AdvertiseRefsHook is used to limit the visibility of the refs in Gerrit.
If this hook is not called, then all refs are treated as visible,
causing the server to serve commits reachable from branches the client
should not be able to access, if asked to via a request naming a guessed
object id.
Until 3a529361a76e8267467071e0b13ebb36b97d8fb2 (Call AdvertiseRefsHook
before validating wants, 2018-12-18), UploadPack would invoke this hook
at ref advertisement time but not during negotiation and when serving a
pack file. Add a test to avoid regressing. Stateful bidirectional
transports were not affected, so the test uses HTTP.
[jn: split out when backporting the fix to stable-4.5. The test passes
as long as v4.9.0.201710071750-r~169 (fetch: Accept any SHA-1 on lhs of
refspec, 2017-06-04) is cherry picked along with it.]
Change-Id: I8c017107336adc7cb4c826985779676bf043e648
Signed-off-by: Masaya Suzuki <masayasuzuki@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrn@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
- this is a new warning option in Eclipse 4.7 and higher
- we always change version of all bundles in a release to keep release
engineering simple
Change-Id: Ic7523d77b67b2802f1bab3bc70af250d712a034f
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
When a https connection could not be established because the SSL
handshake was unsuccessful, TransportHttp would unconditionally
throw a TransportException.
Other https clients like web browsers or also some SVN clients
handle this more gracefully. If there's a problem with the server
certificate, they inform the user and give him a possibility to
connect to the server all the same.
In git, this would correspond to dynamically setting http.sslVerify
to false for the server.
Implement this using the CredentialsProvider to inform and ask the
user. We offer three choices:
1. skip SSL verification for the current git operation, or
2. skip SSL verification for the server always from now on for
requests originating from the current repository, or
3. always skip SSL verification for the server from now on.
For (1), we just suppress SSL verification for the current instance of
TransportHttp.
For (2), we store a http.<uri>.sslVerify = false setting for the
original URI in the repo config.
For (3), we store the http.<uri>.sslVerify setting in the git user
config.
Adapt the SmartClientSmartServerSslTest such that it uses this
mechanism instead of setting http.sslVerify up front.
Improve SimpleHttpServer to enable setting it up also with HTTPS
support in anticipation of an EGit SWTbot UI test verifying that
cloning via HTTPS from a server that has a certificate that doesn't
validate pops up the correct dialog, and that cloning subsequently
proceeds successfully if the user decides to skip SSL verification.
Bug: 374703
Change-Id: Ie1abada9a3d389ad4d8d52c2d5265d2764e3fb0e
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>
Git has a rather elaborate mechanism to specify HTTP configuration
options per URL, based on pattern matching the URL against "http"
subsection names.[1] The URLs used for this matching are always the
original URLs; redirected URLs do not participate.
* Scheme and host must match exactly case-insensitively.
* An optional user name must match exactly.
* Ports must match exactly after default ports have been filled in.
* The path of a subsection, if any, must match a segment prefix of
the path of the URL.
* Matches with user name take precedence over equal-length path
matches without, but longer path matches are preferred over
shorter matches with user name.
Implement this for JGit. Factor out the HttpConfig from TransportHttp
and implement the matching and override mechanism.
The set of supported settings is still the same; JGit currently
supports only followRedirects, postBuffer, and sslVerify, plus the
JGit-specific maxRedirects key.
Add tests for path normalization and prefix matching only on segment
separators, and use the new mechanism in SmartClientSmartServerSslTest
to disable sslVerify selectively for only the test server URLs.
Compare also bug 374703 and bug 465492. With this commit it would be
possible to set sslVerify to false for only the git server using a
self-signed certificate instead of having to switch it off globally
via http.sslVerify.
[1] https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config
Change-Id: I42a3c2399cb937cd7884116a2a32fcaa7a418fcb
Signed-off-by: Thomas Wolf <thomas.wolf@paranor.ch>