def _numworkers(ui): s = ui.config('worker', 'numcpus') if s: try: n = int(s) if n >= 1: return n except ValueError: raise error.Abort(_('number of cpus must be an integer')) return min(max(countcpus(), 4), 32) if os.name == 'posix': _startupcost = 0.01 else: _startupcost = 1e30 def worthwhile(ui, costperop, nops): '''try to determine whether the benefit of multiple processes can outweigh the cost of starting them''' linear = costperop * nops workers = _numworkers(ui) benefit = linear - (_startupcost * workers + linear / workers) return benefit >= 0.15 def worker(ui, costperarg, func, staticargs, args): '''run a function, possibly in parallel in multiple worker processes. returns a progress iterator costperarg - cost of a single task func - function to run staticargs - arguments to pass to every invocation of the function args - arguments to split into chunks, to pass to individual workers ''' if worthwhile(ui, costperarg, len(args)): return _platformworker(ui, func, staticargs, args) return func(*staticargs + (args,)) def _posixworker(ui, func, staticargs, args): rfd, wfd = os.pipe() workers = _numworkers(ui) oldhandler = signal.getsignal(signal.SIGINT) signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, signal.SIG_IGN) pids, problem = [], [0] for pargs in partition(args, workers): pid = os.fork() if pid == 0: signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, oldhandler) try: os.close(rfd) for i, item in func(*(staticargs + (pargs,))): os.write(wfd, '%d %s\n' % (i, item)) os._exit(0) except KeyboardInterrupt: os._exit(255) # other exceptions are allowed to propagate, we rely # on lock.py's pid checks to avoid release callbacks pids.append(pid) pids.reverse() os.close(wfd) fp = os.fdopen(rfd, 'rb', 0) def killworkers(): # if one worker bails, there's no good reason to wait for the rest for p in pids: try: os.kill(p, signal.SIGTERM) except OSError as err: if err.errno != errno.ESRCH: raise def waitforworkers(): for _pid in pids: st = _exitstatus(os.wait()[1]) if st and not problem[0]: problem[0] = st killworkers() t = threading.Thread(target=waitforworkers) t.start() def cleanup(): signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, oldhandler) t.join() status = problem[0] if status: if status < 0: os.kill(os.getpid(), -status) sys.exit(status) try: for line in fp: l = line.split(' ', 1) yield int(l[0]), l[1][:-1] except: # re-raises killworkers() cleanup() raise cleanup() def _posixexitstatus(code): '''convert a posix exit status into the same form returned by os.spawnv returns None if the process was stopped instead of exiting''' if os.WIFEXITED(code): return os.WEXITSTATUS(code) elif os.WIFSIGNALED(code): return -os.WTERMSIG(code) if os.name != 'nt': _platformworker = _posixworker _exitstatus = _posixexitstatus def partition(lst, nslices): '''partition a list into N slices of roughly equal size The current strategy takes every Nth element from the input. If we ever write workers that need to preserve grouping in input we should consider allowing callers to specify a partition strategy. mpm is not a fan of this partitioning strategy when files are involved. In his words: Single-threaded Mercurial makes a point of creating and visiting files in a fixed order (alphabetical). When creating files in order, a typical filesystem is likely to allocate them on nearby regions on disk. Thus, when revisiting in the same order, locality is maximized and various forms of OS and disk-level caching and read-ahead get a chance to work. This effect can be quite significant on spinning disks. I discovered it circa Mercurial v0.4 when revlogs were named by hashes of filenames. Tarring a repo and copying it to another disk effectively randomized the revlog ordering on disk by sorting the revlogs by hash and suddenly performance of my kernel checkout benchmark dropped by ~10x because the "working set" of sectors visited no longer fit in the drive's cache and the workload switched from streaming to random I/O. What we should really be doing is have workers read filenames from a ordered queue. This preserves locality and also keeps any worker from getting more than one file out of balance. ''' for i in range(nslices): yield lst[i::nslices]