* g10/cpr.c (write_status_printf): Escape CR and LF.
* g10/import.c (print_import_check): Simplify by using
write_status_printf and hexfingerprint.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/cpr.c (write_status_failure): Make it print only once.
* g10/gpg.c (wrong_args): Bump error counter.
(g10_exit): Print a FAILURE status if we ever did a log_error etc.
(main): Use log_error instead of log_fatal at one place. Print a
FAILURE status for a bad option. Ditto for certain exit points so
that we can see different error locations.
--
This makes it easier to detect errors by tools which have no way to
get the exit code (e.g. due to double forking).
GnuPG-bug-id: 3872
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/cpr.c (do_get_from_fd): Free the old buffer.
--
If the received input is longer than 200 characters we used to leak
the previous allocated buffer.
GnuPG-bug-id: 3528
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* common/sysutils.c (gnupg_fd_valid): New function.
* common/sysutils.h (gnupg_fd_valid): New declaration.
* common/logging.c (log_set_file): Use the new function.
* g10/cpr.c (set_status_fd): Likewise.
* g10/gpg.c (main): Likewise.
* g10/keylist.c (read_sessionkey_from_fd): Likewise.
* g10/passphrase.c (set_attrib_fd): Likewise.
* tests/openpgp/Makefile.am (XTESTS): Add the new test.
* tests/openpgp/issue2941.scm: New file.
--
Consider a situation where the user passes "--status-fd 3" but file
descriptor 3 is not open.
During the course of executing the rest of the commands, it's possible
that gpg itself will open some files, and file descriptor 3 will get
allocated.
In this situation, the status information will be appended directly to
whatever file happens to have landed on fd 3 (the trustdb? the
keyring?).
This is a potential data destruction issue for all writable file
descriptor options:
--status-fd
--attribute-fd
--logger-fd
It's also a potential issue for readable file descriptor options, but
the risk is merely weird behavior, and not data corruption:
--override-session-key-fd
--passphrase-fd
--command-fd
Fixes this by checking whether the fd is valid early on before using
it.
GnuPG-bug-id: 2941
Signed-off-by: Justus Winter <justus@g10code.com>
* common/status.h (STATUS_FAILURE): New.
* g10/cpr.c (write_status_failure): New.
* g10/gpg.c (main): Call write_status_failure for all commands which
print an error message here.
* g10/call-agent.c (start_agent): Print an STATUS_ERROR if we can't
set the pinentry mode.
--
This status line can be used similar to the error code returned by
commands send over the Assuan interface in gpgsm. We don't emit them
in gpgsm because there we already have that Assuan interface to return
proper error code. This change helps GPGME to return better error
codes.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/misc.c (print_pubkey_algo_note): Use enum typedef for the arg.
(print_cipher_algo_note): Ditto.
(print_digest_algo_note): Ditto.
(map_md_openpgp_to_gcry): New.
(openpgp_md_test_algo): Rewrite.
(openpgp_md_algo_name): Rewrite to do without Libgcrypt.
* g10/cpr.c (write_status_begin_signing): Remove hardwired list of
algo ranges.
* g10/cpr.c (write_status_strings): New.
(write_status_text): Replace code by a call to write_status_strings.
* g10/mainproc.c (proc_encrypted): Remove show_session_key code.
* g10/decrypt-data.c (decrypt_data): Add new show_session_key code.
--
This feature can be used to return the session key for just a part of
a file. For example to downloading just the first 32k of a huge file,
decrypting that incomplete part and while ignoring all the errors
break out the session key. The session key may then be used on the
server to decrypt the entire file without the need to have the private
key on the server.
GnuPG-bug-id: 1389
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
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.