wireproto: define permissions-based routing of HTTPv2 wire protocol
Now that we have a scaffolding for serving version 2 of the HTTP
protocol, let's start implementing it.
A good place to start is URL routing and basic request processing
semantics. We can focus on content types, capabilities detect, etc
later.
Version 2 of the HTTP wire protocol encodes the needed permissions
of the request in the URL path. The reasons for this are documented
in the added documentation. In short, a) it makes it really easy and
fail proof for server administrators to implement path-based
authentication and b) it will enable clients to realize very early in
a server exchange that authentication will be required to complete
the operation. This latter point avoids all kinds of complexity and
problems, like dealing with Expect: 100-continue and clients finding
out later during `hg push` that they need to provide authentication.
This will avoid the current badness where clients send a full bundle,
get an HTTP 403, provide authentication, then retransmit the bundle.
In order to implement command checking, we needed to implement a
protocol handler for the new wire protocol. Our handler is just
small enough to run the code we've implemented.
Tests for the defined functionality have been added.
I very much want to refactor the permissions checking code and define
a better response format. But this can be done later. Nothing is
covered by backwards compatibility at this point.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2836
Set vars:
$ CONTRIBDIR="$TESTDIR/../contrib"
Prepare repo-a:
$ hg init repo-a
$ cd repo-a
$ echo this is file a > a
$ hg add a
$ hg commit -m first
$ echo adding to file a >> a
$ hg commit -m second
$ echo adding more to file a >> a
$ hg commit -m third
$ hg verify
checking changesets
checking manifests
crosschecking files in changesets and manifests
checking files
1 files, 3 changesets, 3 total revisions
Dumping revlog of file a to stdout:
$ $PYTHON "$CONTRIBDIR/dumprevlog" .hg/store/data/a.i
file: .hg/store/data/a.i
node: 183d2312b35066fb6b3b449b84efc370d50993d0
linkrev: 0
parents: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
length: 15
-start-
this is file a
-end-
node: b1047953b6e6b633c0d8197eaa5116fbdfd3095b
linkrev: 1
parents: 183d2312b35066fb6b3b449b84efc370d50993d0 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
length: 32
-start-
this is file a
adding to file a
-end-
node: 8c4fd1f7129b8cdec6c7f58bf48fb5237a4030c1
linkrev: 2
parents: b1047953b6e6b633c0d8197eaa5116fbdfd3095b 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
length: 54
-start-
this is file a
adding to file a
adding more to file a
-end-
Dump all revlogs to file repo.dump:
$ find .hg/store -name "*.i" | sort | xargs $PYTHON "$CONTRIBDIR/dumprevlog" > ../repo.dump
$ cd ..
Undumping into repo-b:
$ hg init repo-b
$ cd repo-b
$ $PYTHON "$CONTRIBDIR/undumprevlog" < ../repo.dump
.hg/store/00changelog.i
.hg/store/00manifest.i
.hg/store/data/a.i
$ cd ..
Rebuild fncache with clone --pull:
$ hg clone --pull -U repo-b repo-c
requesting all changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 3 changesets with 3 changes to 1 files
new changesets de1da620e7d8:46946d278c50
Verify:
$ hg -R repo-c verify
checking changesets
checking manifests
crosschecking files in changesets and manifests
checking files
1 files, 3 changesets, 3 total revisions
Compare repos:
$ hg -R repo-c incoming repo-a
comparing with repo-a
searching for changes
no changes found
[1]
$ hg -R repo-a incoming repo-c
comparing with repo-c
searching for changes
no changes found
[1]
Test simplemerge command:
$ cp "$CONTRIBDIR/simplemerge" .
$ echo base > base
$ echo local > local
$ cat base >> local
$ cp local orig
$ cat base > other
$ echo other >> other
changing local directly
$ $PYTHON simplemerge local base other && echo "merge succeeded"
merge succeeded
$ cat local
local
base
other
$ cp orig local
printing to stdout
$ $PYTHON simplemerge -p local base other
local
base
other
local:
$ cat local
local
base
conflicts
$ cp base conflict-local
$ cp other conflict-other
$ echo not other >> conflict-local
$ echo end >> conflict-local
$ echo end >> conflict-other
$ $PYTHON simplemerge -p conflict-local base conflict-other
base
<<<<<<< conflict-local
not other
=======
other
>>>>>>> conflict-other
end
[1]
1 label
$ $PYTHON simplemerge -p -L foo conflict-local base conflict-other
base
<<<<<<< foo
not other
=======
other
>>>>>>> conflict-other
end
[1]
2 labels
$ $PYTHON simplemerge -p -L foo -L bar conflict-local base conflict-other
base
<<<<<<< foo
not other
=======
other
>>>>>>> bar
end
[1]
3 labels
$ $PYTHON simplemerge -p -L foo -L bar -L base conflict-local base conflict-other
base
<<<<<<< foo
not other
end
||||||| base
=======
other
end
>>>>>>> bar
[1]
too many labels
$ $PYTHON simplemerge -p -L foo -L bar -L baz -L buz conflict-local base conflict-other
abort: can only specify three labels.
[255]
binary file
$ $PYTHON -c "f = open('binary-local', 'w'); f.write('\x00'); f.close()"
$ cat orig >> binary-local
$ $PYTHON simplemerge -p binary-local base other
warning: binary-local looks like a binary file.
[1]
binary file --text
$ $PYTHON simplemerge -a -p binary-local base other 2>&1
warning: binary-local looks like a binary file.
\x00local (esc)
base
other
help
$ $PYTHON simplemerge --help
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.
options:
-L --label labels to use on conflict markers
-a --text treat all files as text
-p --print print results instead of overwriting LOCAL
--no-minimal no effect (DEPRECATED)
-h --help display help and exit
-q --quiet suppress output
wrong number of arguments
$ $PYTHON simplemerge
simplemerge: wrong number of arguments
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.
options:
-L --label labels to use on conflict markers
-a --text treat all files as text
-p --print print results instead of overwriting LOCAL
--no-minimal no effect (DEPRECATED)
-h --help display help and exit
-q --quiet suppress output
[1]
bad option
$ $PYTHON simplemerge --foo -p local base other
simplemerge: option --foo not recognized
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.
options:
-L --label labels to use on conflict markers
-a --text treat all files as text
-p --print print results instead of overwriting LOCAL
--no-minimal no effect (DEPRECATED)
-h --help display help and exit
-q --quiet suppress output
[1]