* Use HTTPMessage for the headers parameter of HTTP event handlers
While the documentation of `BaseHandler.http_error_default()` describes
the `hdrs` (`headers` in most other handlers) as "a mapping object with
the headers of the error", the implementation that is located in
`URLopener._open_generic_http()` will pass `response.msg` instead,
which is of type `http.client.HTTPMessage`.
* Use Message for the headers parameter of HTTPError
When the standard library constructs `HTTPError`, it will
pass an `http.client.HTTPMessage`, which is a subclass of
`email.message.Message`. Picking the superclass for the
annotations gives users the flexibility to for example
the result of the `email.message_from_X()` functions.
The only thing unique to `HTTPMessage` is the undocumented
`getallmatchingheaders()` method, which is only called by
`http.server.CGIHTTPRequestHandler.run_cgi()`. That class
gets its headers from `http.client.parse_headers()` and not
from `HTTPError`, so I think it's safe to use `Message`
as the annotation.
* Replace all uses of StrPath, BytesPath, and AnyPath in Python 2 stubs.
* Add StrOrBytesPath as preferred alias for AnyPath.
* Replace all remaining AnyPath instances with StrOrBytesPath.
* Mark AnyPath as obsolete.
Part of #5470
A security fix added a "separator" argument to several URL parsing
functions and method in point releases:
* 3.6.13
* 3.7.10
* 3.8.8
* 3.9.2
Until all these versions are available on the GitHub Actions runners,
we need to whitelist the functions in the stubtests.