Mercurial > hg > mercurial-crew-with-dirclash
view contrib/hg-ssh @ 1933:7544700fd931
Use 'hg ci -d "1000000 0"' in tests to circumvent problem with leading zero.
Some systems show "Thu Jan 01" instead of "Thu Jan 1", which breaks tests.
Using "1000000" yields "Mon Jan 12 13:46:40 1970", which looks the same on
all systems.
author | Thomas Arendsen Hein <thomas@intevation.de> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 13 Mar 2006 13:05:41 +0100 |
parents | 9a5b778f7e2d |
children | 831ebc408ffb |
line wrap: on
line source
#!/usr/bin/env python # # Copyright 2005, 2006 by Intevation GmbH <intevation@intevation.de> # Author(s): # Thomas Arendsen Hein <thomas@intevation.de> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms # of the GNU General Public License, incorporated herein by reference. """ hg-ssh - a wrapper for ssh access to a limited set of mercurial repos To be used in ~/.ssh/authorized_keys with the "command" option, see sshd(8): command="hg-ssh path/to/repo1 /path/to/repo2 ~/repo3 ~user/repo4" ssh-dss ... (probably together with these other useful options: no-port-forwarding,no-X11-forwarding,no-agent-forwarding) This allows pull/push over ssh to to the repositories given as arguments. If all your repositories are subdirectories of a common directory, you can allow shorter paths with: command="cd path/to/my/repositories && hg-ssh repo1 subdir/repo2" You can use pattern matching of your normal shell, e.g.: command="cd repos && hg-ssh user/thomas/* projects/{mercurial,foo}" """ from mercurial import commands import sys, os cwd = os.getcwd() allowed_paths = [os.path.normpath(os.path.join(cwd, os.path.expanduser(path))) for path in sys.argv[1:]] orig_cmd = os.getenv('SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND', '?') if orig_cmd.startswith('hg -R ') and orig_cmd.endswith(' serve --stdio'): path = orig_cmd[6:-14] repo = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(cwd, os.path.expanduser(path))) if repo in allowed_paths: commands.dispatch(['-R', repo, 'serve', '--stdio']) else: sys.stderr.write("Illegal repository %r\n" % repo) sys.exit(-1) else: sys.stderr.write("Illegal command %r\n" % orig_cmd) sys.exit(-1)