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sslutil: print a warning when using TLS 1.0 on legacy Python...
sslutil: print a warning when using TLS 1.0 on legacy Python Mercurial now requires TLS 1.1+ when TLS 1.1+ is supported by the client. Since we made the decision to require TLS 1.1+ when running with modern Python versions, it makes sense to do something for legacy Python versions that only support TLS 1.0. Feature parity would be to prevent TLS 1.0 connections out of the box and require a config option to enable them. However, this is extremely user hostile since Mercurial wouldn't talk to https:// by default in these installations! I can easily see how someone would do something foolish like use "--insecure" instead - and that would be worse than allowing TLS 1.0! This patch takes the compromise position of printing a warning when performing TLS 1.0 connections when running on old Python versions. While this warning is no more annoying than the CA certificate / fingerprint warnings in Mercurial 3.8, we provide a config option to disable the warning because to many people upgrading Python to make the warning go away is not an available recourse (unlike pinning fingerprints is for the CA warning). The warning appears as optional output in a lot of tests.

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filterpyflakes.py
61 lines | 1.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Filter output by pyflakes to control which warnings we check
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import re
import sys
def makekey(typeandline):
"""
for sorting lines by: msgtype, path/to/file, lineno, message
typeandline is a sequence of a message type and the entire message line
the message line format is path/to/file:line: message
>>> makekey((3, 'example.py:36: any message'))
(3, 'example.py', 36, ' any message')
>>> makekey((7, 'path/to/file.py:68: dummy message'))
(7, 'path/to/file.py', 68, ' dummy message')
>>> makekey((2, 'fn:88: m')) > makekey((2, 'fn:9: m'))
True
"""
msgtype, line = typeandline
fname, line, message = line.split(":", 2)
# line as int for ordering 9 before 88
return msgtype, fname, int(line), message
lines = []
for line in sys.stdin:
# We whitelist tests (see more messages in pyflakes.messages)
pats = [
(r"imported but unused", None),
(r"local variable '.*' is assigned to but never used", None),
(r"unable to detect undefined names", None),
(r"undefined name '.*'",
r"undefined name '(WindowsError|memoryview)'")
]
for msgtype, (pat, excl) in enumerate(pats):
if re.search(pat, line) and (not excl or not re.search(excl, line)):
break # pattern matches
else:
continue # no pattern matched, next line
fn = line.split(':', 1)[0]
f = open(fn)
data = f.read()
f.close()
if 'no-' 'check-code' in data:
continue
lines.append((msgtype, line))
for msgtype, line in sorted(lines, key=makekey):
sys.stdout.write(line)
print()
# self test of "undefined name" detection for other than 'memoryview'
if False:
print(undefinedname)