##// END OF EJS Templates
win32: add a method to trigger the Crypto API to complete a certificate chain...
win32: add a method to trigger the Crypto API to complete a certificate chain I started a thread[1] on the mailing list awhile ago, but the short version is that Windows doesn't ship with a full list of certificates[2]. Even if the server sends the whole chain, if Windows doesn't have the appropriate certificate pre-installed in its "Third-Party Root Certification Authorities" store, connections mysteriously fail with: abort: error: [SSL: CERTIFICATE_VERIFY_FAILED] certificate verify failed (_ssl.c:661) Windows expects the application to call the methods invoked here as part of the certificate verification, triggering a call out to Windows update if necessary, to complete the trust chain. The python bug to add this support[3] hasn't had any recent activity, and isn't targeting py27 anyway. The only work around that I could find (besides figuring out the certificate and walking through the import wizard) is to browse to the site in Internet Explorer. Opening the page with FireFox or Chrome didn't work. That's a pretty obscure way to fix a pretty obscure problem. We go to great lengths to demystify various SSL errors, but this case is clearly lacking. Let's try to make things easier to diagnose and fix. When I had trouble figuring out how to get ctypes to work with all of the API pointers, I found that there are other python projects[4] using this API to achieve the same thing. [1] https://www.mercurial-scm.org/pipermail/mercurial-devel/2017-April/096501.html [2] https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/931125/how-to-get-a-root-certificate-update-for-windows [3] https://bugs.python.org/issue20916 [4] https://github.com/nvaccess/nvda/blob/3b86bce2066b1934df14b96f2e83369900860ecf/source/updateCheck.py#L511

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localstore.py
68 lines | 2.4 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# Copyright 2009-2010 Gregory P. Ward
# Copyright 2009-2010 Intelerad Medical Systems Incorporated
# Copyright 2010-2011 Fog Creek Software
# Copyright 2010-2011 Unity Technologies
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
'''store class for local filesystem'''
from __future__ import absolute_import
from mercurial.i18n import _
from mercurial import util
from . import (
basestore,
lfutil,
)
class localstore(basestore.basestore):
'''localstore first attempts to grab files out of the store in the remote
Mercurial repository. Failing that, it attempts to grab the files from
the user cache.'''
def __init__(self, ui, repo, remote):
self.remote = remote.local()
super(localstore, self).__init__(ui, repo, self.remote.url())
def put(self, source, hash):
if lfutil.instore(self.remote, hash):
return
lfutil.link(source, lfutil.storepath(self.remote, hash))
def exists(self, hashes):
retval = {}
for hash in hashes:
retval[hash] = lfutil.instore(self.remote, hash)
return retval
def _getfile(self, tmpfile, filename, hash):
path = lfutil.findfile(self.remote, hash)
if not path:
raise basestore.StoreError(filename, hash, self.url,
_("can't get file locally"))
with open(path, 'rb') as fd:
return lfutil.copyandhash(
util.filechunkiter(fd), tmpfile)
def _verifyfiles(self, contents, filestocheck):
failed = False
for cset, filename, expectedhash in filestocheck:
storepath, exists = lfutil.findstorepath(self.repo, expectedhash)
if not exists:
storepath, exists = lfutil.findstorepath(
self.remote, expectedhash)
if not exists:
self.ui.warn(
_('changeset %s: %s references missing %s\n')
% (cset, filename, storepath))
failed = True
elif contents:
actualhash = lfutil.hashfile(storepath)
if actualhash != expectedhash:
self.ui.warn(
_('changeset %s: %s references corrupted %s\n')
% (cset, filename, storepath))
failed = True
return failed