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encoding: define an enum that specifies what normcase does to ASCII strings...
encoding: define an enum that specifies what normcase does to ASCII strings For C code we don't want to pay the cost of calling into a Python function for the common case of ASCII filenames. However, while on most POSIX platforms we normalize filenames by lowercasing them, on Windows we uppercase them. We define an enum here indicating the direction that filenames should be normalized as. Some platforms (notably Cygwin) have more complicated normalization behavior -- we add a case for that too. In upcoming patches we'll also define a fallback function that is called if the string has non-ASCII bytes. This enum will be replicated in the C code to make foldmaps. There's unfortunately no nice way to avoid that -- we can't have encoding import parsers because of import cycles. One way might be to have parsers import encoding, but accessing Python modules from C code is just awkward. The name 'normcasespecs' was chosen to indicate that this is merely an integer that specifies a behavior, not a function. The name was pluralized since in upcoming patches we'll introduce 'normcasespec' which will be one of these values.

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pathutil.py
177 lines | 6.2 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
import os, errno, stat
import encoding
import util
from i18n import _
def _lowerclean(s):
return encoding.hfsignoreclean(s.lower())
class pathauditor(object):
'''ensure that a filesystem path contains no banned components.
the following properties of a path are checked:
- ends with a directory separator
- under top-level .hg
- starts at the root of a windows drive
- contains ".."
- traverses a symlink (e.g. a/symlink_here/b)
- inside a nested repository (a callback can be used to approve
some nested repositories, e.g., subrepositories)
'''
def __init__(self, root, callback=None):
self.audited = set()
self.auditeddir = set()
self.root = root
self.callback = callback
if os.path.lexists(root) and not util.checkcase(root):
self.normcase = util.normcase
else:
self.normcase = lambda x: x
def __call__(self, path):
'''Check the relative path.
path may contain a pattern (e.g. foodir/**.txt)'''
path = util.localpath(path)
normpath = self.normcase(path)
if normpath in self.audited:
return
# AIX ignores "/" at end of path, others raise EISDIR.
if util.endswithsep(path):
raise util.Abort(_("path ends in directory separator: %s") % path)
parts = util.splitpath(path)
if (os.path.splitdrive(path)[0]
or _lowerclean(parts[0]) in ('.hg', '.hg.', '')
or os.pardir in parts):
raise util.Abort(_("path contains illegal component: %s") % path)
# Windows shortname aliases
for p in parts:
if "~" in p:
first, last = p.split("~", 1)
if last.isdigit() and first.upper() in ["HG", "HG8B6C"]:
raise util.Abort(_("path contains illegal component: %s")
% path)
if '.hg' in _lowerclean(path):
lparts = [_lowerclean(p.lower()) for p in parts]
for p in '.hg', '.hg.':
if p in lparts[1:]:
pos = lparts.index(p)
base = os.path.join(*parts[:pos])
raise util.Abort(_("path '%s' is inside nested repo %r")
% (path, base))
normparts = util.splitpath(normpath)
assert len(parts) == len(normparts)
parts.pop()
normparts.pop()
prefixes = []
while parts:
prefix = os.sep.join(parts)
normprefix = os.sep.join(normparts)
if normprefix in self.auditeddir:
break
curpath = os.path.join(self.root, prefix)
try:
st = os.lstat(curpath)
except OSError, err:
# EINVAL can be raised as invalid path syntax under win32.
# They must be ignored for patterns can be checked too.
if err.errno not in (errno.ENOENT, errno.ENOTDIR, errno.EINVAL):
raise
else:
if stat.S_ISLNK(st.st_mode):
raise util.Abort(
_('path %r traverses symbolic link %r')
% (path, prefix))
elif (stat.S_ISDIR(st.st_mode) and
os.path.isdir(os.path.join(curpath, '.hg'))):
if not self.callback or not self.callback(curpath):
raise util.Abort(_("path '%s' is inside nested "
"repo %r")
% (path, prefix))
prefixes.append(normprefix)
parts.pop()
normparts.pop()
self.audited.add(normpath)
# only add prefixes to the cache after checking everything: we don't
# want to add "foo/bar/baz" before checking if there's a "foo/.hg"
self.auditeddir.update(prefixes)
def check(self, path):
try:
self(path)
return True
except (OSError, util.Abort):
return False
def canonpath(root, cwd, myname, auditor=None):
'''return the canonical path of myname, given cwd and root'''
if util.endswithsep(root):
rootsep = root
else:
rootsep = root + os.sep
name = myname
if not os.path.isabs(name):
name = os.path.join(root, cwd, name)
name = os.path.normpath(name)
if auditor is None:
auditor = pathauditor(root)
if name != rootsep and name.startswith(rootsep):
name = name[len(rootsep):]
auditor(name)
return util.pconvert(name)
elif name == root:
return ''
else:
# Determine whether `name' is in the hierarchy at or beneath `root',
# by iterating name=dirname(name) until that causes no change (can't
# check name == '/', because that doesn't work on windows). The list
# `rel' holds the reversed list of components making up the relative
# file name we want.
rel = []
while True:
try:
s = util.samefile(name, root)
except OSError:
s = False
if s:
if not rel:
# name was actually the same as root (maybe a symlink)
return ''
rel.reverse()
name = os.path.join(*rel)
auditor(name)
return util.pconvert(name)
dirname, basename = util.split(name)
rel.append(basename)
if dirname == name:
break
name = dirname
raise util.Abort(_("%s not under root '%s'") % (myname, root))
def normasprefix(path):
'''normalize the specified path as path prefix
Returned value can be used safely for "p.startswith(prefix)",
"p[len(prefix):]", and so on.
For efficiency, this expects "path" argument to be already
normalized by "os.path.normpath", "os.path.realpath", and so on.
See also issue3033 for detail about need of this function.
>>> normasprefix('/foo/bar').replace(os.sep, '/')
'/foo/bar/'
>>> normasprefix('/').replace(os.sep, '/')
'/'
'''
d, p = os.path.splitdrive(path)
if len(p) != len(os.sep):
return path + os.sep
else:
return path