Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-url.py @ 13029:f930032aa6d5
subrepo: lazier git push logic
Avoids calls to git push when the revision is already known to be
in the remote repository. Now, when using a read-only git subrepo,
git will never need to talk to its upstream repository.
author | Eric Eisner <ede@mit.edu> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 21 Nov 2010 22:00:51 -0500 |
parents | 4c50552fc9bc |
children | 00411a4fa1bb |
line wrap: on
line source
import sys def check(a, b): if a != b: print (a, b) def cert(cn): return dict(subject=((('commonName', cn),),)) from mercurial.url import _verifycert # Test non-wildcard certificates check(_verifycert(cert('example.com'), 'example.com'), None) check(_verifycert(cert('example.com'), 'www.example.com'), 'certificate is for example.com') check(_verifycert(cert('www.example.com'), 'example.com'), 'certificate is for www.example.com') # Test wildcard certificates check(_verifycert(cert('*.example.com'), 'www.example.com'), None) check(_verifycert(cert('*.example.com'), 'example.com'), 'certificate is for *.example.com') check(_verifycert(cert('*.example.com'), 'w.w.example.com'), 'certificate is for *.example.com') # Avoid some pitfalls check(_verifycert(cert('*.foo'), 'foo'), 'certificate is for *.foo') check(_verifycert(cert('*o'), 'foo'), 'certificate is for *o') check(_verifycert({'subject': ()}, 'example.com'), 'no commonName found in certificate') check(_verifycert(None, 'example.com'), 'no certificate received')