Added tag 4.6 for changeset
6614cac550ae
filelog: don't crash on invalid copy metadata (
issue5748)
"copy" and "copyrev" are both supposed to appear next to each other.
However, a user report demonstrated a crash that indicates that
something in the wild is producing "copy" without "copyrev"
(probably `hg convert`).
While we should definitely fix the source of the bad metadata,
the bad code causing the crash is already in the wild and who knows
how many repositories are impacted. So let's be more defensive
when accessing the file revision metadata.
httppeer: detect redirect to URL without query string (
issue5860)
197d10e157ce subtly changed the HTTP peer's handling of HTTP redirects.
Before that changeset, we instantiated an HTTP peer instance and
performed the capabilities lookup with that instance. The old code had
the following relevant properties:
1) The HTTP request layer would automatically follow HTTP redirects.
2) An encountered HTTP redirect would update a peer instance variable
pointing to the repo URL.
3) The peer would automagically perform a "capabilities" command
request if a caller requested capabilities but capabilities were
not yet defined.
The first HTTP request issued by a peer is for ?cmd=capabilities. If
the server responds with an HTTP redirect to a ?cmd=capabilities URL,
the HTTP request layer automatically followed it, retrieved a valid
capabilities response, and the peer's base URL was updated
automatically so subsequent requests used the proper URL. In other
words, things "just worked."
In the case where the server redirected to a URL without the
?cmd=capabilities query string, the HTTP request layer would follow
the redirect and likely encounter HTML. The peer's base URL would be
updated and the unexpected Content-Type would raise a RepoError. We
would catch RepoError and immediately call between() (testing the case
for pre 0.9.1 servers not supporting the "capabilities" command). e.g.
try:
inst._fetchcaps()
except error.RepoError:
inst.between([(nullid, nullid)])
between() would eventually call into _callstream(). And _callstream()
made a call to self.capable('httpheader'). capable() would call
self.capabilities(), which would see that no capabilities were set
(because HTML was returned for that request) and call the "capabilities"
command to fetch capabilities. Because the base URL had been updated
from the redirect, this 2nd "capabilities" command would succeed and
the client would immediately call "between," which would also succeed.
The legacy handshake succeeded. Only because "capabilities" was
successfully executed as a side effect did the peer recognize that it
was talking to a modern server. In other words, this all appeared to
work accidentally.
After
197d10e157ce, we stopped calling the "capabilities" command on
the peer instance. Instead, we made the request via a low-level opener,
detected the redirect as part of response handling code, and passed the
redirected URL into the constructed peer instance.
For cases where the redirected URL included the query string, this
"just worked." But for cases where the redirected URL stripped the query
string, we threw RepoError and because we removed the "between" handshake
fallback, we fell through to the "is a static HTTP repo" check and
performed an HTTP request for .hg/requires.
While
197d10e157ce was marked as backwards incompatible, the only
intended backwards incompatible behavior was not performing the
"between" fallback. It was not realized that the "between" command
had the side-effect of recovering from an errant redirect that
dropped the query string.
This commit restores the previous behavior and allows clients to
handle a redirect that drops the query string. In the case where
the request is redirected and the query string is dropped, we raise
a special case of RepoError. We then catch this special exception in
the handshake code and perform another "capabilities" request against
the redirected URL. If that works, all is well. Otherwise, we fall back
to the "is a static HTTP repo" check.
The new code is arguably better than before
197d10e157ce, as it is
explicit about the expected behavior and we avoid performing a
"between" request, saving a server round trip.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3433
hgweb: prevent triggering dummy href="#" handler
Follow up for the previous patch.
paper: add href="#" to links with click handlers
This restores the styling that was accidentally removed by the
previous change to these files.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3438
paper: don't register click handlers with inline javascript (
issue5812)
The use of inline href="javascript:" undermines CSP policies that
don't allow inline javascript.
This commit changes the registering of the diffstat and line wrapping
toggle handlers to the the global DOMContentLoaded handler, thus
eliminating all inline javascript from the paper template.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3437
hgweb: allow Content-Security-Policy header on 304 responses (
issue5844)
A side-effect of
98baf8dea553 was that the Content-Security-Policy
header was set on all HTTP responses by default. This header wasn't
in our list of allowed headers for HTTP 304 responses. This would
trigger a ProgrammingError when a 304 response was issued via hgwebdir.
This commit adds Content-Security-Policy to the allow list of headers
for 304 responses so we no longer encounter the error.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3436
hgweb: discard Content-Type header for 304 responses (
issue5844)
A side-effect of
98baf8dea553 was that hgwebdir always sets a global
default for the Content-Type header. HTTP 304 responses don't allow
the Content-Type header. So a side-effect of this change was that
HTTP 304 responses served via hgwebdir resulted in a ProgrammingError
being raised.
This commit teaches our 304 response issuing code to drop the
Content-Type header.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3435