* Pin oldest version of packaged python deps
* Install security extras in oldest tests
* Revert "bump requests requirement to >=2.10 (#4248)"
This reverts commit 402ad8b353.
* Use create=True when patching open on module
* Remove py26 oldest tests.
The only systems where we support Python 2.6 use certbot-auto so the oldest
supported versions of our dependencies are never used when using supported
installation methods. Let's remove this unnecessary and slow test.
* Make tox.ini happy
* Remove py26-oldest from Travis
* Highlight failures more with asterisks
* Filter out wildcard names from all_names
* Only test -ai, not -aie (no redirects)
* Modified versions of almost all of 79 configs corpus
* Re-enable now-working stanza with 301 redirect
* Change another redirect to go to :443
Introduce a plugin that automates the process of completing a dns-01 challenge by creating, and subsequently removing, TXT records using RFC 2136 Dynamic Updates (a.k.a. nsupdate).
This plugin has been tested with BIND, but may work with other RFC 2136-compatible DNS servers, such as PowerDNS.
Implement an Authenticator which can fulfill a dns-01 challenge using
the LuaDNS API. Applicable only for domains using LuaDNS for DNS.
Testing Done:
* `tox -e py27`
* `tox -e lint`
* Manual testing:
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-luadns -d`, specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that a
certificate was successfully obtained without user interaction.
* Negative testing:
* Path to non-existent credentials file.
* Credentials file with unsafe permissions (644).
* Path to credentials file without an email.
* Path to credentials file with an invalid email.
* Path to credentials file without a token.
* Path to credentials file with an invalid token.
* Domain name not registered to LuaDNS account.
Implement an Authenticator which can fulfill a dns-01 challenge using
the DNS Made Easy API. Applicable only for domains using DNS Made Easy.
Testing Done:
* `tox -e py27`
* `tox -e lint`
* Manual testing:
(`http://api.sandbox.dnsmadeeasy.com/V2.0` used as the
`api_endpoint` for all manual testing)
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-dnsmadeeasy -d`, specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that a
certificate was successfully obtained without user interaction.
* Negative testing:
* Path to non-existent credentials file.
* Credentials file with unsafe permissions (644).
* Path to credentials file with an invalid API key.
* Path to credentials file with a malformed API key.
* Path to credentials file with an invalid Secret key.
* Path to credentials file with a malformed Secret key.
* Domain name not registered to DNS Made Easy account.
This change renames certbot-route53 to certbot-dns-route53 and updates
the package's setup.py file to maintain backwards compatibility.
Testing Done:
* Run `certbot` with `-a certbot-route53:auth`, verify the plugin runs.
* Run `certbot` with `--dns-route53`, verify the plugin runs.
* cert signature validation for certificates subcommand + a test
* refactoring validation + adding in a check for making sure that the private key matches the certificate
* adding testing certs
* assertIsNone(x) -> assertEqual(None,x) to unbreak the py2.6 tests
* modifying test_verifu_renewable_cert_failure to hopefully appease python 3 test timeouts
* updating cryptography to be >=1.2 so that we can use verify
* removing unused, old testing certificate
* adding better error handling/logging
* adding test for IOError
* switching to a 2048 bit rsa key
Implement an Authenticator which can fulfill a dns-01 challenge using
the NS1 DNS API. Applicable only for domains using NS1 DNS.
Testing Done:
* `tox -e py27`
* `tox -e lint`
* Manual testing:
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-nsone -d`, specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that a
certificate was successfully obtained without user interaction.
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-nsone -d`, without specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that the
user was prompted and that a certificate was successfully
obtained.
* Used `certbot certonly -d`. Verified that the user was prompted for
a credentials file after selecting dnsimple interactively and that
a certificate was successfully obtained.
* Used `certbot renew --force-renewal`. Verified that certificates
were renewed without user interaction.
* Negative testing:
* Path to non-existent credentials file.
* Credentials file with unsafe permissions (644).
* Path to credentials file with an invalid token.
* Path to credentials file without a token.
* Domain name not registered to NS1 account.
Implement an Authenticator which can fulfill a dns-01 challenge using
the DNSimple DNS API. Applicable only for domains using DNSimple DNS.
Testing Done:
* `tox -e py27`
* `tox -e lint`
* Manual testing:
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-dnsimple -d`, specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that a
certificate was successfully obtained without user interaction.
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-dnsimple -d`, without specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that the
user was prompted and that a certificate was successfully
obtained.
* Used `certbot certonly -d`. Verified that the user was prompted for
a credentials file after selecting dnsimple interactively and that
a certificate was successfully obtained.
* Used `certbot renew --force-renewal`. Verified that certificates
were renewed without user interaction.
* Negative testing:
* Path to non-existent credentials file.
* Credentials file with unsafe permissions (644).
* Path to credentials file with an invalid token.
* Path to credentials file without a token.
* Domain name not registered to DNSimple account.
Implement an Authenticator which can fulfill a dns-01 challenge using
the CloudXNS DNS API. Applicable only for domains using CloudXNS DNS.
Testing Done:
* `tox -e py27`
* `tox -e lint`
* Manual testing:
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-cloudxns -d`, specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that a
certificate was successfully obtained without user interaction.
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-cloudxns -d`, without specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that the
user was prompted and that a certificate was successfully
obtained.
* Used `certbot certonly -d`. Verified that the user was prompted for
a credentials file after selecting cloudxns interactively and that
a certificate was successfully obtained.
* Used `certbot renew --force-renewal`. Verified that certificates
were renewed without user interaction.
* Negative testing:
* Path to non-existent credentials file.
* Credentials file with unsafe permissions (644).
* Domain name not registered to CloudXNS account.
Implement an Authenticator which can fulfill a dns-01 challenge using
the Google Cloud DNS API. Applicable only for domains using Google Cloud
DNS for DNS.
Testing Done:
* `tox -e py27`
* `tox -e lint`
* Manual testing:
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-google -d`, specifying a credentials
file as a command line argument. Verified that a certificate was
successfully obtained without user interaction.
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-google -d`, without specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that the
user was prompted and that a certificate was successfully
obtained.
* Used `certbot certonly -d`. Verified that the user was prompted for
a credentials file after selecting google interactively and that
a certificate was successfully obtained.
* Used `certbot renew --force-renewal`. Verified that certificates
were renewed without user interaction.
* Negative testing:
* Path to non-existent credentials file.
* Credentials file with unsafe permissions (644).
* Domain name not registered to Google Cloud Platform account.
Implement an Authenticator which can fulfill a dns-01 challenge using the
DigitalOcean API. Applicable only for domains using DigitalOcean for DNS.
Testing Done:
* `tox -e py27`
* `tox -e lint`
* Manual testing:
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-digitalocean -d`, specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that a
certificate was successfully obtained without user interaction.
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-digitalocean -d`, without specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that the user
was prompted and that a certificate was successfully obtained.
* Used `certbot certonly -d`. Verified that the user was prompted for
a credentials file after selecting digitalocean interactively and
that a certificate was successfully obtained.
* Used `certbot renew --force-renewal`. Verified that certificates
were renewed without user interaction.
* Negative testing:
* Path to non-existent credentials file.
* Credentials file with unsafe permissions (644).
* Credentials file missing token.
* Credentials file with blank token.
* Credentials file with incorrect token.
* Domain name not registered to DigitalOcean account.
* Revert "Pin python-augeas version to avoid error with 1.0.0 (#4422)"
This reverts commit 1c51ae2588.
* make dependency-requirements
* separate certbot and dependency requirements
* fix build.py
* update hashin comment
* simplify release pinning
* separate letsencrypt dependency
* pin hashes in venv
* error out when bad things happen
* use pinned dependencies in tox
* Revert "pin hashes in venv"
This reverts commit 1cd38a9e50.
* use pip_install.sh in venv_common
* quote pip install args
* bump mock version
Implement an Authenticator which can fulfill a dns-01 challenge using the
Cloudflare API. Applicable only for domains using Cloudflare for DNS.
Testing Done:
* `tox -e py27`
* `tox -e lint`
* Manual testing:
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-cloudflare -d`, specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that a
certificate was successfully obtained without user interaction.
* Used `certbot certonly --dns-cloudflare -d`, without specifying a
credentials file as a command line argument. Verified that the user
was prompted and that a certificate was successfully obtained.
* Used `certbot certonly -d`. Verified that the user was prompted for
a credentials file after selecting cloudflare interactively and
that a certificate was successfully obtained.
* Used `certbot renew --force-renewal`. Verified that certificates
were renewed without user interaction.
* Negative testing:
* Path to non-existent credentials file.
* Credentials file with unsafe permissions (644).
* Credentials file missing e-mail address.
* Credentials file with blank API key.
* Credentials file with incorrect e-mail address.
* Credentials file with malformed API key.
* Credentials file with invalid API key.
* Domain name not registered to Cloudflare account.
* Initial configuration of mypy in box, correction of base mypy errors.
* Move mypy install to toe
* Add pylint comments for typing imports.
* Remove typing module for Python 2.6 compatibility.
* add py36 to tox
* Add Python 3.6 tests to Travis
* Provide real path to python stdlib during tests
* set logs_dir in config_test
* set *_dirs in DetermineAccountTest
* Fix TLSSNI01Test
* Fix RenewalTest
* fix test_ancient_webroot_renewal_conf
* Parallalelise nosetests from tox
* Parallelise even more things, break even more things
* Now unbreak all the tests that aren't ready for ||ism
* Try to pass tests!
- Remove non-working hack in reporter_test
- also be selective about ||ism in the cover environment
* Try again
* certbot-apache tests also work, given enough time
* Nginx may need more time in Travis's cloud
* Unbreak reporter_test under ||ism
* More timeout
* Working again?
* This goes way faster
* Another big win
* Split a couple more large test suites
* A last improvement
* More ||ism!
* ||ise lint too
* Allow nosetests to figure out how many cores to use
* simplify merge
* Mark the new CLI tests as ||izable
* Simplify reporter_test changes
* Rationalise ||ism flags
* Re-up coverage
* Clean up reporter tests
* Stop modifying testdata during tests
* remove unused os
* pin requests version in py26-oldest
* Determine requests security deps dynamically
Starting with requests 2.12, pyasn1 and ndg-httpsclient are no longer
needed to inject pyopenssl into urllib3. This change allows us to
determine whether or not these dependencies are required at install
time. If an older version of requests is used, these packages are
still installed. If a new version of requests is used, they are not
reducing the number of dependencies we have.
* Bump requests version in certbot-auto
* Use pkg_resources in activate test
Due to pip's lack of dependency resolution, the change to use
requests[extras] causes errors in acme.util_test because pkg_resources
accurately detects the "missing" dependency.
There isn't a real problem here. The problem comes from a brand new
requests and ancient pyopenssl as well as a unit test for
functionality we plan to remove in our next release. I modified
the unit test to fix the problem for now.
* Use six instead of pkg_resources for test
* Require requests<=2.11.1 in py27-oldest test
If we don't do this, we get test failures for the certbot package
which is actually a good thing! pkg_resources is catching the
unlikely but possible problem I describe in #3803 and erroring out
saying it is missing the necessary dependencies to run certbot.
Good job package resources.
* Undo changes to acme.util_test
* Adding Debian 7 (Wheezy) to LE tests
* Adding Debian 8 (Jessie) to LE tests
* Fixing Debian Wheezy certificate addition error
* Adding packages to LEA Debian Jessie test and refining the code commenting
* Adding installing OpenSSL to the Debian Wheezy LEA test script
* Removing LEA tests for Debian Jessie
* Fixing nits