Hi everyone,
I loaded SqueakSSL-Core-ar.22.mcz and SqueakSSL-Tests-ar-13.mcz from the Monticello repository http://www.squeaksource.com/SqueakSSL into a Squeak 4.2 All-in-One image directly from the squeak.org website (which has not been updated).
The following method: SqueakSSLTest >> #expectedFailures is implemented thusly:
expectedFailures "If we don't have a cert all the tests fail"
SqueakSSL platformName = 'Mac OS' ifTrue:[ "The following tests all need certificate selection to work properly." ^#( testConnectAccept testEncryptDecrypt testMultiFrameDecrypt testSingleByteDecrypt testSplitTlsFrameRead testStreamAccept testStreamConnect testStreamTransfer ) ].
This clearly doesn't work on Windows at all, since TestCase >> #shouldPass sends #includes: to the result of that method, which (if you're not running Mac OS) is the SqueakSSLTest instance.
I added:
^super expectedFailures
at the bottom, and the tests at least don't choke before they start now.
Now the tests all fail. I grabbed the latest DLL from http://code.google.com/p/squeakssl/downloads/list, replaced the one that came with 4.2, and now all the tests pass :-)
I'm hoping to be able to send & receive email from a specific gmail account using this - any suggestions?
- Jon
On 11/26/2011 17:55, Jon Hylands wrote:
This clearly doesn't work on Windows at all, since TestCase >> #shouldPass sends #includes: to the result of that method, which (if you're not running Mac OS) is the SqueakSSLTest instance.
You're right, apologies. I don't know what I've been smoking when I committed this version :-) It's fixed now.
I'm hoping to be able to send & receive email from a specific gmail account using this - any suggestions?
For sending you can try the SqueakSSL-SMTP package which i just committed to the SqueakSSL repository. This is just a subclassed SMTPClient using SecureSocketStream for sending the email. The class side example shows how to send Email from a GMail account.
POP3 should be similarly simple if you start from POP3Client.
Hope this helps, - Andreas
Thanks Andreas,
That worked, although I'm obviously missing something you have in your image, since SecureSocketStream doesn't implement openConnectionToHost:port:timeout:, only openConnectionToHost:port:. I just removed the timeout argument altogether, using the default timeout, and it works fine with that.
I tried the POP3Client, but gmail requires an SSL connection, so I copied your ensureConnection method to a new subclass, SecurePOP3Client (see attached) that works nicely.
Note that the example attempts to delete the message after downloading, which of course is nice to have in an automated system, but you probably wouldn't want to do it on your "real" gmail account. In order for the delete to work, you have to change the setting on the gmail account settings to delete after download. I also had to add a #quit in addition to the #close in order to have the server flush and properly do the delete.
- Jon
On Sun, Nov 27, 2011 at 5:42 AM, Andreas Raab andreas.raab@gmx.de wrote:
On 11/26/2011 17:55, Jon Hylands wrote:
This clearly doesn't work on Windows at all, since TestCase >> #shouldPass sends #includes: to the result of that method, which (if you're not running Mac OS) is the SqueakSSLTest instance.
You're right, apologies. I don't know what I've been smoking when I committed this version :-) It's fixed now.
I'm hoping to be able to send & receive email from a specific gmail
account using this - any suggestions?
For sending you can try the SqueakSSL-SMTP package which i just committed to the SqueakSSL repository. This is just a subclassed SMTPClient using SecureSocketStream for sending the email. The class side example shows how to send Email from a GMail account.
POP3 should be similarly simple if you start from POP3Client.
Hope this helps,
- Andreas
On 11/28/2011 2:44, Jon Hylands wrote:
Thanks Andreas,
That worked, although I'm obviously missing something you have in your image, since SecureSocketStream doesn't implement openConnectionToHost:port:timeout:, only openConnectionToHost:port:. I just removed the timeout argument altogether, using the default timeout, and it works fine with that.
SocketStream implements openConnectionToHost:port:timeout: and SecureSocketStream is a subclass of it, so the method should be there.
Cheers, - Andreas
I tried the POP3Client, but gmail requires an SSL connection, so I copied your ensureConnection method to a new subclass, SecurePOP3Client (see attached) that works nicely.
Note that the example attempts to delete the message after downloading, which of course is nice to have in an automated system, but you probably wouldn't want to do it on your "real" gmail account. In order for the delete to work, you have to change the setting on the gmail account settings to delete after download. I also had to add a #quit in addition to the #close in order to have the server flush and properly do the delete.
- Jon
On Sun, Nov 27, 2011 at 5:42 AM, Andreas Raab <andreas.raab@gmx.de mailto:andreas.raab@gmx.de> wrote:
On 11/26/2011 17:55, Jon Hylands wrote: This clearly doesn't work on Windows at all, since TestCase >> #shouldPass sends #includes: to the result of that method, which (if you're not running Mac OS) is the SqueakSSLTest instance. You're right, apologies. I don't know what I've been smoking when I committed this version :-) It's fixed now. I'm hoping to be able to send & receive email from a specific gmail account using this - any suggestions? For sending you can try the SqueakSSL-SMTP package which i just committed to the SqueakSSL repository. This is just a subclassed SMTPClient using SecureSocketStream for sending the email. The class side example shows how to send Email from a GMail account. POP3 should be similarly simple if you start from POP3Client. Hope this helps, - Andreas
If you pull a virgin 4.2 All-in-one image off squeak.org, you'll see that that method does not exist anywhere in the image, so it obviously came from some other package...
- Jon
On Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 3:24 AM, Andreas Raab andreas.raab@gmx.de wrote:
On 11/28/2011 2:44, Jon Hylands wrote:
Thanks Andreas,
That worked, although I'm obviously missing something you have in your image, since SecureSocketStream doesn't implement openConnectionToHost:port:**timeout:, only openConnectionToHost:port:. I just removed the timeout argument altogether, using the default timeout, and it works fine with that.
SocketStream implements openConnectionToHost:port:**timeout: and SecureSocketStream is a subclass of it, so the method should be there.
Cheers,
- Andreas
I tried the POP3Client, but gmail requires an SSL connection, so I
copied your ensureConnection method to a new subclass, SecurePOP3Client (see attached) that works nicely.
Note that the example attempts to delete the message after downloading, which of course is nice to have in an automated system, but you probably wouldn't want to do it on your "real" gmail account. In order for the delete to work, you have to change the setting on the gmail account settings to delete after download. I also had to add a #quit in addition to the #close in order to have the server flush and properly do the delete.
- Jon
On Sun, Nov 27, 2011 at 5:42 AM, Andreas Raab <andreas.raab@gmx.de mailto:andreas.raab@gmx.de> wrote:
On 11/26/2011 17:55, Jon Hylands wrote:
This clearly doesn't work on Windows at all, since TestCase >> #shouldPass sends #includes: to the result of that method, which
(if you're not running Mac OS) is the SqueakSSLTest instance.
You're right, apologies. I don't know what I've been smoking when I committed this version :-) It's fixed now.
I'm hoping to be able to send & receive email from a specific gmail account using this - any suggestions?
For sending you can try the SqueakSSL-SMTP package which i just committed to the SqueakSSL repository. This is just a subclassed SMTPClient using SecureSocketStream for sending the email. The class side example shows how to send Email from a GMail account.
POP3 should be similarly simple if you start from POP3Client.
Hope this helps, - Andreas
On Tue, 29 Nov 2011, Jon Hylands wrote:
If you pull a virgin 4.2 All-in-one image off squeak.org, you'll see that that method does not exist anywhere in the image, so it obviously came from some other package...
It was introduced in Squeak 4.3, see http://lists.squeakfoundation.org/pipermail/squeak-dev/2011-March/157820.htm...
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