##// END OF EJS Templates
sslutil: require TLS 1.1+ when supported...
sslutil: require TLS 1.1+ when supported Currently, Mercurial will use TLS 1.0 or newer when connecting to remote servers, selecting the highest TLS version supported by both peers. On older Pythons, only TLS 1.0 is available. On newer Pythons, TLS 1.1 and 1.2 should be available. Security professionals recommend avoiding TLS 1.0 if possible. PCI DSS 3.1 "strongly encourages" the use of TLS 1.2. Known attacks like BEAST and POODLE exist against TLS 1.0 (although mitigations are available and properly configured servers aren't vulnerable). I asked Eric Rescorla - Mozilla's resident crypto expert - whether Mercurial should drop support for TLS 1.0. His response was "if you can get away with it." Essentially, a number of servers on the Internet don't support TLS 1.1+. This is why web browsers continue to support TLS 1.0 despite desires from security experts. This patch changes Mercurial's default behavior on modern Python versions to require TLS 1.1+, thus avoiding known security issues with TLS 1.0 and making Mercurial more secure by default. Rather than drop TLS 1.0 support wholesale, we still allow TLS 1.0 to be used if configured. This is a compromise solution - ideally we'd disallow TLS 1.0. However, since we're not sure how many Mercurial servers don't support TLS 1.1+ and we're not sure how much user inconvenience this change will bring, I think it is prudent to ship an escape hatch that still allows usage of TLS 1.0. In the default case our users get better security. In the worst case, they are no worse off than before this patch. This patch has no effect when running on Python versions that don't support TLS 1.1+. As the added test shows, connecting to a server that doesn't support TLS 1.1+ will display a warning message with a link to our wiki, where we can guide people to configure their client to allow less secure connections.

File last commit:

r29191:ad1ce3c7 default
r29560:303e9300 default
Show More
test-inherit-mode.t
158 lines | 3.8 KiB | text/troff | Tads3Lexer
#require unix-permissions
test that new files created in .hg inherit the permissions from .hg/store
$ mkdir dir
just in case somebody has a strange $TMPDIR
$ chmod g-s dir
$ cd dir
$ cat >printmodes.py <<EOF
> import os, sys
>
> allnames = []
> isdir = {}
> for root, dirs, files in os.walk(sys.argv[1]):
> for d in dirs:
> name = os.path.join(root, d)
> isdir[name] = 1
> allnames.append(name)
> for f in files:
> name = os.path.join(root, f)
> allnames.append(name)
> allnames.sort()
> for name in allnames:
> suffix = name in isdir and '/' or ''
> print '%05o %s%s' % (os.lstat(name).st_mode & 07777, name, suffix)
> EOF
$ cat >mode.py <<EOF
> import sys
> import os
> print '%05o' % os.lstat(sys.argv[1]).st_mode
> EOF
$ umask 077
$ hg init repo
$ cd repo
$ chmod 0770 .hg/store
before commit
store can be written by the group, other files cannot
store is setgid
$ python ../printmodes.py .
00700 ./.hg/
00600 ./.hg/00changelog.i
00600 ./.hg/requires
00770 ./.hg/store/
$ mkdir dir
$ touch foo dir/bar
$ hg ci -qAm 'add files'
after commit
working dir files can only be written by the owner
files created in .hg can be written by the group
(in particular, store/**, dirstate, branch cache file, undo files)
new directories are setgid
$ python ../printmodes.py .
00700 ./.hg/
00600 ./.hg/00changelog.i
00770 ./.hg/cache/
00660 ./.hg/cache/branch2-served
00660 ./.hg/cache/rbc-names-v1
00660 ./.hg/cache/rbc-revs-v1
00660 ./.hg/dirstate
00660 ./.hg/last-message.txt
00600 ./.hg/requires
00770 ./.hg/store/
00660 ./.hg/store/00changelog.i
00660 ./.hg/store/00manifest.i
00770 ./.hg/store/data/
00770 ./.hg/store/data/dir/
00660 ./.hg/store/data/dir/bar.i
00660 ./.hg/store/data/foo.i
00660 ./.hg/store/fncache
00660 ./.hg/store/phaseroots
00660 ./.hg/store/undo
00660 ./.hg/store/undo.backupfiles
00660 ./.hg/store/undo.phaseroots
00660 ./.hg/undo.backup.dirstate
00660 ./.hg/undo.bookmarks
00660 ./.hg/undo.branch
00660 ./.hg/undo.desc
00660 ./.hg/undo.dirstate
00700 ./dir/
00600 ./dir/bar
00600 ./foo
$ umask 007
$ hg init ../push
before push
group can write everything
$ python ../printmodes.py ../push
00770 ../push/.hg/
00660 ../push/.hg/00changelog.i
00660 ../push/.hg/requires
00770 ../push/.hg/store/
$ umask 077
$ hg -q push ../push
after push
group can still write everything
$ python ../printmodes.py ../push
00770 ../push/.hg/
00660 ../push/.hg/00changelog.i
00770 ../push/.hg/cache/
00660 ../push/.hg/cache/branch2-base
00660 ../push/.hg/cache/rbc-names-v1
00660 ../push/.hg/cache/rbc-revs-v1
00660 ../push/.hg/dirstate
00660 ../push/.hg/requires
00770 ../push/.hg/store/
00660 ../push/.hg/store/00changelog.i
00660 ../push/.hg/store/00manifest.i
00770 ../push/.hg/store/data/
00770 ../push/.hg/store/data/dir/
00660 ../push/.hg/store/data/dir/bar.i
00660 ../push/.hg/store/data/foo.i
00660 ../push/.hg/store/fncache
00660 ../push/.hg/store/undo
00660 ../push/.hg/store/undo.backupfiles
00660 ../push/.hg/store/undo.phaseroots
00660 ../push/.hg/undo.bookmarks
00660 ../push/.hg/undo.branch
00660 ../push/.hg/undo.desc
00660 ../push/.hg/undo.dirstate
Test that we don't lose the setgid bit when we call chmod.
Not all systems support setgid directories (e.g. HFS+), so
just check that directories have the same mode.
$ cd ..
$ hg init setgid
$ cd setgid
$ chmod g+rwx .hg/store
$ chmod g+s .hg/store 2> /dev/null || true
$ mkdir dir
$ touch dir/file
$ hg ci -qAm 'add dir/file'
$ storemode=`python ../mode.py .hg/store`
$ dirmode=`python ../mode.py .hg/store/data/dir`
$ if [ "$storemode" != "$dirmode" ]; then
> echo "$storemode != $dirmode"
> fi
$ cd ..
$ cd .. # g-s dir