The check about the f argument type was removed in this commit:
2c94aa567e
Thanks for Pedro Arthur Duarte (pedroarthur.jedi at gmail.com) by the help with
this bug.
The internal `_ssl._SSLSocket` object now provides methods to retrieve
the peer cert chain and verified cert chain as a list of Certificate
objects. Certificate objects have methods to convert the cert to a dict,
PEM, or DER (ASN.1).
These are private APIs for now. There is a slim chance to stabilize the
approach and provide a public API for 3.10. Otherwise I'll provide a
stable API in 3.11.
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
Previous ID (5233) refers to "Sieve Email Filtering: Subaddress
Extension". It seems that the actual reference should be "Internet
Message Format" RFC 5322 (https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5322).
(The typo probably comes from commit 29d1bc0842 in which the ID of
this RFC got updated from the obsolete 2822.)
Co-authored-by: Ambrose Chua <ambrose@hey.com>
* Add space after period to warning in _tzpath.py
Currently:
InvalidTZPathWarning: Invalid paths specified in PYTHONTZPATH environment variable.Paths should be absolute but found the following relative paths: ...
* Update _tzpath.py
asyncio.get_event_loop() emits now a deprecation warning when it creates a new event loop.
In future releases it will became an alias of asyncio.get_running_loop().
Revert 73ea546, increase logging, and improve stability of test.
Handle all OSErrors in a single block. OSError also takes care of
SSLError and socket's connection errors.
Partly reverts commit fb7e750. The
threaded connection handler must not raise an unhandled exception.
Depending on usage, it's possible for Flag members to have the _inverted_ attribute when they are testing, while the Flag being testing against will not have that attribute on its members -- so skip that comparison.
This works by not caching the handle and instead getting the handle from
the file descriptor each time, so that if the actual handle changes by
fd redirection closing/opening the console handle beneath our feet, we
will keep working correctly.
The argument order of `link_to()` is reversed compared to what one may expect, so:
a.link_to(b)
Might be expected to create *a* as a link to *b*, in fact it creates *b* as a link to *a*, making it function more like a "link from". This doesn't match `symlink_to()` nor the documentation and doesn't seem to be the original author's intent.
This PR deprecates `link_to()` and introduces `hardlink_to()`, which has the same argument order as `symlink_to()`.
test_wrong_cert_tls13 sometimes fails on some Windows buildbots. Turn
failing test case into skipped test case until we have more time to
investigate.
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>