Hey folks, Likely the wrong place to report this, but I couldn't work out the best place and figured this is only as bad as anywhere else. A user has reported to webmaster that hgweb is misconfigured (or at least the server configuration is interfering with hgweb). The symptom is that this url is incorrectly a 404: http://hg.python.org/cpython/file/3.3/Doc/tools/sphinxext/static/version_swi... His diagnosis:
the web server is misconfigured to serve the hgweb static files for any directory named 'static'. It is appropriate for it to do this for http://hg.python.org/static/ and maybe even http://hg.python.org/cpython/static/ and the other repositories, but it is inappropriate for it to serve the hgweb static files within the repository contents.
What should have happened: The web server passes on the request to hgweb, which notices that it is supposed to retrieve a particular version of a file from the Mercurial repository and show it to the user. This works successfully for URLs not containing '/static/' (ending slash significant), e.g., http://hg.python.org/cpython/file/3.3/Doc/tools/sphinxext/static. You can see that hgweb successfully displays the directory listing. However, try adding a slash onto the end of that. The web server picks up '/static/' and takes over the request, listing its static files (rather than letting hgweb display the 'static' directory from the Mercurial repository). The static files shown by the web server's directory listing are used for the user interface of hgweb; for example, the logo http://hg.python.org/cpython/static/hglogo.png. It should be serving those static files on http://hg.python.org/static/ and http://hg.python.org/repo/static/ (where repo is a repository name like cpython), but it is also serving on http://hg.python.org/repo/file/.../static/, which is inappropriate, because it makes it impossible to view version_switch.js and the other files in that directory with the hgweb interface. -- http://www.voidspace.org.uk/ May you do good and not evil May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others May you share freely, never taking more than you give. -- the sqlite blessing http://www.sqlite.org/different.html
participants (1)
-
Michael Foord