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265 lines
8.9 KiB
Org Mode
265 lines
8.9 KiB
Org Mode
# HACKING -*- org -*-
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#+TITLE: A Hacker's Guide to GnuPG
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#+TEXT: Some notes on GnuPG internals
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#+STARTUP: showall
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#+OPTIONS: ^:{}
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* How to contribute
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The following stuff explains some basic procedures you need to
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follow if you want to contribute code or documentation.
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** No more ChangeLog files
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Do not modify any of the ChangeLog files in GnuPG. Starting on
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December 1st, 2011 we put change information only in the GIT commit
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log, and generate a top-level ChangeLog file from logs at "make dist"
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time. As such, there are strict requirements on the form of the
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commit log messages. The old ChangeLog files have all be renamed to
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ChangeLog-2011
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** Commit log requirements
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Your commit log should always start with a one-line summary, the
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second line should be blank, and the remaining lines are usually
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ChangeLog-style entries for all affected files. However, it's fine
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--- even recommended --- to write a few lines of prose describing the
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change, when the summary and ChangeLog entries don't give enough of
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the big picture. Omit the leading TABs that you are seeing in a
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"real" ChangeLog file, but keep the maximum line length at 72 or
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smaller, so that the generated ChangeLog lines, each with its leading
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TAB, will not exceed 80 columns. If you want to add text which shall
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not be copied to the ChangeLog, separate it by a line consisting of
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two dashes at the begin of a line.
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Typo fixes and documentation updates don't need a ChangeLog Entry,
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thus you would use a commit message like
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#+begin_example
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Fix type in a comment
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--
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#+end_example
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The marker line here is important; without it the first line would
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appear in the ChangeLog.
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** License policy
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GnuPG is licensed under the GPLv3+ with some files under a mixed
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LGPLv3+/GPLv2+ license. It is thus important, that all contributed
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code allows for an update of the license; for example we can't
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accept code under the GPLv2(only).
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GnuPG used to have a strict policy of requiring copyright
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assignments to the FSF. To avoid this major organizational overhead
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and to allow inclusion of code, not copyrighted by the FSF, this
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policy has been relaxed on 2013-03-29. It is now also possible to
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contribute code by asserting that the contribution is in accordance
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to the "Libgcrypt Developer's Certificate of Origin" as found in the
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file "DCO". (Except for a slight wording change, this DCO is
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identical to the one used by the Linux kernel.)
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If your want to contribute code or documentation to GnuPG and you
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didn't signed a copyright assignment with the FSF in the past, you
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need to take these simple steps:
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- Decide which mail address you want to use. Please have your real
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name in the address and not a pseudonym. Anonymous contributions
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can only be done if you find a proxy who certifies for you.
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- If your employer or school might claim ownership of code written
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by you; you need to talk to them to make sure that you have the
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right to contribute under the DCO.
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- Send an OpenPGP signed mail to the gnupg-devel@gnupg.org mailing
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list from your mail address. Include a copy of the DCO as found
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in the official master branch. Insert your name and email address
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into the DCO in the same way you want to use it later. Example:
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Signed-off-by: Joe R. Hacker <joe@example.org>
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(If you really need it, you may perform simple transformations of
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the mail address: Replacing "@" by " at " or "." by " dot ".)
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- That's it. From now on you only need to add a "Signed-off-by:"
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line with your name and mail address to the commit message. It is
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recommended to send the patches using a PGP/MIME signed mail.
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** Coding standards
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Please follow the GNU coding standards. If you are in doubt consult
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the existing code as an example. Do no re-indent code without a
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need. If you really need to do it, use a separate commit for such a
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change.
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* Debug hints
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See the manual for some hints.
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* Standards
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** RFCs
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1423 Privacy Enhancement for Internet Electronic Mail:
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Part III: Algorithms, Modes, and Identifiers.
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1489 Registration of a Cyrillic Character Set.
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1750 Randomness Recommendations for Security.
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1991 PGP Message Exchange Formats (obsolete)
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2144 The CAST-128 Encryption Algorithm.
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2279 UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646.
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2440 OpenPGP (obsolete).
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3156 MIME Security with Pretty Good Privacy (PGP).
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4880 Current OpenPGP specification.
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* Various information
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** Directory Layout
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- ./ :: Readme, configure
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- ./agent :: Gpg-agent and related tools
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- ./doc :: Documentation
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- ./g10 :: Gpg program here called gpg2
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- ./sm :: Gpgsm program
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- ./jnlib :: Not used (formerly used utility functions)
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- ./common :: Utility functions
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- ./kbx :: Keybox library
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- ./scd :: Smartcard daemon
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- ./scripts :: Scripts needed by configure and others
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- ./dirmngr :: The directory manager
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** Detailed Roadmap
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This list of file is not up to date!
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- g10/gpg.c :: Main module with option parsing and all the stuff you
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have to do on startup. Also has the exout handler
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and some helper functions.
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- g10/sign.c :: Create signature and optionally encrypt
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- g10/parse-packet.c ::
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- g10/build-packet.c ::
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- g10/free-packet.c :: Parsing and creating of OpenPGP message packets.
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- g10/getkey.c :: Key selection code
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- g10/pkclist.c :: Build a list of public keys
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- g10/skclist.c :: Build a list of secret keys
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- g10/ringedit.c :: Keyring I/O
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- g10/keydb.h ::
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- g10/keyid.c :: Helper functions to get the keyid, fingerprint etc.
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- g10/trustdb.c ::
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- g10/trustdb.h ::
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- g10/tdbdump.c :: Management of the trustdb.gpg
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- g10/tdbio.c ::
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- g10/tdbio.h :: I/O handling for the trustdb.gpg
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- g10/compress.c :: Filter to handle compression
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- g10/filter.h :: Declarations for all filter functions
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- g10/delkey.c :: Delete a key
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- g10/kbnode.c :: Helper for the KBNODE linked list
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- g10/main.h :: Prototypes and some constants
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- g10/mainproc.c :: Message processing
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- g10/armor.c :: Ascii armor filter
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- g10/mdfilter.c :: Filter to calculate hashs
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- g10/textfilter.c :: Filter to handle CR/LF and trailing white space
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- g10/cipher.c :: En-/Decryption filter
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- g10/misc.c :: Utlity functions
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- g10/options.h :: Structure with all the command line options
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and related constants
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- g10/openfile.c :: Create/Open Files
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- g10/hkp.h :: Keyserver access
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- g10/hkp.c :: Ditto.
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- g10/packet.h :: Defintion of OpenPGP structures.
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- g10/passphrase.c :: Passphrase handling code
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- g10/pubkey-enc.c ::
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- g10/seckey-cert.c ::
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- g10/seskey.c ::
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- g10/import.c ::
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- g10/export.c ::
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- g10/comment.c ::
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- g10/status.c ::
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- g10/status.h ::
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- g10/sign.c ::
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- g10/plaintext.c ::
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- g10/encr-data.c ::
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- g10/encode.c ::
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- g10/revoke.c ::
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- g10/keylist.c ::
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- g10/sig-check.c ::
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- g10/signal.c ::
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- g10/helptext.c ::
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- g10/verify.c ::
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- g10/decrypt.c ::
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- g10/keyedit.c ::
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- g10/dearmor.c ::
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- g10/keygen.c ::
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** Memory allocation
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Use only the functions:
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- xmalloc
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- xmalloc_secure
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- xtrymalloc
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- xtrymalloc_secure
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- xcalloc
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- xcalloc_secure
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- xtrycalloc
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- xtrycalloc_secure
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- xrealloc
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- xtryrealloc
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- xstrdup
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- xtrystrdup
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- xfree
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The *secure versions allocated memory in the secure memory. That is,
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swapping out of this memory is avoided and is gets overwritten on
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free. Use this for passphrases, session keys and other sensitive
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material. This memory set aside for secure memory is linited to a few
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k. In general the function don't print a memeory message and
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terminate the process if there is not enough memory available. The
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"try" versions of the functions return NULL instead.
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** Logging
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TODO
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** Option parsing
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GnuPG does not use getopt or GNU getopt but functions of it's own.
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See util/argparse.c for details. The advantage of these functions is
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that it is more easy to display and maintain the help texts for the
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options. The same option table is also used to parse resource files.
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** What is an IOBUF
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This is the data structure used for most I/O of gnupg. It is similar
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to System V Streams but much simpler. Because OpenPGP messages are
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nested in different ways; the use of such a system has big advantages.
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Here is an example, how it works: If the parser sees a packet header
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with a partial length, it pushes the block_filter onto the IOBUF to
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handle these partial length packets: from now on you don't have to
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worry about this. When it sees a compressed packet it pushes the
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uncompress filter and the next read byte is one which has already been
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uncompressed by this filter. Same goes for enciphered packet,
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plaintext packets and so on. The file g10/encode.c might be a good
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staring point to see how it is used - actually this is the other way:
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constructing messages using pushed filters but it may be easier to
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understand.
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