view contrib/simplemerge @ 29334:ecc9b788fd69

sslutil: per-host config option to define certificates Recent work has introduced the [hostsecurity] config section for defining per-host security settings. This patch builds on top of this foundation and implements the ability to define a per-host path to a file containing certificates used for verifying the server certificate. It is logically a per-host web.cacerts setting. This patch also introduces a warning when both per-host certificates and fingerprints are defined. These are mutually exclusive for host verification and I think the user should be alerted when security settings are ambiguous because, well, security is important. Tests validating the new behavior have been added. I decided against putting "ca" in the option name because a non-CA certificate can be specified and used to validate the server certificate (commonly this will be the exact public certificate used by the server). It's worth noting that the underlying Python API used is load_verify_locations(cafile=X) and it calls into OpenSSL's SSL_CTX_load_verify_locations(). Even OpenSSL's documentation seems to omit that the file can contain a non-CA certificate if it matches the server's certificate exactly. I thought a CA certificate was a special kind of x509 certificate. Perhaps I'm wrong and any x509 certificate can be used as a CA certificate [as far as OpenSSL is concerned]. In any case, I thought it best to drop "ca" from the name because this reflects reality.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Tue, 07 Jun 2016 20:29:54 -0700
parents 863075fd4cd0
children d83ca854fa21
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#!/usr/bin/env python

from mercurial import demandimport
demandimport.enable()

import sys
from mercurial.i18n import _
from mercurial import error, simplemerge, fancyopts, util, ui

options = [('L', 'label', [], _('labels to use on conflict markers')),
           ('a', 'text', None, _('treat all files as text')),
           ('p', 'print', None,
            _('print results instead of overwriting LOCAL')),
           ('', 'no-minimal', None, _('no effect (DEPRECATED)')),
           ('h', 'help', None, _('display help and exit')),
           ('q', 'quiet', None, _('suppress output'))]

usage = _('''simplemerge [OPTS] LOCAL BASE OTHER

    Simple three-way file merge utility with a minimal feature set.

    Apply to LOCAL the changes necessary to go from BASE to OTHER.

    By default, LOCAL is overwritten with the results of this operation.
''')

class ParseError(Exception):
    """Exception raised on errors in parsing the command line."""

def showhelp():
    sys.stdout.write(usage)
    sys.stdout.write('\noptions:\n')

    out_opts = []
    for shortopt, longopt, default, desc in options:
        out_opts.append(('%2s%s' % (shortopt and '-%s' % shortopt,
                                    longopt and ' --%s' % longopt),
                         '%s' % desc))
    opts_len = max([len(opt[0]) for opt in out_opts])
    for first, second in out_opts:
        sys.stdout.write(' %-*s  %s\n' % (opts_len, first, second))

try:
    for fp in (sys.stdin, sys.stdout, sys.stderr):
        util.setbinary(fp)

    opts = {}
    try:
        args = fancyopts.fancyopts(sys.argv[1:], options, opts)
    except fancyopts.getopt.GetoptError as e:
        raise ParseError(e)
    if opts['help']:
        showhelp()
        sys.exit(0)
    if len(args) != 3:
            raise ParseError(_('wrong number of arguments'))
    sys.exit(simplemerge.simplemerge(ui.ui(), *args, **opts))
except ParseError as e:
    sys.stdout.write("%s: %s\n" % (sys.argv[0], e))
    showhelp()
    sys.exit(1)
except error.Abort as e:
    sys.stderr.write("abort: %s\n" % e)
    sys.exit(255)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
    sys.exit(255)