Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-audit-path.t @ 45825:8f07f5a9c3de
worker: raise exception instead of calling sys.exit() with child's code
When a worker process returns an error code, we would call
`sys.exit()` with that exit code on the main process. The `SystemExit`
exception would then get caught in `scmutil.callcatch()`, which would
return that error code. The comment there says "Commands shouldn't
sys.exit directly", which I agree with. This patch changes it so we
raise a specific exception when a worker fails so we can catch
instead. I think that means that `SystemExit` is now always an
internal error.
(I had earlier thought that this call to `sys.exit()` was from within
the child process until Matt Harbison made me look again, so thanks
for that!)
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9287
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 07 Nov 2020 21:50:28 -0800 |
parents | f90a5c211251 |
children | 35f1ecd84bd0 |
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The simple store doesn't escape paths robustly and can't store paths with periods, etc. So much of this test fails with it. #require no-reposimplestore $ hg init audit of .hg $ hg add .hg/00changelog.i abort: path contains illegal component: .hg/00changelog.i [255] #if symlink Symlinks $ mkdir a $ echo a > a/a $ hg ci -Ama adding a/a $ ln -s a b $ echo b > a/b $ hg add b/b abort: path 'b/b' traverses symbolic link 'b' [255] $ hg add b should still fail - maybe $ hg add b/b abort: path 'b/b' traverses symbolic link 'b' [255] $ hg commit -m 'add symlink b' Test symlink traversing when accessing history: ----------------------------------------------- (build a changeset where the path exists as a directory) $ hg up 0 0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ mkdir b $ echo c > b/a $ hg add b/a $ hg ci -m 'add directory b' created new head Test that hg cat does not do anything wrong the working copy has 'b' as directory $ hg cat b/a c $ hg cat -r "desc(directory)" b/a c $ hg cat -r "desc(symlink)" b/a b/a: no such file in rev bc151a1f53bd [1] Test that hg cat does not do anything wrong the working copy has 'b' as a symlink (issue4749) $ hg up 'desc(symlink)' 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ hg cat b/a b/a: no such file in rev bc151a1f53bd [1] $ hg cat -r "desc(directory)" b/a c $ hg cat -r "desc(symlink)" b/a b/a: no such file in rev bc151a1f53bd [1] #endif unbundle tampered bundle $ hg init target $ cd target $ hg unbundle "$TESTDIR/bundles/tampered.hg" adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 5 changesets with 6 changes to 6 files (+4 heads) new changesets b7da9bf6b037:fc1393d727bc (5 drafts) (run 'hg heads' to see heads, 'hg merge' to merge) attack .hg/test $ hg manifest -r0 .hg/test $ hg update -Cr0 abort: path contains illegal component: .hg/test [255] attack foo/.hg/test $ hg manifest -r1 foo/.hg/test $ hg update -Cr1 abort: path 'foo/.hg/test' is inside nested repo 'foo' [255] attack back/test where back symlinks to .. $ hg manifest -r2 back back/test #if symlink $ hg update -Cr2 abort: path 'back/test' traverses symbolic link 'back' [255] #else ('back' will be a file and cause some other system specific error) $ hg update -Cr2 abort: $TESTTMP/target/back/test: $ENOTDIR$ [255] #endif attack ../test $ hg manifest -r3 ../test $ mkdir ../test $ echo data > ../test/file $ hg update -Cr3 abort: path contains illegal component: ../test [255] $ cat ../test/file data attack /tmp/test $ hg manifest -r4 /tmp/test $ hg update -Cr4 abort: path contains illegal component: /tmp/test [255] $ cd .. Test symlink traversal on merge: -------------------------------- #if symlink set up symlink hell $ mkdir merge-symlink-out $ hg init merge-symlink $ cd merge-symlink $ touch base $ hg commit -qAm base $ ln -s ../merge-symlink-out a $ hg commit -qAm 'symlink a -> ../merge-symlink-out' $ hg up -q 0 $ mkdir a $ touch a/poisoned $ hg commit -qAm 'file a/poisoned' $ hg log -G -T '{rev}: {desc}\n' @ 2: file a/poisoned | | o 1: symlink a -> ../merge-symlink-out |/ o 0: base try trivial merge $ hg up -qC 1 $ hg merge 2 abort: path 'a/poisoned' traverses symbolic link 'a' [255] try rebase onto other revision: cache of audited paths should be discarded, and the rebase should fail (issue5628) $ hg up -qC 2 $ hg rebase -s 2 -d 1 --config extensions.rebase= rebasing 2:e73c21d6b244 tip "file a/poisoned" abort: path 'a/poisoned' traverses symbolic link 'a' [255] $ ls ../merge-symlink-out $ cd .. Test symlink traversal on update: --------------------------------- $ mkdir update-symlink-out $ hg init update-symlink $ cd update-symlink $ ln -s ../update-symlink-out a $ hg commit -qAm 'symlink a -> ../update-symlink-out' $ hg rm a $ mkdir a && touch a/b $ hg ci -qAm 'file a/b' a/b $ hg up -qC 0 $ hg rm a $ mkdir a && touch a/c $ hg ci -qAm 'rm a, file a/c' $ hg log -G -T '{rev}: {desc}\n' @ 2: rm a, file a/c | | o 1: file a/b |/ o 0: symlink a -> ../update-symlink-out try linear update where symlink already exists: $ hg up -qC 0 $ hg up 1 abort: path 'a/b' traverses symbolic link 'a' [255] try linear update including symlinked directory and its content: paths are audited first by calculateupdates(), where no symlink is created so both 'a' and 'a/b' are taken as good paths. still applyupdates() should fail. $ hg up -qC null $ hg up 1 abort: path 'a/b' traverses symbolic link 'a' [255] $ ls ../update-symlink-out try branch update replacing directory with symlink, and its content: the path 'a' is audited as a directory first, which should be audited again as a symlink. $ rm -f a $ hg up -qC 2 $ hg up 1 abort: path 'a/b' traverses symbolic link 'a' [255] $ ls ../update-symlink-out $ cd .. #endif