Mercurial > hg
view tests/sslcerts/README @ 35432:86b8cc1f244e
worker: make windows workers daemons
The windows workers weren't daemons and were not correctly killed when ctrl-c'd from the terminal. Withi this change when the main thread is killed, all daemons get killed as well.
I also reduced the time we give to workers to cleanup nicely to not have people ctrl-c'ing when they get inpatient.
The output when threads clened up nicely:
PS C:\<dir>> hg.exe sparse --disable-profile SparseProfiles/<profile>.sparse
interrupted!
The output when threads don't clenup in 1 sec:
PS C:\<dir> hg.exe sparse --enable-profile SparseProfiles/<profile>.sparse
failed to kill worker threads while handling an exception
interrupted!
Exception in thread Thread-4 (most likely raised during interpreter shutdown):
PS C:\<dir>>
Test Plan:
Run hg command on windows (pull/update/sparse). Ctrl-C'd sparse --enable-profile command that was using threads and observed in proces explorer that all threads got killed.
ran tests on CentOS
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1564
author | Wojciech Lis <wlis@fb.com> |
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date | Thu, 30 Nov 2017 16:01:53 -0800 |
parents | 43f3c0df2fab |
children |
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Generate a private key (priv.pem): $ openssl genrsa -out priv.pem 2048 Generate 2 self-signed certificates from this key (pub.pem, pub-other.pem): $ openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 9000 \ -out pub.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/' $ openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 9000 \ -out pub-other.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/' Now generate an expired certificate by turning back the system time: $ faketime 2016-01-01T00:00:00Z \ openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 1 \ -out pub-expired.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/' Generate a certificate not yet active by advancing the system time: $ faketime 2030-01-1T00:00:00Z \ openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 1 \ -out pub-not-yet.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/' Generate a passphrase protected client certificate private key: $ openssl genrsa -aes256 -passout pass:1234 -out client-key.pem 2048 Create a copy of the private key without a passphrase: $ openssl rsa -in client-key.pem -passin pass:1234 -out client-key-decrypted.pem Create a CSR and sign the key using the server keypair: $ printf '.\n.\n.\n.\n.\n.\nhg-client@localhost\n.\n.\n' | \ openssl req -new -key client-key.pem -passin pass:1234 -out client-csr.pem $ openssl x509 -req -days 9000 -in client-csr.pem -CA pub.pem -CAkey priv.pem \ -set_serial 01 -out client-cert.pem When replacing the certificates, references to certificate fingerprints will need to be updated in test files. Fingerprints for certs can be obtained by running: $ openssl x509 -in pub.pem -noout -sha1 -fingerprint $ openssl x509 -in pub.pem -noout -sha256 -fingerprint