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sslutil: try to find CA certficates in well-known locations...
sslutil: try to find CA certficates in well-known locations Many Linux distros and other Nixen have CA certificates in well-defined locations. Rather than potentially fail to load any CA certificates at all (which will always result in a certificate verification failure), we scan for paths to known CA certificate files and load one if seen. Because a proper Mercurial install will have the path to the CA certificate file defined at install time, we print a warning that the install isn't proper and provide a URL with instructions to correct things. We only perform path-based fallback on Pythons that don't know how to call into OpenSSL to load the default verify locations. This is because we trust that Python/OpenSSL is properly configured and knows better than Mercurial. So this new code effectively only runs on Python <2.7.9 (technically Pythons without the modern ssl module).

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test-hg-parseurl.py
17 lines | 580 B | text/x-python | PythonLexer
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
from mercurial import (
hg,
)
def testparse(url, branch=[]):
print('%s, branches: %r' % hg.parseurl(url, branch))
testparse('http://example.com/no/anchor')
testparse('http://example.com/an/anchor#foo')
testparse('http://example.com/no/anchor/branches', branch=['foo'])
testparse('http://example.com/an/anchor/branches#bar', branch=['foo'])
testparse('http://example.com/an/anchor/branches-None#foo', branch=None)
testparse('http://example.com/')
testparse('http://example.com')
testparse('http://example.com#foo')