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auth: explicit user permission should not blindly overrule permissions through user groups
Before, explicit permissions of a user could shadow higher permissions that
would otherwise be obtained through a group the user is member of.
That was confusing and fragile: *removing* a permission could then suddenly
give a user *more* permissions.
Instead, change the flag for controlling internal permission computation to
*not* use "explicit". Permissions will then add up, no matter if they are
explicit or through groups.
The change in auth.py is small, but read the body of __get_perms to see the
actual impact ... and also the clean-up changeset that will come next.
This might in some cases be a behaviour change and give users more access ...
but it will probably only give the user that was intended. This change can thus
be seen as a bugfix.
Some tests assumed the old behaviour. Not for good reasons, but just because
that is how they were written. These tests are updated to expect the new
behaviour, and it has been reviewed that it makes sense.
Note that this 'explicit' flag mostly is for repo permissions and independent
of the 'user_inherit_default_permissions' that just was removed and is about
global permissions.
Before, explicit permissions of a user could shadow higher permissions that
would otherwise be obtained through a group the user is member of.
That was confusing and fragile: *removing* a permission could then suddenly
give a user *more* permissions.
Instead, change the flag for controlling internal permission computation to
*not* use "explicit". Permissions will then add up, no matter if they are
explicit or through groups.
The change in auth.py is small, but read the body of __get_perms to see the
actual impact ... and also the clean-up changeset that will come next.
This might in some cases be a behaviour change and give users more access ...
but it will probably only give the user that was intended. This change can thus
be seen as a bugfix.
Some tests assumed the old behaviour. Not for good reasons, but just because
that is how they were written. These tests are updated to expect the new
behaviour, and it has been reviewed that it makes sense.
Note that this 'explicit' flag mostly is for repo permissions and independent
of the 'user_inherit_default_permissions' that just was removed and is about
global permissions.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 | #!/usr/bin/env python2
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import os
import sys
import platform
if sys.version_info < (2, 6) or sys.version_info >= (3,):
raise Exception('Kallithea requires python 2.6 or 2.7')
here = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__))
def _get_meta_var(name, data, callback_handler=None):
import re
matches = re.compile(r'(?:%s)\s*=\s*(.*)' % name).search(data)
if matches:
if not callable(callback_handler):
callback_handler = lambda v: v
return callback_handler(eval(matches.groups()[0]))
_meta = open(os.path.join(here, 'kallithea', '__init__.py'), 'rb')
_metadata = _meta.read()
_meta.close()
callback = lambda V: ('.'.join(map(str, V[:3])) + '.'.join(V[3:]))
__version__ = _get_meta_var('VERSION', _metadata, callback)
__license__ = _get_meta_var('__license__', _metadata)
__author__ = _get_meta_var('__author__', _metadata)
__url__ = _get_meta_var('__url__', _metadata)
# defines current platform
__platform__ = platform.system()
is_windows = __platform__ in ['Windows']
requirements = [
"alembic >= 0.8.0, < 1.1",
"gearbox < 1",
"waitress >= 0.8.8, < 1.2",
"WebOb >= 1.7, < 1.8", # turbogears2 2.3.12 requires WebOb<1.8.0
"backlash >= 0.1.2, < 1",
"TurboGears2 >= 2.3.10, < 2.4",
"tgext.routes >= 0.2.0, < 1",
"Beaker >= 1.7.0, < 2",
"WebHelpers >= 1.3, < 1.4",
"FormEncode >= 1.2.4, < 1.4",
"SQLAlchemy >= 1.1, < 1.3",
"Mako >= 0.9.0, < 1.1",
"Pygments >= 2.0, < 2.3",
"Whoosh >= 2.5.0, < 2.8",
"celery >= 3.1, < 4.0", # celery 4 doesn't work
"Babel >= 1.3, < 2.7",
"python-dateutil >= 1.5.0, < 2.8",
"Markdown >= 2.2.1, < 2.7",
"docutils >= 0.11, < 0.15",
"URLObject >= 2.3.4, < 2.5",
"Routes >= 1.13, < 2",
"dulwich >= 0.14.1, < 0.20",
"mercurial >= 4.1.1, < 4.10",
"decorator >= 3.3.2, < 4.4",
"Paste >= 2.0.3, < 3.1",
"bleach >= 3.0, < 3.1",
"Click >= 7.0, < 8",
]
if sys.version_info < (2, 7):
requirements.append("importlib == 1.0.1")
requirements.append("argparse")
if not is_windows:
requirements.append("bcrypt >= 3.1.0, < 3.2")
dependency_links = [
]
classifiers = [
'Development Status :: 4 - Beta',
'Environment :: Web Environment',
'Framework :: Pylons',
'Intended Audience :: Developers',
'License :: OSI Approved :: GNU General Public License (GPL)',
'Operating System :: OS Independent',
'Programming Language :: Python',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7',
'Topic :: Software Development :: Version Control',
]
# additional files from project that goes somewhere in the filesystem
# relative to sys.prefix
data_files = []
description = ('Kallithea is a fast and powerful management tool '
'for Mercurial and Git with a built in push/pull server, '
'full text search and code-review.')
keywords = ' '.join([
'kallithea', 'mercurial', 'git', 'code review',
'repo groups', 'ldap', 'repository management', 'hgweb replacement',
'hgwebdir', 'gitweb replacement', 'serving hgweb',
])
# long description
README_FILE = 'README.rst'
try:
long_description = open(README_FILE).read()
except IOError as err:
sys.stderr.write(
"[WARNING] Cannot find file specified as long_description (%s)\n"
% README_FILE
)
long_description = description
import setuptools
# monkey patch setuptools to use distutils owner/group functionality
from setuptools.command import sdist
sdist_org = sdist.sdist
class sdist_new(sdist_org):
def initialize_options(self):
sdist_org.initialize_options(self)
self.owner = self.group = 'root'
sdist.sdist = sdist_new
packages = setuptools.find_packages(exclude=['ez_setup'])
setuptools.setup(
name='Kallithea',
version=__version__,
description=description,
long_description=long_description,
keywords=keywords,
license=__license__,
author=__author__,
author_email='kallithea@sfconservancy.org',
dependency_links=dependency_links,
url=__url__,
install_requires=requirements,
classifiers=classifiers,
data_files=data_files,
packages=packages,
include_package_data=True,
message_extractors={'kallithea': [
('**.py', 'python', None),
('templates/**.mako', 'mako', {'input_encoding': 'utf-8'}),
('templates/**.html', 'mako', {'input_encoding': 'utf-8'}),
('public/**', 'ignore', None)]},
zip_safe=False,
entry_points="""
[console_scripts]
kallithea-api = kallithea.bin.kallithea_api:main
kallithea-gist = kallithea.bin.kallithea_gist:main
kallithea-config = kallithea.bin.kallithea_config:main
kallithea-cli = kallithea.bin.kallithea_cli:cli
[paste.app_factory]
main = kallithea.config.middleware:make_app
""",
)
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