##// END OF EJS Templates
lfs: add the 'Authorization' property to the Batch API response, if present...
lfs: add the 'Authorization' property to the Batch API response, if present The client copies all of these properties under 'header' to the HTTP Headers of the subsequent GET or PUT request that it performs. That allows the Basic HTTP authentication used to authorize the Batch API request to also authorize the upload/download action. There's likely further work to do here. There's an 'authenticated' boolean key in the Batch API response that can be set, and there is an 'LFS-Authenticate' header that is used instead of 'WWW-Authenticate'[1]. (We likely need to support both, since some hosting solutions are likely to only respond with the latter.) In any event, this works with SCM Manager, so there is real world benefit. I'm limiting the headers returned to 'Basic', because that's all the lfs spec calls out. In practice, I've seen gitbucket emit custom header content[2]. [1] https://github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs/blob/master/docs/api/batch.md#response-errors [2] https://github.com/gitbucket/gitbucket/blob/35655f33c7713f08515ed640ece0948acd6d6168/src/main/scala/gitbucket/core/servlet/GitRepositoryServlet.scala#L119

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highlight.py
96 lines | 3.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# highlight.py - highlight extension implementation file
#
# Copyright 2007-2009 Adam Hupp <adam@hupp.org> and others
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
#
# The original module was split in an interface and an implementation
# file to defer pygments loading and speedup extension setup.
from __future__ import absolute_import
from mercurial import demandimport
demandimport.ignore.extend(['pkgutil', 'pkg_resources', '__main__'])
from mercurial import (
encoding,
)
from mercurial.utils import (
stringutil,
)
with demandimport.deactivated():
import pygments
import pygments.formatters
import pygments.lexers
import pygments.plugin
import pygments.util
for unused in pygments.plugin.find_plugin_lexers():
pass
highlight = pygments.highlight
ClassNotFound = pygments.util.ClassNotFound
guess_lexer = pygments.lexers.guess_lexer
guess_lexer_for_filename = pygments.lexers.guess_lexer_for_filename
TextLexer = pygments.lexers.TextLexer
HtmlFormatter = pygments.formatters.HtmlFormatter
SYNTAX_CSS = ('\n<link rel="stylesheet" href="{url}highlightcss" '
'type="text/css" />')
def pygmentize(field, fctx, style, tmpl, guessfilenameonly=False):
# append a <link ...> to the syntax highlighting css
old_header = tmpl.load('header')
if SYNTAX_CSS not in old_header:
new_header = old_header + SYNTAX_CSS
tmpl.cache['header'] = new_header
text = fctx.data()
if stringutil.binary(text):
return
# str.splitlines() != unicode.splitlines() because "reasons"
for c in "\x0c\x1c\x1d\x1e":
if c in text:
text = text.replace(c, '')
# Pygments is best used with Unicode strings:
# <http://pygments.org/docs/unicode/>
text = text.decode(encoding.encoding, 'replace')
# To get multi-line strings right, we can't format line-by-line
try:
lexer = guess_lexer_for_filename(fctx.path(), text[:1024],
stripnl=False)
except (ClassNotFound, ValueError):
# guess_lexer will return a lexer if *any* lexer matches. There is
# no way to specify a minimum match score. This can give a high rate of
# false positives on files with an unknown filename pattern.
if guessfilenameonly:
return
try:
lexer = guess_lexer(text[:1024], stripnl=False)
except (ClassNotFound, ValueError):
# Don't highlight unknown files
return
# Don't highlight text files
if isinstance(lexer, TextLexer):
return
formatter = HtmlFormatter(nowrap=True, style=style)
colorized = highlight(text, lexer, formatter)
coloriter = (s.encode(encoding.encoding, 'replace')
for s in colorized.splitlines())
tmpl.filters['colorize'] = lambda x: next(coloriter)
oldl = tmpl.cache[field]
newl = oldl.replace('line|escape', 'line|colorize')
tmpl.cache[field] = newl