* agent/findkey.c (agent_public_key_from_file): pass size_t as int to
gcry_sexp_build_array's %b.
--
This is only a problem on big-endian systems where size_t is not the
same size as an int. It was causing failures on debian's s390x,
powerpc64, and sparc64 platforms.
There may well be other failures with %b on those platforms in the
codebase, and it probably needs an audit.
Once you have a key in private-keys-v1.d/$KEYGRIP.key with a comment
or a uri of reasonable length associated with it, this fix can be
tested with:
gpg-agent --server <<<"READKEY $KEYGRIP"
On the failing platforms, the printed comment will be of length 0.
Gnupg-bug-id: 4501
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
* g10/keyserver.c (keyserver_search): Remove a specialized error
message.
--
Dirmngr comes with a default keyserver and the suggestion to use
gpg --keyserver
is not good because that option is deprecated. An error message
"No keyserver available" is sufficient.
GnuPG-bug-id: 4512
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* m4/iconv.m4: Update from gettext 0.20.1.
--
Cherry-picked from master commit:
1cd2aca03b8807c6f8e4929ace462bb606dcd53f
This includes fixes of file descriptor leaks.
GnuPG-bug-id: 4504
Signed-off-by: NIIBE Yutaka <gniibe@fsij.org>
* g10/sign.c (update_keysig_packet): Convert digest algo when needed.
--
Several gpg commands try to keep most properties of a key signature
when updating (i.e. creating a new version of a key signature). This
included the use of the current hash-algorithm. This patch changes
this so that SHA-1 or RMD160 are replaced by SHA-256 if
possible (i.e. for RSA signatures). Affected commands are for example
--quick-set-expire and --quick-set-primary-uid.
GnuPG-bug-id: 4508
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* sm/certdump.c (format_name_writer): Take care of a flush request.
--
We won't see a flush here so that fix does not solve a real bug but we
want to be correct. Note that this function seems to predate the
es_fopenmem function and thus in master (2.3) we should replace it
entirely.
GnuPG-bug-id: 4495
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* build-aux/speedo.mk (AUTHENTICODE_SIGNHOST): New.
(AUTHENTICODE_TOOL): New.
(AUTHENTICODE_FILES): New.
(installer): Sign listed files.
(AUTHENTICODE_SIGNHOST): New macro.
(sign-installer): Use that macro instead of direct use of osslsigncode.
--
This also adds code to support signing via a Token. Because there is
no specification of that token, I was not able to write a free driver
for it. Thus we resort to use a running Windows-10 instance with an
enabled ssh server to do the code signing.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/parse-packet.c (parse_signature): Take only the addrspec from a
Signer's UID subpacket.
--
This is to address a problem in the currentr OpenKeychain which put
the entire UID into the subpacket. For example our Tofu code can only
use the addrspec and not the entire UID.
Reported-by: Wiktor Kwapisiewicz <wiktor@metacode.biz>
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/getkey.c (get_best_pubkey_byname): Set new.uid always
to NULL after use.
--
pubkey_cmp is not guranteed to set new.uid.
So if the diff < 0 case is reached best is set to new.
If then diff > 0 is reached without modifying new.uid
e.g. if the key has no matching mboxes. new.uid is
free'd even though the uid is still referenced in
best.
GnuPG-Bug-Id: T4462
(cherry picked from commit e57954ed278cb5e6e725005b1ecaf7ce70006ce0)
* g10/keyserver.c (keyserver_import_wkd): Clear NO_ARMOR.
--
We may even adjust the specs to allow that. It should not be a
problem for any OpenPGP implementation because armored keys are very
common and de-armoring code is de-facto a mandatory feature.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/import.c (import): Limit the number of considered keys to 5.
(import_one): Return the first fingerprint in case of WKD.
--
The Web Key Directory should carry only one key. However, some
providers like to put old or expired keys also into the WKD. I don't
thunk that this is a good idea but I heard claims that this is needed
for them to migrate existing key data bases.
This patch puts a limit on 5 on it (we had none right now) and also
fixes the issue that gpg could not work immediately with the requested
key because the code uses the fingerprint of the key to use the
imported key. Now the first key is used. On a second try (w/o
accessing the WKD) the regular key selection mechanism would be in
effect. I think this is the most conservative approach. Let's see
whether it helps.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* dirmngr/domaininfo.c (struct domaininfo_s): Add field keepmark.
(insert_or_update): Implement new update algorithm.
--
The old algorithm limited the length of a bucket chain by purging the
last 50% or the entries. Thus the first domains entered into the
cache were never purged. The new algorithm is a bit better: It also
limits the chain length on overflow to 50% but tries to keep the
entries indicating that a WKD is available in the cache. If there is
still space to keep more, those which clearly do not support WKD are
also kept.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* dirmngr/ks-engine-hkp.c (send_request): New case for 413.
* dirmngr/ks-engine-http.c (ks_http_fetch): Ditto.
* dirmngr/ocsp.c (do_ocsp_request): Ditto.
--
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/ecdh.c (kek_params_table): Use CIPHER_ALGO_AES192 for
ECC strength 384, according to RFC-6637.
--
Reported-by: Trevor Bentley
Signed-off-by: NIIBE Yutaka <gniibe@fsij.org>
(cherry picked from commit af3efd149f555d36a455cb2ea311ff81caf5124c)
* g10/keygen.c (ask_curve): Change algo ID to ECDSA if it changed from
an EdDSA curve.
--
(cherry picked from commit 4324560b2c0bb76a1769535c383424a042e505ae)
This change matters when it is called from ask_card_keyattr.
Some-comments-by: NIIBE Yutaka <gniibe@fsij.org>
* sm/gpgsm.c (main): Add special handling for bad keys in decrypt
mode.
--
The problem can easily be tested by adding --encrypt-to EXPIRED_KEY to
a decryption command. With that patch the errors are printed but
decryption continues and the process returns success unless other
errors occur.
GnuPG-bug-id: 4431
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* sm/gpgsm.c (main): Call translate_sys2libc_fd_int to
convert the FDs.
--
This is required to actually pass gpgsm an fd on windows
and not a windows handle.
For the passphrase-fd this was already done.
(cherry picked from commit e4e0804ed123516fa00f8a876a862b2c6d34ba5c)
* g10/parse-packet.c (parse_key): Return GPG_ERR_UNKNOWN_VERSION
instead of invalid packet.
* g10/keydb.c (parse_keyblock_image): Do not map the unknown version
error to invalid keyring.
(keydb_search): Skip unknown version errors simlar to legacy keys.
* g10/keyring.c (keyring_rebuild_cache): Skip keys with unknown
versions.
* g10/import.c (read_block): Handle unknown version.
--
When using gpg 2.3 the local keyring may contain v5 keys. This patch
allows the use of such a keyring also with a 2.2 version which does
not support v5 keys. We will probably need some more tweaking here
but this covers the most common cases of listing keys and also
importing v5 keys.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/import.c (NODE_TRANSFER_SECKEY): New.
(import): Add attic kludge.
(transfer_secret_keys): Add arg only_marked.
(resync_sec_with_pub_keyblock): Return removed seckeys via new arg
r_removedsecs.
(import_secret_one): New arg r_secattic. Change to take ownership of
arg keyblock. Implement extra secret key import logic. Factor some
code out to ...
(do_transfer): New.
(import_matching_seckeys): New.
--
The PGP desktops exported secret keys are really stupid. And they
even a have kind of exception in rfc4880 which does not rule that
out (section 11.2):
[...] Implementations SHOULD include self-signatures on any user
IDs and subkeys, as this allows for a complete public key to be
automatically extracted from the transferable secret key.
Implementations MAY choose to omit the self-signatures, especially
if a transferable public key accompanies the transferable secret
key.
Now if they would only put the public key before the secret
key. Anyway we now have a workaround for that ugliness.
GnuPG-bug-id: 4392
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
(cherry picked from commit 5205512fc092c53c0a52c8379ef2a129ce6e58a9)
* g10/keydb.h (struct kbnode_struct): Replace unused field RECNO by
new field TAG.
* g10/kbnode.c (alloc_node): Change accordingly.
* g10/import.c (import_one): Add arg r_valid.
(sec_to_pub_keyblock): Set tags.
(resync_sec_with_pub_keyblock): New.
(import_secret_one): Change return code to gpg_error_t. Return an
error code if sec_to_pub_keyblock failed. Resync secret keyblock.
--
When importing an invalid secret key ring for example without key
binding signatures or no UIDs, gpg used to let gpg-agent store the
secret keys anyway. This is clearly a bug because the diagnostics
before claimed that for example the subkeys have been skipped.
Importing the secret key parameters then anyway is surprising in
particular because a gpg -k does not show the key. After importing
the public key the secret keys suddenly showed up.
This changes the behaviour of
GnuPG-bug-id: 4392
to me more consistent but is not a solution to the actual bug.
Caution: The ecc.scm test now fails because two of the sample keys
don't have binding signatures.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
(cherry picked from commit f799e9728bcadb3d4148a47848c78c5647860ea4)
* g10/keyedit.c (show_basic_key_info): New arg 'print_sec'. Remove
useless code for "sub" and "ssb".
* g10/import.c (import_one): Pass FROM_SK to show_basic_key_info. Do
not print the first keyinfo in FROM_SK mode.
printing.
--
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
(cherry picked from commit f64477db86568bdc28c313bfeb8b95d8edf05a3c)
* 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>
Fixed one conlict in a comment.
* dirmngr/dns.h (dns_quietinit): Remove.
(dns_hints_i_new): Remove.
--
Even before our change, dns_quietinit was questionable macro; There
was no place in dns.c which requires overrides in initializer list.
Only redundant zero were.
Signed-off-by: NIIBE Yutaka <gniibe@fsij.org>
(cherry picked from commit 371ae25f8f6f2d1ac030bf984bca479393a5ed43)
* dirmngr/dns.h (DNS_OPTS_INIT, dns_opts): Remove.
* dirmngr/dns-stuff.c (libdns_res_open): Use zero-ed, and initialized
automatic variable for opts.
* dirmngr/dns.c (send_query, resolve_query, resolve_addrinfo):
Likewise.
--
In fact, DNS_OPTS_INIT was only needed when args are none. With
partially specified initialization, C99 guarantees zero-ed other
members just like static object.
Signed-off-by: NIIBE Yutaka <gniibe@fsij.org>
(cherry picked from commit d661acd483236d34720a4959fc816d05f89c2cb7)
* dirmngr/dns.h (dns_rr_foreach): Don't use dns_rr_i_new.
Call dns_rr_grep with NULL.
* dirmngr/dns.c (dns_rr_grep): Support NULL for error_.
--
Here we still use C99 feature of struct member initialization in
dns_rr_foreach, for struct dns_rr_i. Note that in C99, it guarantees
non-specified member fields are initialized by zero. So, there's no
need to use dns_rr_i_new at all.
Signed-off-by: NIIBE Yutaka <gniibe@fsij.org>
(cherry picked from commit a1ccfe2b37847cce0db2fb94a7365c9fa501eda4)