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auth_ldap: fix interpretation of LDAP attributes in Python 3
The python-ldap module returns the LDAP attribute names as strings, and the
attribute values as arrays of bytes, e.g. for email:
'mail': [b'john.doe@example.com'],
See https://www.python-ldap.org/en/latest/bytes_mode.html, particularly:
https://www.python-ldap.org/en/latest/bytes_mode.html#what-s-text-and-what-s-bytes
Due to a missing conversion from bytes to unicode for the attribute values
obtained from LDAP, storing the values in a unicode field in the database would
fail. It would apparently either store a repr of the bytes or store them in
some other way.
Upon user login, SQLAlchemy warned about this:
.../sqlalchemy/sql/sqltypes.py:269: SAWarning: Unicode type received non-unicode bind param value b'John'. (this warning may be suppressed after 10 occurrences)
.../sqlalchemy/sql/sqltypes.py:269: SAWarning: Unicode type received non-unicode bind param value b'Doe'. (this warning may be suppressed after 10 occurrences)
In PostgreSQL, this would result in 'weird' values for first name, last
name, and email fields, both in the database and the web UI, e.g.
firstname: \x4a6f686e
lastname: \x446f65
email: \x6a6f686e406578616d706c652e636f6d
These values represent the actual values in hexadecimal, e.g.
\x4a6f686e = 0x4a 0x6f 0x68 0x6e = J o h n
In SQLite, the problem initially shows differently, as an exception in
gravatar_url():
File "_base_root_html", line 207, in render_body
File "_index_html", line 78, in render_header_menu
File "_base_base_html", line 479, in render_menu
File ".../kallithea/lib/helpers.py", line 908, in gravatar_div
gravatar(email_address, cls=cls, size=size)))
File ".../kallithea/lib/helpers.py", line 923, in gravatar
src = gravatar_url(email_address, size * 2)
File ".../kallithea/lib/helpers.py", line 956, in gravatar_url
.replace('{email}', email_address) \
TypeError: replace() argument 2 must be str, not bytes
but nevertheless the root cause of the problem is the same.
Fix the problem by converting the LDAP attributes from bytes to strings.
The python-ldap module returns the LDAP attribute names as strings, and the
attribute values as arrays of bytes, e.g. for email:
'mail': [b'john.doe@example.com'],
See https://www.python-ldap.org/en/latest/bytes_mode.html, particularly:
https://www.python-ldap.org/en/latest/bytes_mode.html#what-s-text-and-what-s-bytes
Due to a missing conversion from bytes to unicode for the attribute values
obtained from LDAP, storing the values in a unicode field in the database would
fail. It would apparently either store a repr of the bytes or store them in
some other way.
Upon user login, SQLAlchemy warned about this:
.../sqlalchemy/sql/sqltypes.py:269: SAWarning: Unicode type received non-unicode bind param value b'John'. (this warning may be suppressed after 10 occurrences)
.../sqlalchemy/sql/sqltypes.py:269: SAWarning: Unicode type received non-unicode bind param value b'Doe'. (this warning may be suppressed after 10 occurrences)
In PostgreSQL, this would result in 'weird' values for first name, last
name, and email fields, both in the database and the web UI, e.g.
firstname: \x4a6f686e
lastname: \x446f65
email: \x6a6f686e406578616d706c652e636f6d
These values represent the actual values in hexadecimal, e.g.
\x4a6f686e = 0x4a 0x6f 0x68 0x6e = J o h n
In SQLite, the problem initially shows differently, as an exception in
gravatar_url():
File "_base_root_html", line 207, in render_body
File "_index_html", line 78, in render_header_menu
File "_base_base_html", line 479, in render_menu
File ".../kallithea/lib/helpers.py", line 908, in gravatar_div
gravatar(email_address, cls=cls, size=size)))
File ".../kallithea/lib/helpers.py", line 923, in gravatar
src = gravatar_url(email_address, size * 2)
File ".../kallithea/lib/helpers.py", line 956, in gravatar_url
.replace('{email}', email_address) \
TypeError: replace() argument 2 must be str, not bytes
but nevertheless the root cause of the problem is the same.
Fix the problem by converting the LDAP attributes from bytes to strings.
99ad9d0af1a3 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 e285bb7abb28 e285bb7abb28 58df0b3ed377 99ad9d0af1a3 99ad9d0af1a3 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 99ad9d0af1a3 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 1d539bb18165 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 58df0b3ed377 | # celeryd - run the celeryd daemon as an upstart job for kallithea
# Change variables/paths as necessary and place file /etc/init/celeryd.conf
# start/stop/restart as normal upstart job (ie: $ start celeryd)
description "Celery for Kallithea Mercurial Server"
author "Matt Zuba <matt.zuba@goodwillaz.org"
start on starting kallithea
stop on stopped kallithea
respawn
umask 0022
env PIDFILE=/tmp/celeryd.pid
env APPINI=/var/hg/kallithea/production.ini
env HOME=/var/hg
env USER=hg
# To use group (if different from user), you must edit sudoers file and change
# root's entry from (ALL) to (ALL:ALL)
# env GROUP=hg
script
COMMAND="/var/hg/.virtualenvs/kallithea/bin/kallithea-cli celery-run -c $APPINI -- --pidfile=$PIDFILE"
if [ -z "$GROUP" ]; then
exec sudo -u $USER $COMMAND
else
exec sudo -u $USER -g $GROUP $COMMAND
fi
end script
post-stop script
rm -f $PIDFILE
end script
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