the HAR file spec (http://www.softwareishard.com/blog/har-12-spec/#timings) states that timings that do not apply for a certain requests should be set to -1, this example may set -1000 as a timings value for certain requests.
This ends up producing invalid HAR files in many cases.
My proposed fix is to assign -1 into the dic and only multiply by 1000 for other values
test_xss_scanner.py was utterly failing because of a trouble (bug?)
with the `monkeypatch` fixture failing to replace `gethostbyname`
with the correct mock function.
Indeed, when stepping through the code, the `gethostbyname` presumably
mocked was reported as a builtin python function. The problem could
then come from the fact that it is hard to monkeypatch builtin function
in python.
Using absolute imports seems to resolve the problem.
This patch does a lot.
- Ditch sphinx in favor of hugo. This gives us complete control of the layout
and presentation of our docs. Henceforth, docs will be hosted on our website
rather than ReadTheDocs.
- Create a simple, clean doc layout and theme.
- Remove large parts of the documentaion. I've ditched anything that was a)
woefully out of date, b) too detailed, or c) too hard to maintain in the long
term.
- Huge updates to the docs themselves: completely rewrite addons documentation,
add docs for core concepts like commands and options, and revise and tweak a
lot of the existing docs.
With this patch, we're also changing the way we publish and maintain the docs.
From now on, we don't publish docs for every release. Instead, the website will
contain ONE set of docs for each major release. The online docs will be updated
if needed as minor releases are made. Docs are free to improve during minor
releases, but anything that changes behaviour sufficiently to require a doc
change warrants a new major release. This also leaves us free to progressively
update and improve docs out of step with our release cadence.
With this new scheme, I feel CI over the docs is less important. I've removed
it for now, but won't object if someone wants to add it back in.
SSL is an outdated protocol superseeded by TLS. Although the commonly
used library is called OpenSSL, it is no reason to still use outdated
language for attributes.