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sslutil: more robustly detect protocol support...
sslutil: more robustly detect protocol support The Python ssl module conditionally sets the TLS 1.1 and TLS 1.2 constants depending on whether HAVE_TLSv1_2 is defined. Yes, these are both tied to the same constant (I would think there would be separate constants for each version). Perhaps support for TLS 1.1 and 1.2 were added at the same time and the assumption is that OpenSSL either has neither or both. I don't know. As part of developing this patch, it was discovered that Apple's /usr/bin/python2.7 does not support TLS 1.1 and 1.2 (only TLS 1.0)! On OS X 10.11, Apple Python has the modern ssl module including SSLContext, but it doesn't appear to negotiate TLS 1.1+ nor does it expose the constants related to TLS 1.1+. Since this code is doing more robust feature detection (and not assuming modern ssl implies TLS 1.1+ support), we now get TLS 1.0 warnings when running on Apple Python. Hence the test changes. I'm not super thrilled about shipping a Mercurial that always whines about TLS 1.0 on OS X. We may want a follow-up patch to suppress this warning.

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debugcmdserver.py
49 lines | 1.2 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# Dumps output generated by Mercurial's command server in a formatted style to a
# given file or stderr if '-' is specified. Output is also written in its raw
# format to stdout.
#
# $ ./hg serve --cmds pipe | ./contrib/debugcmdserver.py -
# o, 52 -> 'capabilities: getencoding runcommand\nencoding: UTF-8'
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import struct
import sys
if len(sys.argv) != 2:
print('usage: debugcmdserver.py FILE')
sys.exit(1)
outputfmt = '>cI'
outputfmtsize = struct.calcsize(outputfmt)
if sys.argv[1] == '-':
log = sys.stderr
else:
log = open(sys.argv[1], 'a')
def read(size):
data = sys.stdin.read(size)
if not data:
raise EOFError
sys.stdout.write(data)
sys.stdout.flush()
return data
try:
while True:
header = read(outputfmtsize)
channel, length = struct.unpack(outputfmt, header)
log.write('%s, %-4d' % (channel, length))
if channel in 'IL':
log.write(' -> waiting for input\n')
else:
data = read(length)
log.write(' -> %r\n' % data)
log.flush()
except EOFError:
pass
finally:
if log != sys.stderr:
log.close()