##// 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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r30559:d83ca854 default
r32050:77eaf953 4.1.3 stable
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test-walkrepo.py
66 lines | 1.9 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import os
from mercurial import (
hg,
scmutil,
ui as uimod,
util,
)
chdir = os.chdir
mkdir = os.mkdir
pjoin = os.path.join
walkrepos = scmutil.walkrepos
checklink = util.checklink
u = uimod.ui.load()
sym = checklink('.')
hg.repository(u, 'top1', create=1)
mkdir('subdir')
chdir('subdir')
hg.repository(u, 'sub1', create=1)
mkdir('subsubdir')
chdir('subsubdir')
hg.repository(u, 'subsub1', create=1)
chdir(os.path.pardir)
if sym:
os.symlink(os.path.pardir, 'circle')
os.symlink(pjoin('subsubdir', 'subsub1'), 'subsub1')
def runtest():
reposet = frozenset(walkrepos('.', followsym=True))
if sym and (len(reposet) != 3):
print("reposet = %r" % (reposet,))
print(("Found %d repositories when I should have found 3"
% (len(reposet),)))
if (not sym) and (len(reposet) != 2):
print("reposet = %r" % (reposet,))
print(("Found %d repositories when I should have found 2"
% (len(reposet),)))
sub1set = frozenset((pjoin('.', 'sub1'),
pjoin('.', 'circle', 'subdir', 'sub1')))
if len(sub1set & reposet) != 1:
print("sub1set = %r" % (sub1set,))
print("reposet = %r" % (reposet,))
print("sub1set and reposet should have exactly one path in common.")
sub2set = frozenset((pjoin('.', 'subsub1'),
pjoin('.', 'subsubdir', 'subsub1')))
if len(sub2set & reposet) != 1:
print("sub2set = %r" % (sub2set,))
print("reposet = %r" % (reposet,))
print("sub2set and reposet should have exactly one path in common.")
sub3 = pjoin('.', 'circle', 'top1')
if sym and sub3 not in reposet:
print("reposet = %r" % (reposet,))
print("Symbolic links are supported and %s is not in reposet" % (sub3,))
runtest()
if sym:
# Simulate not having symlinks.
del os.path.samestat
sym = False
runtest()