This will address the common mistake many asyncio users make:
an "except Exception" clause breaking Tasks cancellation.
In addition to this change, we stop inheriting asyncio.TimeoutError
and asyncio.InvalidStateError from their concurrent.futures.*
counterparts. There's no point for these exceptions to share the
inheritance chain.
In 3.9 we'll focus on implementing supervisors and cancel scopes,
which should allow better handling of all exceptions, including
SystemExit and KeyboardInterrupt
* asyncio: __del__() keep reference to warnings.warn
The __del__() methods of asyncio classes now keep a strong reference
to the warnings.warn() to be able to display the ResourceWarning
warning in more cases. Ensure that the function remains available if
instances are destroyed late during Python shutdown (while module
symbols are cleared).
* Rename warn parameter to _warn
"_warn" name is a hint that it's not the regular warnings.warn()
function.
The cancellation of an overlapped WSARecv() has a race condition
which causes data loss because of the current implementation of
proactor in asyncio.
No longer cancel overlapped WSARecv() in _ProactorReadPipeTransport
to work around the race condition.
Remove the optimized recv_into() implementation to get simple
implementation of pause_reading() using the single _pending_data
attribute.
Move _feed_data_to_bufferred_proto() to protocols.py.
Remove set_protocol() method which became useless.
* Fix AttributeError (not all SSL exceptions have 'errno' attribute)
* Increase default handshake timeout from 10 to 60 seconds
* Make sure start_tls can be cancelled correctly
* Make sure any error in SSLProtocol gets propagated (instead of just being logged)
Fix a race condition in SSLProtocol.connection_made() of
asyncio.sslproto: start immediately the handshake instead of using
call_soon(). Previously, data_received() could be called before the
handshake started, causing the handshake to hang or fail.
In this commit:
* Support BufferedProtocol in set_protocol() and start_tls()
* Fix proactor to cancel readers reliably
* Update tests to be compatible with OpenSSL 1.1.1
* Clarify BufferedProtocol docs
* Bump TLS tests timeouts to 60 seconds; eliminate possible race from start_serving
* Rewrite test_start_tls_server_1
bpo-31399: Let OpenSSL verify hostname and IP
The ssl module now uses OpenSSL's X509_VERIFY_PARAM_set1_host() and
X509_VERIFY_PARAM_set1_ip() API to verify hostname and IP addresses.
* Remove match_hostname calls
* Check for libssl with set1_host, libssl must provide X509_VERIFY_PARAM_set1_host()
* Add documentation for OpenSSL 1.0.2 requirement
* Don't support OpenSSL special mode with a leading dot, e.g. ".example.org" matches "www.example.org". It's not standard conform.
* Add hostname_checks_common_name
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
* Make ssh_handshake_timeout None by default.
* Raise ValueError if ssl_handshake_timeout is used without ssl.
* Raise ValueError if ssl_handshake_timeout is not positive.
Issue #23749: With this change it's possible to implement starttls
as a separate package on PyPI, or even by copying/pasting a small
snipped of code in your project.
It's expected that we'll figure out the API design for starttls
during 3.6, so that we can add it in 3.7.
Issue #26604:
* Add a new optional source parameter to _warnings.warn() and warnings.warn()
* Modify asyncore, asyncio and _pyio modules to set the source parameter when
logging a ResourceWarning warning
This info is required on Python 3.5 and newer to get specific information on
the SSL object, like getting the binary peer certificate (instead of getting
it as text).
* Rephrase also the comment explaining why the waiter is not awaken immediatly.
* SSLProtocol.eof_received() doesn't instanciate ConnectionResetError exception
directly, it will be done by Future.set_exception(). The exception is not
used if the waiter was cancelled or if there is no waiter.
* Remove unused SSLProtocol._closing attribute
* test_sslproto: skip test if ssl module is missing
* Python issue #23208: Don't use the traceback of the current handle if we
already know the traceback of the source. The handle may be more revelant,
but having 3 tracebacks (handle, source, exception) becomes more difficult to
read. The handle may be preferred later but it requires more work to make
this choice.