add combined MANIFEST.in and CHANGELOG

This commit is contained in:
Maximilian Hils 2016-02-17 00:02:18 +01:00
parent 887ecf8896
commit b7701eb8c1
5 changed files with 89 additions and 87 deletions

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* Countless bugfixes and other small improvements
7 November 2014: pathod 0.11:
* Hugely improved SSL support, including dynamic generation of certificates
using the mitproxy cacert
* pathoc -S dumps information on the remote SSL certificate chain
* Big improvements to fuzzing, including random spec selection and memoization to avoid repeating randomly generated patterns
* Reflected patterns, allowing you to embed a pathod server response specification in a pathoc request, resolving both on client side. This makes fuzzing proxies and other intermediate systems much better.
28 January 2014: mitmproxy 0.10:
@ -264,6 +275,9 @@
* Many other small bugfixes and improvements.
25 August 2013: pathod 0.9.2:
* Adapt to interface changes in netlib
16 June 2013: mitmproxy 0.9.1:
@ -323,6 +337,77 @@
* Proxy authentication to limit access to mitmproxy
15 May 2013: pathod 0.9 (version synced with mitmproxy):
* Pathod proxy mode. You can now configure clients to use pathod as an
HTTP/S proxy.
* Pathoc proxy support, including using CONNECT to tunnel directly to
targets.
* Pathoc client certificate support.
* API improvements, bugfixes.
16 November 2012: pathod 0.3:
A release focusing on shoring up our fuzzing capabilities, especially with
pathoc.
* pathoc -q and -r options, output full request and response text.
* pathod -q and -r options, add full request and response text to pathod's
log buffer.
* pathoc and pathod -x option, makes -q and -r options log in hex dump
format.
* pathoc -C option, specify response codes to ignore.
* pathoc -T option, instructs pathoc to ignore timeouts.
* pathoc -o option, a one-shot mode that exits after the first non-ignored
response.
* pathoc and pathod -e option, which explains the resulting message by
expanding random and generated portions, and logging a reproducible
specification.
* Streamline the specification langauge. HTTP response message is now
specified using the "r" mnemonic.
* Add a "u" mnemonic for specifying User-Agent strings. Add a set of
standard user-agent strings accessible through shortcuts.
* Major internal refactoring and cleanup.
* Many bugfixes.
22 August 2012: pathod 0.2:
* Add pathoc, a pathological HTTP client.
* Add libpathod.test, a truss for using pathod in unit tests.
* Add an injection operator to the specification language.
* Allow Python escape sequences in value literals.
* Allow execution of requests and responses from file, using the new + operator.
* Add daemonization to Pathod, and make it more robust for public-facing use.
* Let pathod pick an arbitrary open port if -p 0 is specified.
* Move from Tornado to netlib, the network library written for mitmproxy.
* Move the web application to Flask.
* Massively expand the documentation.
5 April 2012: mitmproxy 0.8:
* Detailed tutorial for Android interception. Some features that land in

4
MANIFEST.in Normal file
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graft mitmproxy
graft pathod
graft netlib
recursive-exclude * *.pyc *.pyo *.swo *.swp *.map

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graft mitmproxy
recursive-exclude * *.pyc *.pyo *.swo *.swp *.map

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7 November 2014: pathod 0.11:
* Hugely improved SSL support, including dynamic generation of certificates
using the mitproxy cacert
* pathoc -S dumps information on the remote SSL certificate chain
* Big improvements to fuzzing, including random spec selection and memoization to avoid repeating randomly generated patterns
* Reflected patterns, allowing you to embed a pathod server response specification in a pathoc request, resolving both on client side. This makes fuzzing proxies and other intermediate systems much better.
25 August 2013: pathod 0.9.2:
* Adapt to interface changes in netlib
15 May 2013: pathod 0.9 (version synced with mitmproxy):
* Pathod proxy mode. You can now configure clients to use pathod as an
HTTP/S proxy.
* Pathoc proxy support, including using CONNECT to tunnel directly to
targets.
* Pathoc client certificate support.
* API improvements, bugfixes.
16 November 2012: pathod 0.3:
A release focusing on shoring up our fuzzing capabilities, especially with
pathoc.
* pathoc -q and -r options, output full request and response text.
* pathod -q and -r options, add full request and response text to pathod's
log buffer.
* pathoc and pathod -x option, makes -q and -r options log in hex dump
format.
* pathoc -C option, specify response codes to ignore.
* pathoc -T option, instructs pathoc to ignore timeouts.
* pathoc -o option, a one-shot mode that exits after the first non-ignored
response.
* pathoc and pathod -e option, which explains the resulting message by
expanding random and generated portions, and logging a reproducible
specification.
* Streamline the specification langauge. HTTP response message is now
specified using the "r" mnemonic.
* Add a "u" mnemonic for specifying User-Agent strings. Add a set of
standard user-agent strings accessible through shortcuts.
* Major internal refactoring and cleanup.
* Many bugfixes.
22 August 2012: pathod 0.2:
* Add pathoc, a pathological HTTP client.
* Add libpathod.test, a truss for using pathod in unit tests.
* Add an injection operator to the specification language.
* Allow Python escape sequences in value literals.
* Allow execution of requests and responses from file, using the new + operator.
* Add daemonization to Pathod, and make it more robust for public-facing use.
* Let pathod pick an arbitrary open port if -p 0 is specified.
* Move from Tornado to netlib, the network library written for mitmproxy.
* Move the web application to Flask.
* Massively expand the documentation.

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graft pathod
recursive-exclude * *.pyc *.pyo *.swo *.swp *.map