* g10/decrypt.c (decrypt_message_fd): Use INPUT_FD directly.
* g10/encrypt.c (encrypt_crypt): Use FILEFD directly.
--
Before 8402815d, original code was with iobuf_open_fd_or_name, which
used gnupg_fd_t for the file descriptor (FD2INT was relevant at that
time). After the change, because it's not gnupg_fd_t but int, use of
FD2INT is irrelevant.
Fixes-commit: 8402815d8e
Signed-off-by: NIIBE Yutaka <gniibe@fsij.org>
* g10/options.h (opt): Add flags.dummy_outfile.
* g10/decrypt.c (decrypt_message): Set this global flag instead of the
fucntion local flag.
* g10/plaintext.c (get_output_file): Ignore opt.output if that was
used as a dummy option aslong with --use-embedded-filename.
--
The problem here was that an explicit specified --decrypt, as
meanwhile suggested, did not work with that dangerous
--use-embedded-filename. In contrast it worked when gpg decrypted as
a side-effect of parsing the data.
GnuPG-bug-id: 4500
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/decrypt.c (decrypt_messages): Properly decrease the reference
count of the armor filters after pushing them.
Signed-off-by: Justus Winter <justus@g10code.com>
* common/iobuf.h (iobuf_open_fd_or_name): Remove prototype. Replace
use with either iobuf_open or iobuf_fdopen_nc, as appropriate.
* common/iobuf.c (iobuf_open): Remove function.
--
Signed-off-by: Neal H. Walfield <neal@g10code.com>.
* g10/gpg.h (g10_errstr): Remove macro and change all occurrences by
gpg_strerror.
(G10ERR_): Remove all macros and change all occurrences by their
GPG_ERR_ counterparts.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* agent/call-scd.c (start_scd): Replace int by assuan_fd_t.
(start_pinentry): Ditto.
* common/asshelp.c (start_new_gpg_agent): Replace int by assuan_fd_t.
* common/dotlock.c (GNUPG_MAJOR_VERSION): Include stringhelp.h for
prototypes on Windows and some other platforms.
* common/logging.c (fun_writer): Declare addrbuf only if needed.
* g10/decrypt.c (decrypt_message_fd) [W32]: Return not_implemented.
* g10/encrypt.c (encrypt_crypt) [W32]: Return error if used in server
mode.
* g10/dearmor.c (dearmor_file, enarmor_file): Replace GNUPG_INVALID_FD
by -1 as temporary hack for Windows.
* g10/export.c (do_export): Ditto.
* g10/revoke.c (gen_desig_revoke, gen_revoke): Ditto.
* g10/sign.c (sign_file, clearsign_file, sign_symencrypt_file): Ditto.
* g10/server.c (cmd_verify, gpg_server) [W32]: Return an error.
--
The gpg server mode is not actual working and thus we can avoid the
warnings by explicitly disabling the mode. We keep it working under
Unix, though.
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.
the literals count.
* verify.c (verify_one_file), decrypt.c (decrypt_messages): Call it
here so we allow multiple literals in --multifile mode (in different
files - not concatenated together).
to libgcrypt functions, using shared error codes from libgpg-error,
replacing the old functions we used to have in ../util by those in
../jnlib and ../common, renaming the malloc functions and a couple of
types. Note, that not all changes are listed below becuause they are
too similar and done at far too many places. As of today the code
builds using the current libgcrypt from CVS but it is very unlikely
that it actually works.