view tests/hghave @ 25708:d3d32643c060

wireproto: correctly escape batched args and responses (issue4739) This issue appears to be as old as wireproto batching itself: I can reproduce the failure as far back as 08ef6b5f3715 trivially by rebasing the test changes in this patch, which was back in the 1.9 era. I didn't test before that change, because prior to that the testfile has a different name and I'm lazy. Note that the test thought it was checking this case, but it actually wasn't: it put a literal ; in the arg and response for its greet command, but the mangle/unmangle step defined in the test meant that instead of "Fo, =;o" going over the wire, "Gp-!><p" went instead, which doesn't contain any special characters (those being [.=;]) and thus not exercising the escaping. The test has been updated to use pre-unmangled special characters, so the request is now "Fo+<:o", which mangles to "Gp,=;p". I have confirmed that the test fails without the adjustment to the escaping rules in wireproto.py. No existing clients of RPC batching were depending on the old behavior in any way. The only *actual* users of batchable RPCs in core were: 1) largefiles, wherein it batches up many statlfile calls. It sends hexlified hashes over the wire and gets a 0, 1, or 2 back as a response. No risk of special characters. 2) setdiscovery, which was using heads() and known(), both of which communicate via hexlified nodes. Again, no risk of special characters. Since the escaping functionality has been completely broken since it was introduced, we know that it has no users. As such, we can change the escaping mechanism without having to worry about backwards compatibility issues. For the curious, this was detected by chance: it happens that the lz4-compressed text of a test file for remotefilelog compressed to something containing a ;, which then caused the failure when I moved remotefilelog to using batching for file content fetching.
author Augie Fackler <augie@google.com>
date Tue, 30 Jun 2015 19:19:17 -0400
parents 05b3238ba901
children b94df10cc3b5
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#!/usr/bin/env python
"""Test the running system for features availability. Exit with zero
if all features are there, non-zero otherwise. If a feature name is
prefixed with "no-", the absence of feature is tested.
"""
import optparse
import sys
import hghave

checks = hghave.checks

def list_features():
    for name, feature in sorted(checks.iteritems()):
        desc = feature[1]
        print name + ':', desc

def test_features():
    failed = 0
    for name, feature in checks.iteritems():
        check, _ = feature
        try:
            check()
        except Exception, e:
            print "feature %s failed:  %s" % (name, e)
            failed += 1
    return failed

parser = optparse.OptionParser("%prog [options] [features]")
parser.add_option("--test-features", action="store_true",
                  help="test available features")
parser.add_option("--list-features", action="store_true",
                  help="list available features")
parser.add_option("-q", "--quiet", action="store_true",
                  help="check features silently")

if __name__ == '__main__':
    options, args = parser.parse_args()
    if options.list_features:
        list_features()
        sys.exit(0)

    if options.test_features:
        sys.exit(test_features())

    quiet = options.quiet

    failures = 0

    def error(msg):
        global failures
        if not quiet:
            sys.stderr.write(msg + '\n')
        failures += 1

    for feature in args:
        negate = feature.startswith('no-')
        if negate:
            feature = feature[3:]

        if feature not in checks:
            error('skipped: unknown feature: ' + feature)
            sys.exit(2)

        check, desc = checks[feature]
        try:
            available = check()
        except Exception, e:
            error('hghave check failed: ' + feature)
            continue

        if not negate and not available:
            error('skipped: missing feature: ' + desc)
        elif negate and available:
            error('skipped: system supports %s' % desc)

    if failures != 0:
        sys.exit(1)