* Expanded the section on issues with Windows installations, with
greater detail of which versions of Visual Studio are needed
depending on which version of CPython is to be used.
* Included a recommendation which is a bit harsh without being totally
prickish.
* Updated all files to not link to author's key or related data in
order to make them all consistent with the changes in commit
649b196881.
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* lang/cpp/src/Makefile.am, lang/qt/src/Makefile.am (AM_CPPFLAGS):
Add suggest-override and zero-as-null-pointer-constant warnings.
* lang/cpp/src/*, lang/qt/src/*: Consistenly use nullptr and override.
--
This was especially important for the headers so that downstream
users of GpgME++ or QGpgME do not get flooded by warnings if
they have these warnings enabled.
It also improves compiler errors/warnings in case of accidental
mistakes.
* Added long description to setup.py.in.
* Added maintenance mode details with clarification for what type of
things would be a bug as far as MM is concerned and what wouldn't
be.
** Includes a not too subtle hint directed towards the donations page.
* Miscellaneous tightening of documentation.
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Added instructions for checking key certifications or key
signatures (depending on preferred terminology).
* Added pendulum module to recommended installations, but not to
requirements.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Added documentation for the new methods added to gpgme.version.
* Removed the Flask based advanced use case from the what-is-new
section as that type of code will not be added here.
* lang/python/version.py.in: added gpg.version.versionintlist
* If gpg.version.versionintlist[2] ever returns -1 then there's a
serious problem with the build and it should be lodged as a bug if
it's repeatable. Seeing this should never happen, but checking for
it is better than not doing so.
* Fixed bug T4242 and tested that dropping "Import" in favour of
"import_type" does indeed work just fine.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* lang/python/src/constants/__init__.py: dropped use of Import
capitalisation and renamed lang/python/src/constants/import.py to
lang/python/src/constants/import_type.py to address bug T4242.
* lang/python/doc/src/gpgme-python-howto: minor docs updates.
* Continued restructuring as part of moving beyond mere;y the HOWTO
file.
* Generated the alternative source files for reST and Texinfo.
* Fixed some errors and updated links after moving the what's new
section to two new files (yes, two).
* lang/cpp/tests/run-verify.cpp: New.
* lang/cpp/tests/Makefile.am: Update accordingly.
--
Add another test runner which helps to find problems on windows.
* lang/cpp/src/context.cpp (Context::create): New.
* lang/cpp/src/context.h: Update accordingly.
* lang/cpp/src/key.cpp, lang/cpp/src/key.h:
(Key::isBad, Subkey::isBad, UserID::isBad)
(UserID::Signature::isBad): Add shorthand for the isX checks.
* NEWS: Mention it.
--
I don't know how often I wrote:
if (key.isNull() || key.isExpired() || key.isRevoked() ...
And for the context it is good practice to use a unique ptr
so the API should make it easy.
* Fixed a minor error in how the reST version of the HOWTO is
generated.
* Updated the help() in __init__.py with a little more detail as to
why not to use the lower level functions.
* lang/python/tests/t-callbacks.py: Updated test logic to try
generating a key which expires in 2099 and if that fails then
fallback to an expiration in 2037 in an attempt to catch the 32-bit
systems.
* lang/python/gpgme.i: ignore HAVE_CXX11 in SWIG interface
--
If there are two distinct builds (a) and (b) of gpgme which both build
python bindings, and build (a) also happens to build the C++ bindings,
then the generated gpg/gpgme.py file from build (a) will not be usable
with the .so generated in build (b), despite them being exactly the
same, and having nothing to do with C++.
In particular, it will fail with:
-----------
File "…/gpg/__init__.py", line 99, in <module>
from . import core
File "…/gpg/core.py", line 10, in <module>
from . import gpgme
File "…/gpg/gpgme.py", line 152, in <module>
HAVE_CXX11 = _gpgme.HAVE_CXX11
AttributeError: module 'gpg._gpgme' has no attribute 'HAVE_CXX11'
-----------
By asking SWIG to ignore this definition, we stabilize the generated
.py and the .so, ensuring that they are more cleanly interoperable.
--
* Use wrapper types calling translation functions instead of
TRANSLATE-{FROM,TO}-FOREIGN methods as they seem not to be
called in some cases.
* Use the (:STRUCT SOME-C-STRUCT) notation instead of the
deprecated direct reference to SOME-C-STRUCT.
* Add missing values in enums and bit fields.
* Use cffi-grovel to define system types (SIZE-T, OFF-T, etc).
* Wrap GPGME-DATA-T in a class (like contexts).
* Use the FINALIZE function from trivial-garbage to free the
C objects for contexts, keys and data automatically.
* Make DATA-READ-CB and DATA-WRITE-CB run faster.
* Update the README file.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume LE VAILLANT <glv@posteo.net>
* lang/cpp/Makefile.am: Add tests subdir.
* lang/cpp/tests/Makefile.am: New.
* lang/cpp/tests/README,
lang/cpp/tests/run-getkey.cpp,
lang/cpp/tests/run-keylist.cpp: New.
* configure.ac: Configure tests makefile.
--
The autotests for c++ live in lang/qt/tests these
tests are more for manual experiments to validate some
functionality.
* lang/cpp/src/context.cpp (Context::startKeyListing),
(Context::keyListResult, Context::signingKeys): Initialize key.
--
"Should" not be neccessary but it's cleaner and would have
covered the case of the previous commit.
* configure.ac: Bump core LT version to C32/A21/R0. Bump C++ LT
version to C14/A8/R0.
* lang/qt/tests/Makefile.am (CLEANFILES): Add reader status files.
* Makefile.am (EXTRA_DIST): Add conf/whatisthis.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* conf/: New dir.
* configure.ac (AC_CONFIG_HEADER): Move header to conf dir.
* doc/Makefile.am (mkdefsinc): Adjust rule.
* lang/python/Makefile.am (copystamp): Ditto.
--
C++ uses those stupid files without a suffix and thus the new standard
header <version> as included by newer other libc++ versions may
conflict with the VERSION file in out top directory. This change
should solve the problem.
GnuPG-bug-id: 4168
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* lang/python/doc/meta/TODO.org: Added the two major documentation
build system tasks to the TODO list.
* Added an index page in preparation for sorting out the second of
those TODO lists (Docutils is a lot easier to handle than Texinfo).
* Meanwhile, have confirmed that it all builds just fine under
GNU/Linux, OS X and FreeBSD while retaining the documentation, so
that's a nice improvement from 1.11.1.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* doc/Makefile.am: Removed a bit I forgot about.
* Renamed lang/python/docs to lang/python/doc bvecause apparently
automake cares about that too.
* Decided to be extra explicit in the manifest because if I don't then
all sorts of things get deleted ... like lang/python
* Tested on an external linux system just in case my osx workstation
introduces too much weirdness.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* lang/python/Makefile.am: Attempting to remove the docs/meta
directory did a lot worse than I thought it was doing, so better to
just be sure the documentation is available than destroy the entire
bindings directory.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* lang/python/Makefile.am: Now that gpg2 has been renamed back to gpg
and gpg1 is semi-deprecated, we should check what the actual gpg
binary is with gpgconf and use that rather than make assumptions per
system.
* Also, it means less worry if gpg3 is ever a thing. (Trust me, I
remember the Python 1 to 2 transition as well as the current 2 to 3
transition). ;)
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* More updates to the docs themselves and the versions to be available
with the next release.
* .texi and .rst copies of the HOWTO and the short history of (this
part) of the project.
* Restructured the docs directory to account for the GNU preferred
source doc format (.texi) and the Python preferred source doc
format (.rst) and the real source doc format (.org).
* Both the perceived source formats will need to be generated from the
.org files and included at this stage. Unfortunately there is not
yet a native org-to-rst transformation method in the org-mode
software in Emacs nor is there a a direct means of going from reST
to Org-mode from Docutils. There's only third party packages like
Pandoc and, while very good, there is no guarantee of consistency;
so we can't entirely automate this bit (yet).
* doc/Makefile.am: removed the python howto from this file, restoring
it to just the main project and the newer .js files.
* deleted: doc/gpgme-python-howto.texi
* renamed the Short_History.org file to short-history.org to keep the
naming conventions similar.
* All the Python files can (and should) live together.
* Changed the order of python versions the configure/make process
checks for, placing Python 3.7 ahead of 3.6.
* Updated the HOWTO documentation to reflect this change.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Tightened up the docs a little bit, updated the "what's new"
section, dropped the "-draft" version in preparation for GPGME
1.12.0's release.
* Exported another .texi version (and updated the draft copies to this
commit (which ought to be 1.11.1-beta313).
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* lang/python/src/core.py: First restoring the exception to the being
just that.
* The means to manipulate the error output is temporarily in commented
out code, but ought to be added to a proper test later.
* In the mean time the original test, with a very slight change, works
again.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* lang/python/src/core.py: Fixed methods of detecting whether verify
is a boolean variable or a list.
* Added methods of catching the missing keys exceptions.
* Still retained PEP8 compliance (which might have been where one or
two problems crept in).
* Though this is essentially the correct behaviour, it still does not
quite fit the otiginal test; so that will also require some adjustment.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* lang/python/examples/howto/local-sign-group.py: added the bit where
specifying the signing key is actually used for signing rather than
just pruning the list of keys to certify.
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* lang/python/examples/howto/local-sign-group.py: locally sign every
key in a group line except one's own keys. Intended to address the
sort of thing one might see on lists like PGPNET or other closed
groups amongst activists, journalists, etc. where everyone encrypts
to all recipients, but may not sign everyone's keys publicly..
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Fixed the final assertion to look for what will actually be reported
in that case instead of something else (i.e. it looks for an
IMPORT_ERROR status code).
* Sometimes you really do need or want punctuation in a heading, but
ideally without something else generating whitespace and other
annoyances to go with it.
* Trying a real decimal point instead.
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Woumd up the "what's new" section.
* Added an example for sending a key to the keyservers via hkp4py.
* Updated the export key code to use a more complete check for the
$GNUPGHOME location.
* Expanded on the installation and reinstallation troubleshooting
section.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Added a What's New section to summarise changes since the last
release. There have been quite a few and some attention does need
to be drawn to some of them.
* Confirming certain issues with some platform builds, especially
BSD/OSX vs. Linux issues which will need to update the installation
troubleshooting guides.
* Added more comprehensive examples using hkp4py and added a couple
more example scripts for protonmail.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Mostly tightening up the details on the hkp4py example script.
* Also fixed a typo in the LGPL boiler plate text included in all the
other example scripts for the HOWTO.
* added a new example script to search the keyservers and import the
results, this time using Marcel Fest's hkp4py module.
* Updated the key importing section to match this addition.
* Tested with the current version of hkp4py from github.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Confirmed that updates to the tests have significant'y improved that
output.
* Updated some of the additional notes for the section on hkp4py.
** This is in anticipation adding at least import examples using that
module as well. It may also include adding examples of exporting a
key and uploading it to the keyservers.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* src/gpgme.h.in: Obsolete "class" also for Python.
* lang/python/gpgme.i: Silenece a swig warning. Silence a gcc
warning.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* Added some material on using the new-ish hkp4py module with GPGME.
* Example code will be added later once a couple of little issues are
addressed.
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* src/gpgme-json.c (op_createkey): Remove subkey-algo param.
(GPG_AGENT_ALLOWS_KEYGEN_TRHOUGH_BROWSER): Fix typo.
* lang/js/src/Keyring.js: Remove subkey-algo support.
* lang/js/src/permittedOperations.js: Ditto.
--
We do not want to expose details of the protocol's key generation and
thus the subkey-algo does not make sense. Right now we support only
the default and future-default algorithms. A user can configure them
anyway using new-default-key-algo in gpg.conf. Eventually we may
officially support a more flexible way of creating special structured
OpenPGP keys but right now that is not part of the API.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
--
* src/index.js: Added an optional configuration object for the startup.
* configuration: timeout - the initial check for a connection ran into
timeouts on slower testing machines. 500ms for initial startup is
not sufficient everywhere. The default timeout was raised to 1000ms,
and as an option this timeout can be increased even further.
* BrowsertestExtension: Set the initial connection timeouts to 2
seconds, to be able to test on slower machines.
* Sanitized the shell command examples of extraneous whitespace.
* Removed keycount.c as sanitising it is pointless and it will be
generated by Cython when the example is followed.
* Regenerated the .texi version.
* Added new advanced section with an example of using the Python
bindings with CPython code compiled back to C code using Cython.
* Though it may seem a bit counter-intuitive to use the bindings just
to go back to C via a different route, this is not actually stupid.
* Added examples/howto/advanced/cython/ directory.
* Added keycount.pyx, setup.py and the keycount.c file which the first
two generated with Cython. Not including the .so and .o files from
the build.
* Exported the .texi version of the howto for the main docs.
* lang/python/docs/gpgme-python-howto.org: more tweaks and edits,
along with another build of output formats.
* doc/gpgme-python-howto.texi: updated texinfo version for parent docs.
* lang/python/docs/gpgme-python-howto.org: Identified and fixed the
headings which kept generating lines with trailing whitespace when
exporting to Texinfo format and adjusted them to prevent that.
* lang/python/docs/gpgme-python-howto.org: Renamed file to better fit
the rest of the project's docs.
* Added a section on the very unofficial drafts I periodically post
links to since they're often the easiest way to get a web version in
front of someone in a hurry.
* lang/python/docs/GPGMEpythonHOWTOen.org: Added corresponding GPGME
version number to table at the start and cut the shortcut from the
groups.py example.
* doc/gpgme-python-howto.texi: New export of Texinfo file for docs
build.
* lang/python/docs/GPGMEpythonHOWTOen.org: Fixed a few errors in the
newer sections.
* Updated code in the examples using secret key exporting and group
lines to reflect the Python 2.7 compatibility fixes added.
* lang/python/examples/howto/export-secret-keys.py and groups.py:
Updated the backwards compatibility adjustments to account for
unicode differences between python 2 and 3.
* lang/python/examples/howto/groups.py: subprocess update
* lang/python/examples/howto/export-secret-keys.py: subprocess update
Both of these try the nice and easy method of getting the subprocess
output available in Python 3, but will fall back to the older Popen
method if it doesn't work. Essentially this is to be a little nicer
to Python 2.7.15 (even though the examples are filled with warnings
that py2 support is not guaranteed with the examples).
--
* src/Helpers.js: GPGME_Keys were not parsed as valid, as their
fingerprint getter is not a fingerprint 'property'.
* BrowserTestExtension: fixed a dsplay typo in counting of tests.
--
* BrowsertestExtension/tests/decryptTest.js: There were cases in which
file names returned in a wrong encoding from decryption. The test
cases here are a 'Hello World' in a text file with different names,
then being encrypted with cli gnupg.
--
* src/Helpers.js: This additional escape should 'repair' special
characters like spaces in filenames. In the strange world of
encoding there is little hope that this captures all cases, or
that it will never fail to return some value, let alone meaningful.
In my test cases it worked.
--
* BrowserTestExtension/tests:
- decryptTest.js: Check Decryption and return values of binary data
- encryptTest.js: Return data type of armored/non-armored encryption
- added a small encoded input png for testing
* DemoExtension/maindemo.js: Fixed unexpected usage of the Demo encrypt
(non-armored)
--
* src/gpgme.js: In case the encryption was done unarmored, the result
is binary data. Added an option to either return the binary data as
base64-encoded string or as Uint8Array, similar to return values of
decrypt
--
* src/Connection.js; src/permittedOperations.js: To avoid further
encoding problems, data sent by gpgme is now sorted as either
'payload' or 'info'. Payload data may come in any encoding, and here
the 'expected' and 'format' options are used, 'info' data may
contain text created by gnupg which may need re-encoding, but this
should not be affected by 'expected' and 'format'
* lang/python/src/core.py: Adjusted new_from_estream function to alias
new_from_stream instead of fd.
* fixed the _gpgme import errors introduced in commit
08cd34afb7 by changing the exported
functions/types to match the inner module where all the work is
done, rather than the outer one(s).
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
--
* src/gpgmejs.js/encrypt: the encrypted data were converted back to a
(incorrect) string, whereas they should be data with no encoding
specified. Returning base64 data is the expected way.
* DemoExtension: caught yet another usage of old syntax.
* lang/python/docs/GPGMEpythonHOWTOen.org: Updated links to the
ProtonMail keyserver import scripts and added a warning regarding
being unable to update third party keys.
* lang/python/examples/howto/pmkey-import-alt.py: added usage.
* lang/python/examples/howto/pmkey-import.py: added usage.
--
* src/Helpers.js: As non-payload data might come in different
encodings, a conversion has been introduced that worked in most
cases. Data like the userid might come in different encodings,
which we don't know of. For now, a try..catch returns the data
as they are if the utf-8 decoding fails. Sometimes this yields the
correct result, sometimes it may not work, but it won't stop the
whole operation anymore.
--
* destructuring just takes the input argument and treats it as object.
In cases like in src/Keyring/generateKey, where I forgot to change
the old syntax, the fingerprint as string was destructured into an
object without "pattern", which caused all Keys to be retrieved.
So, methods with a destructuring now check if the first argument is
an object and get a default empty object if no parameter is
submitted. This allows the further use of destructured parameters,
while still ensuring nothing vastly incorrect is used.
* src/Kering.js, unittsets.js: fixed old syntax in method usage
--
* src/Connection.js: resulting data, if not pure ascii, is base64
encoded in the result message. A further decoding attempt into
javascript 'string' will be attempted by default, unless specified
at the decrypt() method. The return value 'format' now shows which
of the possibilities has been applied. The old boolean 'base64'
now turns into format:'base64' if the returned payload is a base64
string after decryption.
--
* reflecting the new optional strings accepted by the backend.
'file_name' and 'sender' can be used via the 'additional'
parameter in encrypt operations
--
* recent changes in parameter calling led to a forgotten internal call
in getDefaultKey using old syntax (and failing in case a default key
is configured)
--
* src/gpgmejs.js: Setting the default to 'always trust' assumes that
most api users will already have made their internal checks, but may
not have the gnupg web-of-trust model implemented, thus trusting the
key themselves, without gnupg having full or even any information.
Still it should stay an option to have gnupg decide.
--
* src/Keyring.js: Adapted Keyring.getDefaultKey() to my current
understanding of a default signing key: either the default key set
in the gpg config, or 'the first usable private key' - usability
meaning 'not invalid, expired, revoked, and can be used for
signing'. It should be the same key used as in command line when
doing a --sign operation.
In case the user has a smartcard plugged in, we currently
won't know of this here, so our choice may differ. But as we do all
javascript-binding sign operations with the key fingerprint
explicitly set, this should not be a real problem. This method is
seen more as a convenience to tell using librarys which key
represents the main user.
--
* As a decrypt result cannot be known beforehand, the decrypt operation
may add an 'expect' property, taking either 'uint8' or 'base64',
which will return the decrypted data in the appropiate formats.
the return property 'format' will give a feedback on which option
was taken.
A test was added to reflect these changes.
--
* As requested by using parties, the options to be passed into the
methods are now objects, with the objects' properties better
describing what they do, and to avoid the need to type several nulls
in a method call if one wants the last parameter.
- src/Keyring.js, src/gpgme.js: Changed parameters and their
validations
- BrowserTest/*.js Had to adapt quite some calls to the new format
--
* src/Connection.js, src/Helpers.js: performance of decoding incoming
base64 data was improved to about 4 times the speed by introducing
two more efficient functions (thanks to rrenkert@intevation.de for
finding and testing them)
* src/gpgmejs.js: Decrypted data will now return as Uint8Array, if the
caller does not wish for a decoding. Decoding binary data will return
invalid data, and a Uint8Array may be desired. This can be indicated
by using the (new) 'binary' option in decrypt.
* src/Errors.js A new error in case this decoding fails
* src/Message.js, src/Connection.js: expected is change from base64
to binary, to avoid confusion later on.
--
* src/Signature.js/get fingerprint: A signature with no fingerprint
should not happen, but if it does, we should throw an error here,
as the method is a getter.
This adds a new language binding "gpgme.js" to GPGME. It
serves as a bridge between the native-messaging service "gpgme-json"
and JavaScript Applications.
The first user of this binding will be Mailvelope which will
see GnuPG integration in the near future.
GnuPG-Bug-Id: T4107
--
* synchronous functions should throw errors if something goes wrong,
Promises should reject. This commit changes some error cases that
returned Error objects instead of throwing them
- src/Key.js: createKey() and sync Key.get() throw errors
- src/Error.js: Exporting the list of errors to be able to test and
compare against these strings
- src/Keyring.js: Setting a null value in pattern is not useful, and
now caused an error with the new changes.
- src/Message.js: createMessage and Message.setParameter now throw
errors
--
* src/gpgmejs.js: Decrypt now parses additional optional dec_info
information, as well as any verify information, if present
* src/permittedOperations: Now decrypt also expect the new return
object dec_inf (containing info such as is_mime and file_name)
--
* src/Keyring.js: Changed key ecpiration from Date to seconds from
creation, as in gpgme. The Date parameter used before was due to a
misunderstanding in documentation and requests from potential users.
--
* undoes 94ee0988d4 and
e16a87e839.
I do not fully understand why my approach was bad, but I am not in
a position to argue. This revert was requested to me after a review,
and I'm doing it in the assumption that more experienced people know
better than me.
* unittests: Also changed some outdated tests that stopped working
since 754e799d35 (as GPGME_Key is not
exported, one cannot check for instanceof in the tests anymore)
* import-key.py: fixed a minor typo.
* pmkey-import.py: locates and imports keys from the ProtonMail keyserver.
* pmkey-import-alt.py: the same as the previous except with setting an
alternative $GNUPGHOME directory.
* Moved the build import back up where it belongs.
* Included comments indicating how to build and install for multiple
Python versions beyond the first 2 on the same system.
* lang/python/version.py.in: Fixed most things, but there's still an
issue near the build portion with the existing Python bugs referenced.
* lang/python/setup.py.in: Now PEP8 compliant.
* PEP8 compliance for all constants except the globals in
src/constants/__init__.py depending on whether the import sequence
affects the globals themselves.
--
* Arriving strings (i.e. user id names, error messages) are not
always in javascript encoding. This is an attempt to go through
the whole gpgme answer (with the exception of payload data) and
to fix the encoding of these
--
* src/Key.js The synchronous mode for a Key does not offer an armor/
armored property anymore. This frees up a lot of performance issues,
also the armored expoort is expected to change quite often, so a
cached version is not advisable.
* hasSecret/getHasSecret is now refactored, to reflect their uses.
With get('hasSecret') there is a method that fetches the result.
* src/Key.js also some refactoring
--
* src/Key.js Key class is not exported anymore, as it should not be
used directly anywhere. setKeyData is no more a method of the Key,
(optional) data are now validated and set on Key creation and on
updates, both from within this module, thus no longer exposing
setKeyData to the outside.
* createKey now gained an optional parameter which allows to set Key
data at this point.
--
* src/Keyring.js: An empty result should no longer cause an error,
the import feedback summary has been refactored slightly
* Browsertests to reflect import feedback change
--
* src/Keyring.js I wrongly assumed an object to be a GPGME_Key,
it was the raw answer from nativeMessaging instead. Now it returns
a GPGME_Key again.
--
* src/Keyring.js: The answer was not parsed correctly, so a config was
being ignored.
* If no config is set, we return the first non-invalid key with a
secret, instead of the first key (which may be e.g. an expired one)
--
* src/Keyring.js: In case no default Key is set in configuration,
only Keys reported as having a secret part should be considered
for default Keys, avoiding some extra requests.
--
* src/Key.js: the fingerprint returned by a Key is now always upper
case hex, even if the constructor had lower case input. This is to be
more consistent with gpgme and to be more readable and reliable in
comparisions.
* lang/python/examples/howto/symcrypt-file.py: *sigh*; passphrase was
right the first time, just the error check that wasn't.
* I really should stop second guessing myself one of these days ...
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Ran all the .py files in src/ and below through Yapf.
* Included some manual edits of core.py, this time successfully making
two notorious sections a bit more pythonic than scheming.
* Left the module imports as is.
* This will be committed if it passes the most essential test:
compiling, installing and running it.
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* lang/cpp/src/gpggencardkeyinteractor.cpp
(GpgGenCardKeyInteractor::Private::keysize): Change to string.
--
The value is only required as string so we can save it this
way to avoid the need to convert it for the action command.
GnuPG-Bug-Id: T4094
* lang/python/tests/Makefile.am,
lang/qt/tests/Makefile.am,
tests/Makefile.am,
tests/gpg/Makefile.am,
tests/gpgsm/Makefile.am,
tests/opassuan/Makefile.am (GNUPGHOME): Make variable explict.
--
If the build directory has too long path, gpgme could fail.
This is similar to
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=847206
In order to fix that, this patch extracts the GNUPGHOME variable
to be presented directly in the Makefile and thus overridable by
command line option.
A build system can then create a symlink to the GNUPGHOME directory
in /tmp and use that symlink as the GNUPGHOME directory
thus making the path very short.
GnuPG-Bug-Id: T4091
Patch provided by vlmarek
--
* src/index.js: The export now uses a freezed Object, which does not
allow for simply overwriting the init method by e.g. a third-party
library.
* BrowsertestExtension: Added some tests trying if decryption of bad
data properly fails
--
* The aim is to iterate through the results of the first request
(all keys), and then add the propert 'hasSecret' to those that
are in the second request (secret Keysring) as well. I messed
this up in a recent change, and it escaped testing.
--
* An Object.freeze should stop any malicious third party from changing
objects' methods once the objects are instantiated (see unittest for
an approach that would have worked before)
- An initialized gpgmejs- object doesn't have a '_Keyring' property
anymore (it still has its 'Keyring')
- The internal expect='base64' needed to be turned into a method.
--
* src/ [Connection, Error, Key, Keyring, MEssage, Signature, gpgmejs]:
Functions and values that are not meant to be overwritten are now
moved into their constructors, thus eliminating the possibility of
overwrites after initialization.
* Key: The mode of use (synchronous cached, or async promises) ivs now
determined at initialization of that Key. The property Key.isAsync
reflects this state.
* unittests: fixed old Key syntax for testing.
* Message.js isComplete is now a method and not a getter anymore.
* Added some startup tests.
--
Tests will now run with one instance of gpgmejs each block,
which reduces overhead. Readability is (hopefully) improved),
some negative tests are added.
There is still a performance problem in base64 encoding/decoding,
which causes some tests to fail due to time out.
--
* The import answer now also directly contains the armored Key as Key
property, without need to refresh the Key object created in the
answer. This allows for direct comparision of input and output.
* BrowserTestExtension: added test for that import callback
--
* The libgpg error strings arrive in the browser in a different
encoding than used by browsers. Escaping and then decoding it
should cover most languages in the supported browsers.
* lang/cpp/src/key.cpp (Key::update): Check that the key is
not NULL.
* lang/cpp/src/verificationresult.cpp (GpgME::Signature::key):
Check for fingerprint.
* Fixed and tested the changes necessary for org-mode to correctly
parse pythonic (Python 3) indentation.
* Updated the source blocks to recommended upper case for BEGIN_SRC
and END_SRC.
* Tested and confirmed XHTML output matches correct examples.
* Tested against pseudo-control output via exporting from org-mode to
org-mode and then exporting that to XHTML. Remaining differences
appear to be discarding the custom tags used to provide X[HT]ML id
elements to each section which does not appear to offer any benefit.
* Exporting directly to XHTML or other HTML output should no longer
cause problems, but if there are any then the first step should be
exporting from org-to-org and then exporting that to XHTML.
Tested-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Another retrofitting of the HOWTO Python example code, this time
following adjustments to python-mode configuration and having
trawled through the org-mode mailing lists for clues.
* lang/qt/src/threadedjobmixin.cpp (fromEncoding)
(stringFromGpgOutput): New helpers.
(markupDiagnostics): Use it.
--
The Problem is that on my western windows system GnuPG
gets CP 437 as GetConsoleOutputCP and prints in that codepage.
In a W32 GUI Application we get 0 as GetConsoleOutputCP and 1252
with GetACP.
The only thing that seemed to somehow match was GetOEMCP but
that might just be luck and it might still be broken in
other windows languages.
This code is also used in Kleopatra so it might make sense
to make it public once it is demonstrated that it works on
most systems.
--
* src/Keyring.js: If the optional "pattern" parameter is not to be
used, but another, following parameter is, null is more of a
convention in javascript, thus both null and undefined are
interpreted as "this parameter is not meant to be set".
--
* Reflects the changes made to gpgme-json in commit
6cc842c9aa.
- getKeysArmored now returns an object with property 'armored' being
the exported armored block, and an (optional) array of fingerprint
strings for those keys that can be used in sign/encrypt operations
as property 'secret_fprs'. With this, extensions such as mailvelope
will be able to bulk fetch all necessary key information in one
request.
--
* Fixed errors:
- src/Message.js post(): Set chunksize to defined default value instead
of hardcoded
- src/Keys.js: added getHasSecret() to refreshKey operation.
* Reviewed and updated the documentation
* non-documentation changes which do not affect functionality:
- src/Errors: disabled a console.warn that is only useful for debugging
- helpers.js: renamed "string" to "value" in isFingerprint and isLongId
to avoid confusion
- src/Keyring: prepare_sync, search are both explicitly set to false by
default
* Complete typographic overhaul.
* Removed all section level indentation since it does not affect
output formatting, but might affect source code examples.
* In text-mode stripped out all tabs which had crept in and replaced
them with four spaces.
* Updated all code examples (again) to conform with Python-mode.
* Bumped version number in preparation for next release of GPG 2.2.9
and corresponding GPGME release.
--
* Don't make a secret-Key request for each Key retrieved, use one
request for all of them instead, and assemble the info later. This
should reduce the traffic with large Keyrings. The bulk retrieval
for the public armored Keys for each of these Keys is still up to
discussion
* unittests: disabled assertion for the armored key (as it currently
doesn't work)
* encryptTest: clarified the mechanism/reason of rejection for
Messages >64 MB. This is still a TODO, as this error comes from a
different place (the browser itself) and behaves different from the
other errors.
--
* A verify at gpgme-json does not fail if there is a valid pgp message
that does not include a signature. Instead, the answer will be devoid
of signatures. In javascript, the SIG_NO_SIG error should be reported
here, but wasn't.
--
* package.json:
- the old webpack-cli version depended on two packages
with vulnerabilities, set to minimum version 3.0.8 to fix this
(nodesecurity.io/advisories/157, nodesecurity.io/advisories/612)
- added License identifier
* README: Updated documentation
* jsdoc.conf: Added a configuration file for jsdoc
* some minor documentation changes, indentations
--
* src/Keyring.js: getKeys() now has the option "search", which will
trigger a remote lookup (as configured in gpg) for the string given
as pattern.
* src/permittedOperations: make use of the new 'locate' option in
keylist
* DemoExtension: Add a button for lookup, to demonstrate the
functionality
--
* BrowserTestExtension:
- The KeyImport/Export test had some errors, which have now been fixed
- The secret key used for the test examples is now placed more
prominently, and a clarification added that decrypt tests will not
work if this key is not imported.
* permittedOperations.js: typo
Thanks to rrenkert@intevation.de for the fixes
* Apparently I am wrong and Scheme is the new Python after all.
* Non-import related PEP8 compliance must wait for another day, though
the other PEP8 fixes remain.
* Changed id/else statements to a more pythonic form from scheme
masquerading as python - sorry Justus, it had to go ;).
* With the added bonus of enabling PEP8 compliance in those sections.
* Fixed remaining PEP8 compliance issues with the exception of the
imports at the beginning of the file (changing those will break the
entire module, so we'll cope with it as it is).
* Bindings confirmed to work with the newly released 3.7.0.
* Updated M4 file to reflect this change and correct the Python binary
search order (3.7 is not yet given priority, but will still be found
first via the more generic python3 executable).
* Updated setup.py.in, bindings documentation and README to reflect this.
* Added a secret key export variant which saves output as both GPG
binary and ASCII armoured, plus saves in $GNUPGHOME and uses
multiple methods of determining what that location is.
* Example of default exporting keys.
* Example of exporting minimised keys.
* Example of exporting secret keys to a file with correct permissions.
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* The holy grail: a function to export secret keys.
* GPGME will still invoke pinentry and gpg-agent as usual to authorise
the export.
* Mostly similar to the two previous export functions for public keys
except that it will return None if the result had a length of zero
bytes. Meaning that the difference between the specified pattern
(if any) not matching available keys and an incorrect passphrase is
not able to be determined from this function (or the underlying one
for that matter).
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Updated key_export and key_export_minimal to return None where a
pattern matched no keys in a manner simnilar to the possible result
of key_export_secret.
* Added functions for exporting public keys to gpg.core in both
complete form and in minimised form.
* Rather than letting people need to worry about the export modes we
are simply separating the functions as people would be more familiar
with from the command line usage anyway.
* Functions added for Context are: ctx.key_export_minimal and
ctx.key_export as the default or full export.
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
--
* src/Signature: typo
* src/gpgmejs.js: fixed wrong scope in verification
* right now verify does not succeed in the DemoExtension.
This is probably a problem in conversion or line ending.
* configure.ac: Add js as language.
* lang/Makefile.am: Add js as dist language.
* lang/js/BrowserTestExtension/Makefile.am,
lang/js/DemoExtension/Makefile.am,
lang/js/Makefile.am,
lang/js/src/Makefile.am: Populate EXTRA_DIST variables.
--
There is no actual build done yet as there seems to be
no way to build it with debian stable tools. This needs
clarification.
--
* src/Keyring.js: added more options for key generation.
* src/Key.js: GetDefaultKey now relies on the info associated with the
key, as the approach of relying on a secret subkey did not work as
intended
* DemoExtension: Added a button for retrieval of the subkey, to test
this functionality.
* Fixed most of the PEP8 errors in core.py
* Those remaining may need more than little edits and are a bit
strange (too clearly the result of a programmer who has spent far
too much time dealing with Lisp so that for Python it looks
... strange).
* Wrapped the key import function in the try/exception statements
needed to catch at least the most likely unsuccessful import attempt
errors.
* Mostly draws on the file error and no data import statuses for
errors, with a couple of exceptions.
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* The foundation of a pythonic key import function authored by Jacob
Adams.
* A unit testing script for the same function originally authored by
Tobias Mueller
* Added DCO reference for Jacob Adams to the GPGME AUTHORS file.
* Additional details regarding this patch are available here:
https://dev.gnupg.org/T4001
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
--
* src/gpgmejs.js:
- Added verify method
- Added verification results in decrypt (if signatures are present
in the message)
- Added a base64 option to decrypt
* src/Signature.js: Convenience class for verification results. Used
for e.g. converting timestamps to javascript time, quick overall
validity checks
* src/Keyring.js: removed debug code
* src/Errors.js add two new Signature errors
--
* DemoExtension/maindemo.js - added a Demo for retrieving the default
signing key
* src/Errors.js - add a new Error if no default key can be determined
* src/Key.js added documentation and a TODO marker for hasSecret.
* src/Keyring.js implemented getDefaultKey
* src/permittedOperations.js: Added missing entry for verify,
added config_opt
--
* The current test icon was just a generic pin. Changed that by the
gnupg lock symbol with 'Demo'/'Tests' written on it. Original taken
from gnupg artwork/icons/lock-wing.svg.
--
* src/Keyring.js: Added method generateKey for new Keys
Still TODO: Key length and some further testing. Automated testing
does not work in this case, and gpgmejs will not be able to delete
test keys again.
* src/permittedOperations.js Added new method's definitions according
to gpgme-json
--
* the nativeApp now sends all data in one base64-encoded string, which
needs reassembly, but in a much easier way now.
* there are some new performance problems now, especially with
decrypting data
* lang/cpp/src/context.cpp, lang/cpp/src/context.h
(Context::createKeyEx): New.
--
The createKeyEx function follows the usual pattern that the
synchronous call returns a result directly while for the
async an extra call is neccessary.
* Uses the groups module to prepare a list of recipients and encrypt
to those.
* The main version (encrypt-to-group.py) tries to check for invalid
recipients, but still falls back to always trust for the second
encryption attempt.
* The gullible version doesn't try pruning the recipient list at all,
it just tries to encrypt and if it fails, switches straight to
always trust.
* The trustno1 version doesn't use the always trust model at all and
only attempts pruning the list of invalid recipients.
--
* trying to stick to eslint from now on for readability
* As some attribution was lost in previous git confusions, I added my
name into some of the licence headers
--
* Keyring.js
- implemented importKey: importing one or more armored public key
blocks.
- implemented deleteKey: deleting a public Key from gpg.
* Key.js renamed property Key.armor to Key.armored
* Helpers.js: toKeyIDArray does not complain anymore if there are no
keys. Not having Keys in e.g. signing keys in encrypt is legitimate
and common, the complaints were getting spammy
* Errors.js: gpgme_errors now always pass an optional additional
message, for easier debugging in minified code
* Connection.js: Fix in gpgme-json responses containing objects
* eslintrc.json: Start using eslint. A cleanup to conform to it is not
done yet
* Added further tests for the new functionality
* Another attempt at fixing the org-mode version.
* A proof reader ascertained there were tabs in it instead of whitespace.
* Stripped the lot out and replaced with standard 4 spaces, fixed
every incorrect example ... and it still breaks upon save and/or export.
* Added the reference to the mutt-groups.py script to demonstrate the
groups.py module/code.
--
* src/Keys.js
- made setKeyData more consistent with other methods
- added convenience methods (Key.armored, Key.hasSecret)
- Added a Key delete function
* src/Keyring.js:
- added a getkeysArmored which allows for bulk export of public Keys
gpgmejs:
- removed deleteKey. It is now a method of the Key itself
- Encrypt: Added some common options as parameter, and the
possibility to set all allowed flags via an additional Object
* lang/cpp/src/data.h, lang/cpp/src/data.cpp (Data::rewind): New.
* lang/qt/tests/t-various.cpp (testDataRewind): Test it.
--
The advantage of this convieniance function in GPGME is that
it avoids the messiness that are declarations with off_t.
GnuPG-Bug-Id: T3996
--
* implementing Keyring methods:
- Keyring.getKeys: has an additional option that retrieves the armor
and secret state once at the beginning. This is power hungry, but
allows for Keys to be used directly (without querying gpgme-json
each call)
* permittedOperations.js: reflect recent changes in the native
counterpart, adding more options
* Key: adding two methods for retrieving the armored Key block and
for finding out if the Key includes a secret subkey.
--
* After an operation a connection should be disconnected again.
The "end of operation" is now assumed to be either an error as
answer, or a message not including a "more"
* GPGME, GPGME_Key, GPGME_Keyring don't require a connection
anymore
* Message.js: The Message.post() method will open a connection as
required
--
* Keys can now be queried for information. Onne version queries gnug
directly (asynchronous Promise in javascript terms), the cached
version refreshes on demand.
* Small fixes:
src/Connection.js joins answers that stay json properly now
--
* src/Connection.js: isConnected was renamed to checkConnection, that
returns a promise with either version information or Boolean
* Connection checks have been adapted to reflect that checkConnection
returns a Promise
* BrowsertestExtension: tests/signTest.js was missing from my last
commit
* Added a script which demonstrates how the groups module works.
* Script generates Mutt/Neomutt crypt-hooks for every group entry in
gpg.conf, including those entries for multiple keys (Mutt handles
that differently).
* Fixed the groups.py script so it really does what is described (the
old code had the same result for groups, group_lines and
group_lists).
* Updated the corresponding example in the doc to match.
* Updated the decryption example code in the HOWTO and the
corresponding decrypt-file.py script to gracefully handle a
decryption failure. This error will always be triggered when GPGME
is used to try to decrypt an old, MDC-less encrypted message or
file.
--
* Uint8Arrays are not supported for now there are unsolved issues in
conversion, and they are lower priority
* encrypt gains a new option to indicate that input values are base64
encoded
* as decrypted values are always base64 encoded, the option base64 will
not try to decode the result into utf, but leave it as it is
--
* Some assumption on messages were wrong. Now the tests use more
reasonable sizes.
* bigString now uses the full utf8-extent, with the exception of
U+0000. This code gets dropped during the encryption-decryption
process.
--
* The majority of tests needs to be run in a nativeMessaging context.
Offering the few tests that don't need this context at two places
introduces issues with maintainability. All tests now removed can be
found in ./unittests.js
--
* Added openpgp - Mode tests to the browsertest Extension. These tests
require openpgp, which should not be a hard dependency for the main
project. Packing openpgpjs into the extension is still TODO
* Fixes:
- openpgp mode API now correctly handles parameters as an object,
similar to openpgpjs
- proper check and parsing of openpgpjs Message Objects
--
* There were some inconsistencies between utf-8, transfer and browsers'
utf16, which broke characters that were split between individual
messages. src/Connection now contains a workaround that reassembles
javascripts' format from passed base64 strings. This needs someone
more experienced looking.
* Added several new tests which were failing during initial debugging
of this issue
* reorganized BrowsertestExtension to avoid cluttering.
--
* Tests: Under certain circumstances, some data change during
encrypt-decrypt. Committing the current state so the problem can be
discussed.
* Fixes:
- disconnecting the test ports after tests are complete
- fixed passing of the error message from gpgme-json
--
* Key.js: Error code for wrong parameter in createKey should be
"PARAM_WRONG"
* Helpers.js: The property openpgpjs-like Objects were checked for in
toKeyIdArray was not defined.
* src/permittedOperations.js: updated more expectations and assumptions
for the native API
* new Problems:
- There seems to be a message size limit of about 21 MB for
nativeMessaging, much lower than the documented 4GB.
- Some bytes are lost with random data in an encrypt-decrypt
roundtrip. The culprit is unclear.
* Changed the expiration date for the generated test key to NYE this
century, rather than the NYE this millennium as originally suggested
in job #3815.
* This covers the lifetimes of current users (except, maybe, some very
healthy millennials) as well as the 32-bit clock end date in 2038;
without falling foul of OpenPGP's 2106 expiration.
--
* Key.js: Error code for wrong parameter in createKey should be
"PARAM_WRONG"
* Helpers.js: The property openpgpjs-like Objects were checked for in
toKeyIdArray was not defined.
* src/permittedOperations.js: updated more expectations and assumptions
for the native API
--
* Added unittests to be run inside a Browser. To be able to access
the non-exposed functions and classes, a testing bundle will be
created, containing the tests (unittests.js) and the items to be
tested.
* src/Helpelpers, src/Key, src/Keyring: fixed some errors found
during testing.
--
* Tests: initialization of the two modes, encryption
* gpgme.js: reintroduced message check before calling
Connection.post()
* gpgmejs_openpgp.js: Fixed openpgp mode not passing keys
* index.js: fixed some confusion in parseconfig()
* Inserted some TODO stubs for missing error handling
--
* Extensions:
- Moved testapplication to Demoextension
- Created BrowserTestExtension.
Includes mocha and chai. For running tests that cannot be run
outside a WebExtension
Both Extensions can be found zipped in build/extensions after
running build_extensions.sh
* Code changes:
- src/Config: Place for the configuration
- small fixes raised during testing in Keyring.js, Message.js,
- src/gpgmejs_openpgpjs.js don't offer direct GpgME object to the
outside, as it only causes confusion
- index.js init() now checks the config for validity
* Tests:
- Reordered tests in test/.
- Input values are now in a separate file which may be of use for
bulk testing
* moved the build directory from dist to build
* src/qgpgmenewcryptoconfig.cpp (QGpgMENewCryptoConfigEntry::urlValue):
Build url from local file.
(QGpgMENewCryptoConfigEntry::setURLValue): Set native seperated
path.
--
This fixes setting files through cryptoconfig on Windows.
GnuPG-Bug-Id: T3939
--
* Introduced Mocha/chai as testsuite. After development build
'npm test' should run the unit tests. Functionality exclusive to
Browsers/WebExtensions cannot be run this way, so some other testing
is still needed.
- package.json: Added required development packages
- .babelrc indirect configuration for mocha. ES6 transpiling
needs some babel configuration, but mocha has no setting for it.
- test/mocha.opts Vonfiguration for mocha runs
* Fixed errors:
- Helpers.js toKeyIdArray; isLongId is now exported
- Key.js Key constructor failed
- Message.js will not throw an Error during construction, a new
message is now created with createMessage, which can return an
Error or a GPGME_Message object
* Tests:
- test/Helpers: exports from Helpers.js, GPGME_Error handling
- test/Message: first init test with bad parameters
--
* gpgmejs_openpgpjs
- unsuported values with no negative consequences can now reject,
warn or be ignored, according to config.unconsidered_params
- cleanup of unsupported/supported parameters and TODOS
* A src/index.js init() now accepts a configuration object
* Errors will now be derived from Error, offering more info and a
stacktrace.
* Fixed Connection.post() timeout triggering on wrong cases
* Added comments in permittedOperations.js, which gpgme interactions
are still unimplemented and should be added next
--
* A timeout of 5 seconds is activated for functions that do not require
a pinentry. This definition is written to src/permittedOperations.js
* testapplication.js now alerts the proper error codes and messages.
* src/Errors.js fixed two typos in error handling
--
* Error objects will now return the error code if defined as error type
in src/Errors.js, or do a console.log if it is a warning. Errors from
the native gpgme-json will be marked as GNUPG_ERROR.
--
* src/aKey.js changed fingerprint to setter (to avoid overwrites)
* src/gpgmejs_openpgpjs.js
- Added a class GPGME_Key_openpgpmode, which allows for renaming and
deviation from GPGME.
- renamed classes *_openPGPCompatibility to *_openpgpmode. They are
not fully compatible, but only offer a subset of properties. Also,
the name seems less clunky
--
* The Connection will now be started before an object is created, to
better account for failures.
* index.js: now exposes an init(), which returns a Promise of
configurable <GpgME | gpgmeGpgME_openPGPCompatibility> with an
established connection.
* TODO: There is currently no way to recover from a "connection lost"
* Connection.js offers Connection.isConnected, which toggles on port
closing.
--
* Error handling: introduced GPGMEJS_Error class that handles errors
at a more centralized and consistent position
* src/Connection.js:
The nativeMessaging port now opens per session instead of per
message. Some methods were added that reflect this change
- added methods disconnect() and reconnect()
- added connection status query
* src/gpgmejs.js
- stub for key deletion
- error handling
- high level API for changing connection status
* src/gpgmejs_openpgpjs.js
- added stubs for Key/Keyring handling according to current
state of discussion. It is still subject to change
* src/Helpers.js
- toKeyIdArray creates an array of KeyIds, now accepting
fingerprints, GPGMEJS_Key objects and openpgp Key objects.
* Key objects (src/Key.js) Querying information about a key
directly from gnupg. Currently a stub, only the Key.fingerprint is
functional.
* Keyring queries (src/Keyring.js): Listing and searching keys.
Currently a stub.
* Compatibility class gpgme_openpgpjs offers an API that should accept
openpgpjs syntax, throwing errors if a parameter is unexpected/not
implemented
* tried to be more generic in methods
* waiting for multiple answers if 'more' is in the answer
* more consistency checking on sending and receiving
* updated the example extension
--
* lang/python/setup.py.in: Copy gpgme.h instead of parsing it.
--
The python bindings tried to parse deprecated functions
out of gpgme.h. This fails for the current gpgme.h in
that it removes an entire field in the key sig struct (_obsolete_class).
Hence, the fields were off by an int and the bindings accessed struct
members via the wrong offset. That caused python program to crash.
At least on 32bit platforms, the crash can be easily triggered by
accessing key.uids[0].signatures. On 64bit platforms the compiler
probably aligns the struct so that the missing 4 bytes are not noticed.
With this change, the python bindings will expose all functions
that gpgme exposes, including the deprecated ones.
Credits go to Justus Winter for debugging and identying the issue.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Mueller <muelli@cryptobitch.de>
GnuPG-bug-id: 3892
--
Note this code misses all the legal boilerplate; please add this as
soon as possible and provide a DCO so we can merge it into master.
I also removed the dist/ directory because that was not source code.
* Script to generate a new key with encryption subkey taking input
from interactive prompts.
* Will also take a passphrase via pinentry and uses passphrase caching
of five minutes when used in conjunction with the temp homedir
script.
* Testing the addition of a HTML header set in org-mode in order to
had RSS update links for files.
* This should work with any [X]HTML export from current versions of
Org-Mode, but if it also works on website generated pages then it'll
tick off one of the wishlist itmes.
* Script to create a temporary gnupg homedir in the user's directory
for testing or scripting purposes.
* Creates a hidden directory on POSIX systems with the correct
permissions (700).
* Creates a gpg.conf in that directory containing the same
configuration options as used in the "Danger Mouse" example in the
HOWTO with the correct permissions (600).
* Added GPGME Python bindings HOWTO in Australian/British English.
** en-US "translation" still to be done.
* Added several example scripts comprised of the "Basic Functions"
section of the HOWTO (plus the work-around at the end).
** As these scripts are very basic examples they are released under
both the GPLv2+ and the LGPLv2.1+ (just like GPGME itself).
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Temporarily removing multi-key selection based examples.
* There are a few issues with getting the key selections to play
nicely with gpg.Context().keylist object types.
* Will troubleshoot them separately and restore them when that's
worked out, but I don't want these more complicated examples to
delay merging the HOWTO with master.
* Similar to group-key-selection.py, but does not use an existing
group from gpg.conf; instead takes multiple key IDs, fingerprints or
patterns on the command line and adds them to a keylist object.
* Begins to string together some of the simpler examples to do more
useful things.
* Signs and encrypts a file while encrypting to every key in a group
specified in the gpg.conf file.
* Updated usage so it only references importing the final list of
lists produced. Trying to use some of the mid-points can have
unpredictable results (this is part of the problem with work
arounds).
* Similar to encrypt file except for signing a file in normal mode.
* Noticed additional changes to be made to the howto to match this,
but they will have to wait due to a power outage (currently running
on battery and a mobile connection, but that won't last).
* Added groups selection work around code.
* Intended for use as a module to be imported by other scripts,
usually with "from groups import group_lists" or "from groups import
group_lines" or similar.
* Example to sign and encrypt a file.
* Similar to encrypt-file.py except all keys are considered trusted
and signs with the default key.
* Also encrypts to the default key.
* Example to encrypt a file to a single key.
* Takes key ID and/or fpr as a CLI parameter.
* Takes path and filename as a CLI parameter.
* Encrypts to specified key only, no signing and writes the output in
both ASCII armoured and GPG binary formats with output filenames
based on input filename.
* Added the same license as used with the HOWTO.
* Since these examples are so basic, they'll be dual licensed the same
as GPGME itself (otherwise it would slip too dangerously against the
need for permissive licensing of crypto libraries).
* Added reference to location where all the examples included in the
HOWTO will be available as executable scripts.
* Included a short README file in that location.
* Since we don't want to encourage accessing the low level functions
(e.g. op_encrypt), but since this example can still be useful to
understand, renaming it and will add new encryption examples to
match the instructions in the HOWTO.
* Adjusted the python-gnupg so the comments regarding insecure
invocation of commands via subprocess (shell=True) were a major
historical issue and not a a current issue.
* Not including Vinay Sajip's requested change to say it is now secure
since no audit of the current code base has been performed and my
last major inspection of that code was around the time I first
ported PyME to Python 3 in 2015.
* Checked off several points of howto coverage as completed.
* Reorganised to move S/MIME coverage to its own separate group of tasks.
* Noted only revocation remains for howto completion.
* moved single encrytion examples up to the first ones, pending merge
and major cut.
* This is basically just to make future checks of revisions a little easier.
* Fixed a minor typographic error.
* Bumped version number in preparation for merge with master.
* While there are probably a few more things worthy of being added
(mainly how to revoke things), this document is essentially ready
for publication now.
Signed-off-by: Ben McGinnes <ben@adversary.org>
* Added a new user ID for Danger Mouse.
* Removed the empty entry for key preferences since that is handled
through gpg.conf and/or editing the key directly.
* Clarified which English dialects this is written in.
* Translating to American can happen *after* it's done.
** The Yank version would probably want to change some of the examples
anyway.
* Began the description for normal/default signing.
* Added a section on key selection.
* Included recommendation for using fingerprint when selecting one
specific key.
* Also included the most ironically amusing example of multiple key
selection in a GPG guide. Hey, it's public data ... (heh).
* Added explanation of the ascendance of Python 3 over Python 2 in the
guide to the intro.
* Expanded key selection description so people know what not to
include regarding key IDs with this key selection method.
* During the course of working out the updated signature methods,
determined that key selection (including counting) will beed to be
presented before the basic functions.
* Moved "working with keys" up.
* Added a miscellaneous work-arounds section at the end.
* Included code in said miscellaneous section for accessing the groups
specified in a gpg.conf file.
* It's a bit ugly since it does require subprocess (but not call,
Popen or shell access and only accesses one command).
* updated multi-encryption final example to be complete.
* second example shows most likely method of reading plaintext.
* updated example filenames to stick with running gag
(i.e. secret_plans.txt).
* error corrections.
* multiple typesetting fixes only required due to certain archaic
eccentricities of LaTeX.
* a couple of minor python PEP8 compliance corrections.
* Added a more complicated encryption example with a few variations on
the encryption method to account for untrusted recipient keys,
signing or not signing, including or excluding default keys and so
on.
* Switched from links to some external docs to using footnotes where
necessary.
* Ideally the howto should be as stand alone as possible.
* Also it makes it difficult to convert to another format for
proof-reading if there are links that the conversion can't find.
* Wrote the text description explaining each step in the most basic
encryption operation.
* Will need to include additional examples for encrypting to multiple
recipients using Context().encrypt instead of Context().op_encrypt.
* Added all four signing code examples that are most likely to be
used: armoured, clearsigned, detached armoured and detached binary.
* May remove some examples and just discuss the differences, but it
depends on the way the text is filled out.
* Added sample code for encrypting some text to a single key.
* Basically I'm just lifting existing production code and changing the
key IDs from mine to "0x12345678DEADBEEF" for these first few
examples.
* I'll fill in the text description after.
* Note: due to my regional location, I might split some tasks into
more commits in order to be sure no work gets lost in case of
emergency (or to put it another way: I know Telstra too well to
trust them).
* Added a section for those pythonistas who are too used to web
programming. Stressed that it's not simply not RESTful, it's not
even REST-like.
* Letting me move on to drawing a very loose parallel between a
session and a context. The differences should become obvious in the
subsequent sections.
* Some instructions to include are fairly obvious; as with encryption,
decryption and signature verification.
* Some are a little less obvious.
* This includes the requests received to specifically include subkey
management (adding and revoking subkeys on a primary key that's
being retained.
* Added the UID equivalents to the list, as well as key selection
matters (and may or may not include something for handling group
lines since that involves wrapping a CLI binary).
* Key control documentation and examples requested by Mike Ingle of
confidantmail.org.
* removed one bit of whitespace.
* Marked up references to gpgme.h.
* Fixed one spelling error.
* Removed py2.6 from python search order since even if it is
supported, it shouldn't be encouraged.
* Started work on the GPGME Python bindings HOWTO.
* 1,050 words to begin with at approx. 7.5KB.
* Got as far as installation.
* Includes instruction not to use PyPI for this.
* Set LaTeX headers to enable ligatures and a 12pt font by default.
* Paper size left for regional defaults.
* Using XeLaTeX for easier font control.
* Using default LaTeX font of Latin Main, but that's easy enough to change.
* The developers of Phabricator, the web front-end on dev.gnupg.org
have not implemented renderers for Markdown, Org-Mode or any other
common markdown like language.
* They also refuse to do so.
* Instead they re-invented the wheel and implemented their own version
of Markdown-like thing which is incompatible with everything else.
It is called Remarkup.
* The developers of Phabricator and Remarkup have refused to provide
conversion tools to move files to/from any format to/from Remarkup.
* They expect everyone to learn their new favourite pet project.
* Remarkup may or may not display Org Mode files, but if so then it is
likely to only want to do so as plain text.
* There is an unaffiliated and unofficial project to convert Github
Markdown to Remarkup via Pandoc. This might be adapted for our use,
but requires testing.
* Until then exporting from Org Mode to UTF-8 text is likely the least
worst plan.
* Which means renaming this file to README.org first.
* Removed Markdown style heading underlining.
* Removed in-line file type declaration (which is not correctly parsed
by the web interface on dev.gnupg.org).