Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view test/test_userauditor.py @ 5232:462b0f76fce8
issue2550864 - Potential information leakage via journal/history
Fix this by making the hyperdb::Class::history function check for view
permissions on the journaled properties. So a user that sees [hidden]
for a property in the web interface doesn;t see the property changes
in the history.
While doing this, relocated the filter for quiet properties
from the templating class to the hyperdb.
Also added the skipquiet option to the history command in
roundup-admin.py to enable filtering of quiet params.
Also changed calls to history() in the backend databases to report all
items.
Changed inline documentation for all history calls that document the
actions. The create action (before nov 6 2002) used to record all
parameters. After that point the create call uses an empty dictionary.
The filtering code depends on the create dictionary being empty.
It may not operate properly on very old roundup databases.
Changed calls to logging.getLogger to roundup.hyperdb.backends to
allow filtering the back end while keeping hyperdb logging.
In cgi/templating.py, changed history() function consolidating
handiling of link and unlink actions
Added tests for quiet property filtering and permission filtering
of history.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Fri, 14 Apr 2017 23:24:18 -0400 |
| parents | 37d1e24fb941 |
| children | 198b6e810c67 |
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import os, unittest, shutil from db_test_base import setupTracker from .test_dates import skip_pytz class UserAuditorTest(unittest.TestCase): def setUp(self): self.dirname = '_test_user_auditor' self.instance = setupTracker(self.dirname) self.db = self.instance.open('admin') self.db.tx_Source = "cli" self.db.user.create(username='kyle', address='kyle@example.com', realname='Kyle Broflovski', roles='User') def tearDown(self): self.db.close() try: shutil.rmtree(self.dirname) except OSError, error: if error.errno not in (errno.ENOENT, errno.ESRCH): raise def testBadTimezones(self): self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.create, username='eric', timezone='24') userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, timezone='3000') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, timezone='24') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, timezone='-24') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, timezone='-3000') @skip_pytz def testBadTimezonesPyTZ(self): userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') try: from pytz import UnknownTimeZoneError except: UnknownTimeZoneError = ValueError self.assertRaises(UnknownTimeZoneError, self.db.user.set, userid, timezone='MiddleOf/Nowhere') def testGoodTimezones(self): self.db.user.create(username='test_user01', timezone='12') userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') # TODO: roundup should accept non-integer offsets since those are valid # this is the offset for Tehran, Iran #self.db.user.set(userid, timezone='3.5') self.db.user.set(userid, timezone='-23') self.db.user.set(userid, timezone='23') self.db.user.set(userid, timezone='0') @skip_pytz def testGoodTimezonesPyTZ(self): userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') self.db.user.create(username='test_user02', timezone='MST') self.db.user.set(userid, timezone='US/Eastern') def testBadEmailAddresses(self): userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, address='kyle @ example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, address='one@example.com,two@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, address='weird@@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, address='embedded\nnewline@example.com') # verify that we check alternates as well self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, alternate_addresses='kyle @ example.com') # make sure we accept local style addresses self.db.user.set(userid, address='kyle') # verify we are case insensitive self.db.user.set(userid, address='kyle@EXAMPLE.COM') def testUniqueEmailAddresses(self): self.db.user.create(username='kenny', address='kenny@example.com', alternate_addresses='sp_ken@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.create, username='test_user01', address='kenny@example.com') uid = self.db.user.create(username='eric', address='eric@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, uid, address='kenny@example.com') # make sure we check alternates self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, uid, address='kenny@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, uid, address='sp_ken@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, uid, alternate_addresses='kenny@example.com') def testBadRoles(self): userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, roles='BadRole') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, roles='User,BadRole') def testGoodRoles(self): userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') # make sure we handle commas in weird places self.db.user.set(userid, roles='User,') self.db.user.set(userid, roles=',User') # make sure we strip whitespace self.db.user.set(userid, roles=' User ') # check for all-whitespace (treat as no role) self.db.user.set(userid, roles=' ') # vim: filetype=python sts=4 sw=4 et si
