view mercurial/dummycert.pem @ 37651:950294e28136

httppeer: implement command executor for version 2 peer Now that we have a new API for issuing commands which is compatible with wire protocol version 2, we can start using it with wire protocol version 2. This commit replaces our hacky implementation of _call() with something a bit more robust based on the new command executor interface. We now have proper support for issuing multiple commands per HTTP request. Each HTTP request maintains its own client reactor. The implementation is similar to the one in the legacy wire protocol. We use a ThreadPoolExecutor for spinning up a thread to read the HTTP response in the background. This allows responses to resolve in any order. While not implemented on the server yet, a client could use concurrent.futures.as_completed() with a collection of futures and handle responses as they arrive from the server. The return value from issued commands is still a simple list of raw or decoded CBOR data. This is still super hacky. We will want a rich data type for representing command responses. But at least this commit gets us one step closer to a proper peer implementation. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3297
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Fri, 13 Apr 2018 12:30:04 -0700
parents d7f7f1860f00
children
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A dummy certificate that will make OS X 10.6+ Python use the system CA
certificate store:

-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
MIIBIzCBzgIJANjmj39sb3FmMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBBQUAMBkxFzAVBgNVBAMTDmhn
LmV4YW1wbGUuY29tMB4XDTE0MDgzMDA4NDU1OVoXDTE0MDgyOTA4NDU1OVowGTEX
MBUGA1UEAxMOaGcuZXhhbXBsZS5jb20wXDANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAANLADBIAkEA
mh/ZySGlcq0ALNLmA1gZqt61HruywPrRk6WyrLJRgt+X7OP9FFlEfl2tzHfzqvmK
CtSQoPINWOdAJMekBYFgKQIDAQABMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBBQUAA0EAF9h49LkSqJ6a
IlpogZuUHtihXeKZBsiktVIDlDccYsNy0RSh9XxUfhk+XMLw8jBlYvcltSXdJ7We
aKdQRekuMQ==
-----END CERTIFICATE-----

This certificate was generated to be syntactically valid but never be usable;
it expired before it became valid.

Created as:

  $ cat > cn.conf << EOT
  > [req]
  > distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name
  > [req_distinguished_name]
  > commonName = Common Name
  > commonName_default = no.example.com
  > EOT
  $ openssl req -nodes -new -x509 -keyout /dev/null \
  >   -out dummycert.pem -days -1 -config cn.conf -subj '/CN=hg.example.com'

To verify the content of this certificate:

  $ openssl x509 -in dummycert.pem -noout -text
  Certificate:
      Data:
          Version: 1 (0x0)
          Serial Number: 15629337334278746470 (0xd8e68f7f6c6f7166)
      Signature Algorithm: sha1WithRSAEncryption
          Issuer: CN=hg.example.com
          Validity
              Not Before: Aug 30 08:45:59 2014 GMT
              Not After : Aug 29 08:45:59 2014 GMT
          Subject: CN=hg.example.com
          Subject Public Key Info:
              Public Key Algorithm: rsaEncryption
                  Public-Key: (512 bit)
                  Modulus:
                      00:9a:1f:d9:c9:21:a5:72:ad:00:2c:d2:e6:03:58:
                      19:aa:de:b5:1e:bb:b2:c0:fa:d1:93:a5:b2:ac:b2:
                      51:82:df:97:ec:e3:fd:14:59:44:7e:5d:ad:cc:77:
                      f3:aa:f9:8a:0a:d4:90:a0:f2:0d:58:e7:40:24:c7:
                      a4:05:81:60:29
                  Exponent: 65537 (0x10001)
      Signature Algorithm: sha1WithRSAEncryption
           17:d8:78:f4:b9:12:a8:9e:9a:22:5a:68:81:9b:94:1e:d8:a1:
           5d:e2:99:06:c8:a4:b5:52:03:94:37:1c:62:c3:72:d1:14:a1:
           f5:7c:54:7e:19:3e:5c:c2:f0:f2:30:65:62:f7:25:b5:25:dd:
           27:b5:9e:68:a7:50:45:e9:2e:31