##// END OF EJS Templates
dispatch: protect against malicious 'hg serve --stdio' invocations (sec)...
dispatch: protect against malicious 'hg serve --stdio' invocations (sec) Some shared-ssh installations assume that 'hg serve --stdio' is a safe command to run for minimally trusted users. Unfortunately, the messy implementation of argument parsing here meant that trying to access a repo named '--debugger' would give the user a pdb prompt, thereby sidestepping any hoped-for sandboxing. Serving repositories over HTTP(S) is unaffected. We're not currently hardening any subcommands other than 'serve'. If your service exposes other commands to users with arbitrary repository names, it is imperative that you defend against repository names of '--debugger' and anything starting with '--config'. The read-only mode of hg-ssh stopped working because it provided its hook configuration to "hg serve --stdio" via --config parameter. This is banned for security reasons now. This patch switches it to directly call ui.setconfig(). If your custom hosting infrastructure relies on passing --config to "hg serve --stdio", you'll need to find a different way to get that configuration into Mercurial, either by using ui.setconfig() as hg-ssh does in this patch, or by placing an hgrc file someplace where Mercurial will read it. mitrandir@fb.com provided some extra fixes for the dispatch code and for hg-ssh in places that I overlooked.

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test-ancestor.py
262 lines | 8.2 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import binascii
import getopt
import math
import os
import random
import sys
import time
from mercurial.node import nullrev
from mercurial import (
ancestor,
debugcommands,
hg,
ui as uimod,
util,
)
def buildgraph(rng, nodes=100, rootprob=0.05, mergeprob=0.2, prevprob=0.7):
'''nodes: total number of nodes in the graph
rootprob: probability that a new node (not 0) will be a root
mergeprob: probability that, excluding a root a node will be a merge
prevprob: probability that p1 will be the previous node
return value is a graph represented as an adjacency list.
'''
graph = [None] * nodes
for i in xrange(nodes):
if i == 0 or rng.random() < rootprob:
graph[i] = [nullrev]
elif i == 1:
graph[i] = [0]
elif rng.random() < mergeprob:
if i == 2 or rng.random() < prevprob:
# p1 is prev
p1 = i - 1
else:
p1 = rng.randrange(i - 1)
p2 = rng.choice(range(0, p1) + range(p1 + 1, i))
graph[i] = [p1, p2]
elif rng.random() < prevprob:
graph[i] = [i - 1]
else:
graph[i] = [rng.randrange(i - 1)]
return graph
def buildancestorsets(graph):
ancs = [None] * len(graph)
for i in xrange(len(graph)):
ancs[i] = set([i])
if graph[i] == [nullrev]:
continue
for p in graph[i]:
ancs[i].update(ancs[p])
return ancs
class naiveincrementalmissingancestors(object):
def __init__(self, ancs, bases):
self.ancs = ancs
self.bases = set(bases)
def addbases(self, newbases):
self.bases.update(newbases)
def removeancestorsfrom(self, revs):
for base in self.bases:
if base != nullrev:
revs.difference_update(self.ancs[base])
revs.discard(nullrev)
def missingancestors(self, revs):
res = set()
for rev in revs:
if rev != nullrev:
res.update(self.ancs[rev])
for base in self.bases:
if base != nullrev:
res.difference_update(self.ancs[base])
return sorted(res)
def test_missingancestors(seed, rng):
# empirically observed to take around 1 second
graphcount = 100
testcount = 10
inccount = 10
nerrs = [0]
# the default mu and sigma give us a nice distribution of mostly
# single-digit counts (including 0) with some higher ones
def lognormrandom(mu, sigma):
return int(math.floor(rng.lognormvariate(mu, sigma)))
def samplerevs(nodes, mu=1.1, sigma=0.8):
count = min(lognormrandom(mu, sigma), len(nodes))
return rng.sample(nodes, count)
def err(seed, graph, bases, seq, output, expected):
if nerrs[0] == 0:
print('seed:', hex(seed)[:-1], file=sys.stderr)
if gerrs[0] == 0:
print('graph:', graph, file=sys.stderr)
print('* bases:', bases, file=sys.stderr)
print('* seq: ', seq, file=sys.stderr)
print('* output: ', output, file=sys.stderr)
print('* expected:', expected, file=sys.stderr)
nerrs[0] += 1
gerrs[0] += 1
for g in xrange(graphcount):
graph = buildgraph(rng)
ancs = buildancestorsets(graph)
gerrs = [0]
for _ in xrange(testcount):
# start from nullrev to include it as a possibility
graphnodes = range(nullrev, len(graph))
bases = samplerevs(graphnodes)
# fast algorithm
inc = ancestor.incrementalmissingancestors(graph.__getitem__, bases)
# reference slow algorithm
naiveinc = naiveincrementalmissingancestors(ancs, bases)
seq = []
revs = []
for _ in xrange(inccount):
if rng.random() < 0.2:
newbases = samplerevs(graphnodes)
seq.append(('addbases', newbases))
inc.addbases(newbases)
naiveinc.addbases(newbases)
if rng.random() < 0.4:
# larger set so that there are more revs to remove from
revs = samplerevs(graphnodes, mu=1.5)
seq.append(('removeancestorsfrom', revs))
hrevs = set(revs)
rrevs = set(revs)
inc.removeancestorsfrom(hrevs)
naiveinc.removeancestorsfrom(rrevs)
if hrevs != rrevs:
err(seed, graph, bases, seq, sorted(hrevs),
sorted(rrevs))
else:
revs = samplerevs(graphnodes)
seq.append(('missingancestors', revs))
h = inc.missingancestors(revs)
r = naiveinc.missingancestors(revs)
if h != r:
err(seed, graph, bases, seq, h, r)
# graph is a dict of child->parent adjacency lists for this graph:
# o 13
# |
# | o 12
# | |
# | | o 11
# | | |\
# | | | | o 10
# | | | | |
# | o---+ | 9
# | | | | |
# o | | | | 8
# / / / /
# | | o | 7
# | | | |
# o---+ | 6
# / / /
# | | o 5
# | |/
# | o 4
# | |
# o | 3
# | |
# | o 2
# |/
# o 1
# |
# o 0
graph = {0: [-1], 1: [0], 2: [1], 3: [1], 4: [2], 5: [4], 6: [4],
7: [4], 8: [-1], 9: [6, 7], 10: [5], 11: [3, 7], 12: [9],
13: [8]}
def genlazyancestors(revs, stoprev=0, inclusive=False):
print(("%% lazy ancestor set for %s, stoprev = %s, inclusive = %s" %
(revs, stoprev, inclusive)))
return ancestor.lazyancestors(graph.get, revs, stoprev=stoprev,
inclusive=inclusive)
def printlazyancestors(s, l):
print('membership: %r' % [n for n in l if n in s])
print('iteration: %r' % list(s))
def test_lazyancestors():
# Empty revs
s = genlazyancestors([])
printlazyancestors(s, [3, 0, -1])
# Standard example
s = genlazyancestors([11, 13])
printlazyancestors(s, [11, 13, 7, 9, 8, 3, 6, 4, 1, -1, 0])
# Standard with ancestry in the initial set (1 is ancestor of 3)
s = genlazyancestors([1, 3])
printlazyancestors(s, [1, -1, 0])
# Including revs
s = genlazyancestors([11, 13], inclusive=True)
printlazyancestors(s, [11, 13, 7, 9, 8, 3, 6, 4, 1, -1, 0])
# Test with stoprev
s = genlazyancestors([11, 13], stoprev=6)
printlazyancestors(s, [11, 13, 7, 9, 8, 3, 6, 4, 1, -1, 0])
s = genlazyancestors([11, 13], stoprev=6, inclusive=True)
printlazyancestors(s, [11, 13, 7, 9, 8, 3, 6, 4, 1, -1, 0])
# The C gca algorithm requires a real repo. These are textual descriptions of
# DAGs that have been known to be problematic.
dagtests = [
'+2*2*2/*3/2',
'+3*3/*2*2/*4*4/*4/2*4/2*2',
]
def test_gca():
u = uimod.ui.load()
for i, dag in enumerate(dagtests):
repo = hg.repository(u, 'gca%d' % i, create=1)
cl = repo.changelog
if not util.safehasattr(cl.index, 'ancestors'):
# C version not available
return
debugcommands.debugbuilddag(u, repo, dag)
# Compare the results of the Python and C versions. This does not
# include choosing a winner when more than one gca exists -- we make
# sure both return exactly the same set of gcas.
for a in cl:
for b in cl:
cgcas = sorted(cl.index.ancestors(a, b))
pygcas = sorted(ancestor.ancestors(cl.parentrevs, a, b))
if cgcas != pygcas:
print("test_gca: for dag %s, gcas for %d, %d:"
% (dag, a, b))
print(" C returned: %s" % cgcas)
print(" Python returned: %s" % pygcas)
def main():
seed = None
opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], 's:', ['seed='])
for o, a in opts:
if o in ('-s', '--seed'):
seed = long(a, base=0) # accepts base 10 or 16 strings
if seed is None:
try:
seed = long(binascii.hexlify(os.urandom(16)), 16)
except AttributeError:
seed = long(time.time() * 1000)
rng = random.Random(seed)
test_missingancestors(seed, rng)
test_lazyancestors()
test_gca()
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()