hgweb: do not ignore [auth] if url has a username (issue2822)
The [auth] section was ignored when handling URLs like:
http://user@example.com/foo
Instead, we look in [auth] for an entry matching the URL and supplied user
name. Entries without username can match URL with a username. Prefix length
ties are resolved in favor of entries matching the username. With:
foo.prefix = http://example.org
foo.username = user
foo.password = password
bar.prefix = http://example.org/bar
and the input URL:
http://user@example.org/bar
the 'bar' entry will be selected because of prefix length, therefore prompting
for a password. This behaviour ensure that entries selection is consistent when
looking for credentials or for certificates, and that certificates can be
picked even if their entries do no define usernames while the URL does.
Additionally, entries without a username matched against a username are
returned as if they did have requested username set to avoid prompting again
for a username if the password is not set.
v2: reparse the URL in readauthforuri() to handle HTTP and HTTPS similarly.
v3: allow unset usernames to match URL usernames to pick certificates. Resolve
prefix length ties in favor of entries with usernames.
% tedious monotone keys configuration
% create monotone repository
mtn: adding dir1 to workspace manifest
mtn: adding dir1/subdir1 to workspace manifest
mtn: adding dir1/subdir1/file1 to workspace manifest
mtn: beginning commit on branch 'com.selenic.test'
mtn: committed revision 5ed13ff5582d8d1e319f079b694a37d2b45edfc8
% rename directory
mtn: skipping dir1, already accounted for in workspace
mtn: renaming dir1/subdir1 to dir1/subdir2 in workspace manifest
mtn: beginning commit on branch 'com.selenic.test'
mtn: committed revision 985204142a822b22ee86b509d61f3c5ab6857d2b
% convert
assuming destination repo.mtn-hg
initializing destination repo.mtn-hg repository
scanning source...
sorting...
converting...
1 initialize
0 rename
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
% manifest
dir1/subdir2/file1