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hgweb: use a capped reader for WSGI input stream...
hgweb: use a capped reader for WSGI input stream Per PEP 3333, the input stream from WSGI should respect EOF and prevent reads past the end of the request body. However, not all WSGI servers guarantee this. Notably, our BaseHTTPServer based built-in HTTP server doesn't. Instead, it exposes the raw socket and you can read() from it all you want, getting the connection in a bad state by doing so. We have a "cappedreader" utility class that proxies a file object and prevents reading past a limit. This commit converts the WSGI input stream into a capped reader when the input length is advertised via Content-Length headers. "cappedreader" only exposes a read() method. PEP 3333 states that the input stream MUST also support readline(), readlines(hint), and __iter__(). However, since our WSGI application code only calls read() and since we're not manipulating the stream exposed by the WSGI server, we're not violating the spec here. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2768

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bdiff.py
102 lines | 2.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# bdiff.py - Python implementation of bdiff.c
#
# Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import absolute_import
import difflib
import re
import struct
def splitnewlines(text):
'''like str.splitlines, but only split on newlines.'''
lines = [l + '\n' for l in text.split('\n')]
if lines:
if lines[-1] == '\n':
lines.pop()
else:
lines[-1] = lines[-1][:-1]
return lines
def _normalizeblocks(a, b, blocks):
prev = None
r = []
for curr in blocks:
if prev is None:
prev = curr
continue
shift = 0
a1, b1, l1 = prev
a1end = a1 + l1
b1end = b1 + l1
a2, b2, l2 = curr
a2end = a2 + l2
b2end = b2 + l2
if a1end == a2:
while (a1end + shift < a2end and
a[a1end + shift] == b[b1end + shift]):
shift += 1
elif b1end == b2:
while (b1end + shift < b2end and
a[a1end + shift] == b[b1end + shift]):
shift += 1
r.append((a1, b1, l1 + shift))
prev = a2 + shift, b2 + shift, l2 - shift
r.append(prev)
return r
def bdiff(a, b):
a = bytes(a).splitlines(True)
b = bytes(b).splitlines(True)
if not a:
s = "".join(b)
return s and (struct.pack(">lll", 0, 0, len(s)) + s)
bin = []
p = [0]
for i in a:
p.append(p[-1] + len(i))
d = difflib.SequenceMatcher(None, a, b).get_matching_blocks()
d = _normalizeblocks(a, b, d)
la = 0
lb = 0
for am, bm, size in d:
s = "".join(b[lb:bm])
if am > la or s:
bin.append(struct.pack(">lll", p[la], p[am], len(s)) + s)
la = am + size
lb = bm + size
return "".join(bin)
def blocks(a, b):
an = splitnewlines(a)
bn = splitnewlines(b)
d = difflib.SequenceMatcher(None, an, bn).get_matching_blocks()
d = _normalizeblocks(an, bn, d)
return [(i, i + n, j, j + n) for (i, j, n) in d]
def fixws(text, allws):
if allws:
text = re.sub('[ \t\r]+', '', text)
else:
text = re.sub('[ \t\r]+', ' ', text)
text = text.replace(' \n', '\n')
return text
def splitnewlines(text):
'''like str.splitlines, but only split on newlines.'''
lines = [l + '\n' for l in text.split('\n')]
if lines:
if lines[-1] == '\n':
lines.pop()
else:
lines[-1] = lines[-1][:-1]
return lines