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merge: don't try to merge subrepos twice (issue4988)...
merge: don't try to merge subrepos twice (issue4988) In my patch series ending with rev 25e4b2f000c5 I switched most change/delete conflicts to be handled at the resolve layer. .hgsubstate was the one file that we weren't able to handle, so we kept the old code path around for it. The old code path added .hgsubstate to one of the other lists as the user specifies, including possibly the 'g' list. Now since we did this check after converting the actions from being keyed by file to being keyed by action type, there was nothing that actually removed .hgsubstate from the 'cd' or 'dc' lists. This meant that the file would eventually make its way into the 'mergeactions' list, now freshly augmented with 'cd' and 'dc' actions. We call subrepo.submerge for both 'g' actions and merge actions. This means that if the resolution to an .hgsubstate change/delete conflict was to add it to the 'g' list, subrepo.submerge would be called twice. It turns out that this doesn't cause any adverse effects on Linux due to caching, but apparently breaks on other operating systems including Windows. The fix here moves this to before we convert the actions over. This ensures that it .hgsubstate doesn't make its way into multiple lists. The real fix here is going to be: (1) move .hgsubstate conflict resolution into the resolve layer, and (2) use a real data structure for the actions rather than shuffling data around between lists and dictionaries: we need a hash (or prefix-based) index by file and a list index by action type. There's a very tiny behavior change here: collision detection on case-insensitive systems will happen after this is resolved, not before. I think this is the right change -- .hgsubstate could theoretically collide with other files -- but in any case it makes no practical difference. Thanks to Yuya Nishihara for investigating this.

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mail.py
334 lines | 12.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# mail.py - mail sending bits for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# 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, print_function
import email
import os
import quopri
import smtplib
import socket
import sys
import time
from .i18n import _
from . import (
encoding,
error,
sslutil,
util,
)
_oldheaderinit = email.Header.Header.__init__
def _unifiedheaderinit(self, *args, **kw):
"""
Python 2.7 introduces a backwards incompatible change
(Python issue1974, r70772) in email.Generator.Generator code:
pre-2.7 code passed "continuation_ws='\t'" to the Header
constructor, and 2.7 removed this parameter.
Default argument is continuation_ws=' ', which means that the
behavior is different in <2.7 and 2.7
We consider the 2.7 behavior to be preferable, but need
to have an unified behavior for versions 2.4 to 2.7
"""
# override continuation_ws
kw['continuation_ws'] = ' '
_oldheaderinit(self, *args, **kw)
email.Header.Header.__dict__['__init__'] = _unifiedheaderinit
class STARTTLS(smtplib.SMTP):
'''Derived class to verify the peer certificate for STARTTLS.
This class allows to pass any keyword arguments to SSL socket creation.
'''
def __init__(self, sslkwargs, **kwargs):
smtplib.SMTP.__init__(self, **kwargs)
self._sslkwargs = sslkwargs
def starttls(self, keyfile=None, certfile=None):
if not self.has_extn("starttls"):
msg = "STARTTLS extension not supported by server"
raise smtplib.SMTPException(msg)
(resp, reply) = self.docmd("STARTTLS")
if resp == 220:
self.sock = sslutil.wrapsocket(self.sock, keyfile, certfile,
**self._sslkwargs)
self.file = smtplib.SSLFakeFile(self.sock)
self.helo_resp = None
self.ehlo_resp = None
self.esmtp_features = {}
self.does_esmtp = 0
return (resp, reply)
class SMTPS(smtplib.SMTP):
'''Derived class to verify the peer certificate for SMTPS.
This class allows to pass any keyword arguments to SSL socket creation.
'''
def __init__(self, sslkwargs, keyfile=None, certfile=None, **kwargs):
self.keyfile = keyfile
self.certfile = certfile
smtplib.SMTP.__init__(self, **kwargs)
self.default_port = smtplib.SMTP_SSL_PORT
self._sslkwargs = sslkwargs
def _get_socket(self, host, port, timeout):
if self.debuglevel > 0:
print('connect:', (host, port), file=sys.stderr)
new_socket = socket.create_connection((host, port), timeout)
new_socket = sslutil.wrapsocket(new_socket,
self.keyfile, self.certfile,
**self._sslkwargs)
self.file = smtplib.SSLFakeFile(new_socket)
return new_socket
def _smtp(ui):
'''build an smtp connection and return a function to send mail'''
local_hostname = ui.config('smtp', 'local_hostname')
tls = ui.config('smtp', 'tls', 'none')
# backward compatible: when tls = true, we use starttls.
starttls = tls == 'starttls' or util.parsebool(tls)
smtps = tls == 'smtps'
if (starttls or smtps) and not util.safehasattr(socket, 'ssl'):
raise error.Abort(_("can't use TLS: Python SSL support not installed"))
mailhost = ui.config('smtp', 'host')
if not mailhost:
raise error.Abort(_('smtp.host not configured - cannot send mail'))
verifycert = ui.config('smtp', 'verifycert', 'strict')
if verifycert not in ['strict', 'loose']:
if util.parsebool(verifycert) is not False:
raise error.Abort(_('invalid smtp.verifycert configuration: %s')
% (verifycert))
verifycert = False
if (starttls or smtps) and verifycert:
sslkwargs = sslutil.sslkwargs(ui, mailhost)
else:
# 'ui' is required by sslutil.wrapsocket() and set by sslkwargs()
sslkwargs = {'ui': ui}
if smtps:
ui.note(_('(using smtps)\n'))
s = SMTPS(sslkwargs, local_hostname=local_hostname)
elif starttls:
s = STARTTLS(sslkwargs, local_hostname=local_hostname)
else:
s = smtplib.SMTP(local_hostname=local_hostname)
if smtps:
defaultport = 465
else:
defaultport = 25
mailport = util.getport(ui.config('smtp', 'port', defaultport))
ui.note(_('sending mail: smtp host %s, port %d\n') %
(mailhost, mailport))
s.connect(host=mailhost, port=mailport)
if starttls:
ui.note(_('(using starttls)\n'))
s.ehlo()
s.starttls()
s.ehlo()
if (starttls or smtps) and verifycert:
ui.note(_('(verifying remote certificate)\n'))
sslutil.validator(ui, mailhost)(s.sock, verifycert == 'strict')
username = ui.config('smtp', 'username')
password = ui.config('smtp', 'password')
if username and not password:
password = ui.getpass()
if username and password:
ui.note(_('(authenticating to mail server as %s)\n') %
(username))
try:
s.login(username, password)
except smtplib.SMTPException as inst:
raise error.Abort(inst)
def send(sender, recipients, msg):
try:
return s.sendmail(sender, recipients, msg)
except smtplib.SMTPRecipientsRefused as inst:
recipients = [r[1] for r in inst.recipients.values()]
raise error.Abort('\n' + '\n'.join(recipients))
except smtplib.SMTPException as inst:
raise error.Abort(inst)
return send
def _sendmail(ui, sender, recipients, msg):
'''send mail using sendmail.'''
program = ui.config('email', 'method', 'smtp')
cmdline = '%s -f %s %s' % (program, util.email(sender),
' '.join(map(util.email, recipients)))
ui.note(_('sending mail: %s\n') % cmdline)
fp = util.popen(cmdline, 'w')
fp.write(msg)
ret = fp.close()
if ret:
raise error.Abort('%s %s' % (
os.path.basename(program.split(None, 1)[0]),
util.explainexit(ret)[0]))
def _mbox(mbox, sender, recipients, msg):
'''write mails to mbox'''
fp = open(mbox, 'ab+')
# Should be time.asctime(), but Windows prints 2-characters day
# of month instead of one. Make them print the same thing.
date = time.strftime('%a %b %d %H:%M:%S %Y', time.localtime())
fp.write('From %s %s\n' % (sender, date))
fp.write(msg)
fp.write('\n\n')
fp.close()
def connect(ui, mbox=None):
'''make a mail connection. return a function to send mail.
call as sendmail(sender, list-of-recipients, msg).'''
if mbox:
open(mbox, 'wb').close()
return lambda s, r, m: _mbox(mbox, s, r, m)
if ui.config('email', 'method', 'smtp') == 'smtp':
return _smtp(ui)
return lambda s, r, m: _sendmail(ui, s, r, m)
def sendmail(ui, sender, recipients, msg, mbox=None):
send = connect(ui, mbox=mbox)
return send(sender, recipients, msg)
def validateconfig(ui):
'''determine if we have enough config data to try sending email.'''
method = ui.config('email', 'method', 'smtp')
if method == 'smtp':
if not ui.config('smtp', 'host'):
raise error.Abort(_('smtp specified as email transport, '
'but no smtp host configured'))
else:
if not util.findexe(method):
raise error.Abort(_('%r specified as email transport, '
'but not in PATH') % method)
def mimetextpatch(s, subtype='plain', display=False):
'''Return MIME message suitable for a patch.
Charset will be detected as utf-8 or (possibly fake) us-ascii.
Transfer encodings will be used if necessary.'''
cs = 'us-ascii'
if not display:
try:
s.decode('us-ascii')
except UnicodeDecodeError:
try:
s.decode('utf-8')
cs = 'utf-8'
except UnicodeDecodeError:
# We'll go with us-ascii as a fallback.
pass
return mimetextqp(s, subtype, cs)
def mimetextqp(body, subtype, charset):
'''Return MIME message.
Quoted-printable transfer encoding will be used if necessary.
'''
enc = None
for line in body.splitlines():
if len(line) > 950:
body = quopri.encodestring(body)
enc = "quoted-printable"
break
msg = email.MIMEText.MIMEText(body, subtype, charset)
if enc:
del msg['Content-Transfer-Encoding']
msg['Content-Transfer-Encoding'] = enc
return msg
def _charsets(ui):
'''Obtains charsets to send mail parts not containing patches.'''
charsets = [cs.lower() for cs in ui.configlist('email', 'charsets')]
fallbacks = [encoding.fallbackencoding.lower(),
encoding.encoding.lower(), 'utf-8']
for cs in fallbacks: # find unique charsets while keeping order
if cs not in charsets:
charsets.append(cs)
return [cs for cs in charsets if not cs.endswith('ascii')]
def _encode(ui, s, charsets):
'''Returns (converted) string, charset tuple.
Finds out best charset by cycling through sendcharsets in descending
order. Tries both encoding and fallbackencoding for input. Only as
last resort send as is in fake ascii.
Caveat: Do not use for mail parts containing patches!'''
try:
s.decode('ascii')
except UnicodeDecodeError:
sendcharsets = charsets or _charsets(ui)
for ics in (encoding.encoding, encoding.fallbackencoding):
try:
u = s.decode(ics)
except UnicodeDecodeError:
continue
for ocs in sendcharsets:
try:
return u.encode(ocs), ocs
except UnicodeEncodeError:
pass
except LookupError:
ui.warn(_('ignoring invalid sendcharset: %s\n') % ocs)
# if ascii, or all conversion attempts fail, send (broken) ascii
return s, 'us-ascii'
def headencode(ui, s, charsets=None, display=False):
'''Returns RFC-2047 compliant header from given string.'''
if not display:
# split into words?
s, cs = _encode(ui, s, charsets)
return str(email.Header.Header(s, cs))
return s
def _addressencode(ui, name, addr, charsets=None):
name = headencode(ui, name, charsets)
try:
acc, dom = addr.split('@')
acc = acc.encode('ascii')
dom = dom.decode(encoding.encoding).encode('idna')
addr = '%s@%s' % (acc, dom)
except UnicodeDecodeError:
raise error.Abort(_('invalid email address: %s') % addr)
except ValueError:
try:
# too strict?
addr = addr.encode('ascii')
except UnicodeDecodeError:
raise error.Abort(_('invalid local address: %s') % addr)
return email.Utils.formataddr((name, addr))
def addressencode(ui, address, charsets=None, display=False):
'''Turns address into RFC-2047 compliant header.'''
if display or not address:
return address or ''
name, addr = email.Utils.parseaddr(address)
return _addressencode(ui, name, addr, charsets)
def addrlistencode(ui, addrs, charsets=None, display=False):
'''Turns a list of addresses into a list of RFC-2047 compliant headers.
A single element of input list may contain multiple addresses, but output
always has one address per item'''
if display:
return [a.strip() for a in addrs if a.strip()]
result = []
for name, addr in email.Utils.getaddresses(addrs):
if name or addr:
result.append(_addressencode(ui, name, addr, charsets))
return result
def mimeencode(ui, s, charsets=None, display=False):
'''creates mime text object, encodes it if needed, and sets
charset and transfer-encoding accordingly.'''
cs = 'us-ascii'
if not display:
s, cs = _encode(ui, s, charsets)
return mimetextqp(s, 'plain', cs)