* common/Makefile.am (common_sources): Add files.
* g13/call-gpg.c: Move to 'common' and adapt slightly. Add a
parameter to let callees override the gpg program to execute.
* g13/call-gpg.h: Likewise.
* g13/Makefile.am (g13_SOURCES): Drop files.
* g13/create.c (encrypt_keyblob): Hand in the gpg program to execute.
* g13/mount.c (decrypt_keyblob): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Justus Winter <justus@g10code.com>
* common/host2net.h (buf16_to_ulong, buf16_to_uint): New.
(buf16_to_ushort, buf16_to_u16): New.
(buf32_to_size_t, buf32_to_ulong, buf32_to_uint, buf32_to_u32): New.
--
Commit 91b826a38880fd8a989318585eb502582636ddd8 was not enough to
avoid all sign extension on shift problems. Hanno Böck found a case
with an invalid read due to this problem. To fix that once and for
all almost all uses of "<< 24" and "<< 8" are changed by this patch to
use an inline function from host2net.h.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* sm/misc.c (transform_sigval): Init RSA_S_LEN.
* g13/mount.c (read_keyblob): Init HEADERLEN.
--
Not a bug but the compiler (gcc 4.9.1) can't detect that it is not
used uninitialized.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
The asymmetric quotes used by GNU in the past (`...') don't render
nicely on modern systems. We now use two \x27 characters ('...').
The proper solution would be to use the correct Unicode symmetric
quotes here. However this has the disadvantage that the system
requires Unicode support. We don't want that today. If Unicode is
available a generated po file can be used to output proper quotes. A
simple sed script like the one used for en@quote is sufficient to
change them.
The changes have been done by applying
sed -i "s/\`\([^'\`]*\)'/'\1'/g"
to most files and fixing obvious problems by hand. The msgid strings in
the po files were fixed with a similar command.
We better do this once and for all instead of cluttering all future
commits with diffs of trailing white spaces. In the majority of cases
blank or single lines are affected and thus this change won't disturb
a git blame too much. For future commits the pre-commit scripts
checks that this won't happen again.