Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-patchbomb-tls.t @ 30446:b324b4e431e5
posix: give checkexec a fast path; keep the check files and test read only
Before, Mercurial would create a new temporary file every time, stat it, change
its exec mode, stat it again, and delete it. Most of this dance was done to
handle the rare and not-so-essential case of VFAT mounts on unix. The cost of
that was paid by the much more common and important case of using normal file
systems.
Instead, try to create and preserve .hg/cache/checkisexec and
.hg/cache/checknoexec with and without exec flag set. If the files exist and
have correct exec flags set, we can conclude that that file system supports the
exec flag. Best case, the whole exec check can thus be done with two stat
calls. Worst case, we delete the wrong files and check as usual. That will be
because temporary loss of exec bit or on file systems without support for the
exec bit. In that case we check as we did before, with the additional overhead
of one extra stat call.
It is possible that this different test algorithm in some cases on odd file
systems will give different behaviour. Again, I think it will be rare and
special cases and I think it is worth the risk.
test-clone.t happens to show the situation where checkisexec is left behind
from the old style check, while checknoexec only will be created next time a
exec check will be performed.
author | Mads Kiilerich <madski@unity3d.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 14 Jan 2015 01:15:26 +0100 |
parents | 6cff2ac0ccb9 |
children | 5b2e1689b24d |
line wrap: on
line source
#require serve ssl Set up SMTP server: $ CERTSDIR="$TESTDIR/sslcerts" $ cat "$CERTSDIR/priv.pem" "$CERTSDIR/pub.pem" >> server.pem $ python "$TESTDIR/dummysmtpd.py" -p $HGPORT --pid-file a.pid -d \ > --tls smtps --certificate `pwd`/server.pem listening at localhost:$HGPORT $ cat a.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS Ensure hg email output is sent to stdout: $ unset PAGER Set up repository: $ hg init t $ cd t $ cat <<EOF >> .hg/hgrc > [extensions] > patchbomb = > [email] > method = smtp > [smtp] > host = localhost > port = $HGPORT > tls = smtps > EOF $ echo a > a $ hg commit -Ama -d '1 0' adding a Utility functions: $ DISABLECACERTS= $ try () { > hg email $DISABLECACERTS -f quux -t foo -c bar -r tip "$@" > } Our test cert is not signed by a trusted CA. It should fail to verify if we are able to load CA certs: #if sslcontext defaultcacerts no-defaultcacertsloaded $ try this patch series consists of 1 patches. (an attempt was made to load CA certificates but none were loaded; see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/SecureConnections for how to configure Mercurial to avoid this error) (?i)abort: .*?certificate.verify.failed.* (re) [255] #endif #if no-sslcontext defaultcacerts $ try this patch series consists of 1 patches. warning: connecting to localhost using legacy security technology (TLS 1.0); see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/SecureConnections for more info (using CA certificates from *; if you see this message, your Mercurial install is not properly configured; see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/SecureConnections for how to configure Mercurial to avoid this message) (glob) (?) (?i)abort: .*?certificate.verify.failed.* (re) [255] #endif #if defaultcacertsloaded $ try this patch series consists of 1 patches. warning: connecting to localhost using legacy security technology (TLS 1.0); see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/SecureConnections for more info (?) (using CA certificates from *; if you see this message, your Mercurial install is not properly configured; see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/SecureConnections for how to configure Mercurial to avoid this message) (glob) (?) (?i)abort: .*?certificate.verify.failed.* (re) [255] #endif #if no-defaultcacerts $ try this patch series consists of 1 patches. (unable to load * certificates; see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/SecureConnections for how to configure Mercurial to avoid this message) (glob) (?) abort: localhost certificate error: no certificate received (set hostsecurity.localhost:certfingerprints=sha256:62:09:97:2f:97:60:e3:65:8f:12:5d:78:9e:35:a1:36:7a:65:4b:0e:9f:ac:db:c3:bc:6e:b6:a3:c0:16:e0:30 config setting or use --insecure to connect insecurely) [255] #endif $ DISABLECACERTS="--config devel.disableloaddefaultcerts=true" Without certificates: $ try --debug this patch series consists of 1 patches. (using smtps) sending mail: smtp host localhost, port * (glob) warning: connecting to localhost using legacy security technology (TLS 1.0); see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/SecureConnections for more info (?) (verifying remote certificate) abort: unable to verify security of localhost (no loaded CA certificates); refusing to connect (see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/SecureConnections for how to configure Mercurial to avoid this error or set hostsecurity.localhost:fingerprints=sha256:20:de:b3:ad:b4:cd:a5:42:f0:74:41:1c:a2:70:1e:da:6e:c0:5c:16:9e:e7:22:0f:f1:b7:e5:6e:e4:92:af:7e to trust this server) [255] With global certificates: $ try --debug --config web.cacerts="$CERTSDIR/pub.pem" this patch series consists of 1 patches. (using smtps) sending mail: smtp host localhost, port * (glob) warning: connecting to localhost using legacy security technology (TLS 1.0); see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/SecureConnections for more info (?) (verifying remote certificate) sending [PATCH] a ... With invalid certificates: $ try --config web.cacerts="$CERTSDIR/pub-other.pem" this patch series consists of 1 patches. warning: connecting to localhost using legacy security technology (TLS 1.0); see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/SecureConnections for more info (?) (?i)abort: .*?certificate.verify.failed.* (re) [255] $ cd ..