- Event Series
- This event is an instance of E422: Weekly Standup, and repeats every week.
Event Timeline
Comment Actions
Last week:
- libgcrypt rh-fips light review:
- constructor is considered too much: only use it when it is really needed, because it is too strong and applications have no way to control it
- adding error condition for access in fips mode is OK
- adding tests is OK
- Defer adding new feature for --quick-gen-keys for card key generation
- T5167: Yubikey NEO
- No clear_halt makes sense
- backport to 2.2
- rG946555ea3ceb: scd:yubikey: Fix support of Yubikey NEO. in master
- No clear_halt makes sense
- T5170: card: Allow use cases with no corresponding *.key file under private-keys-v1.d
- NetKey card support
- Now IDLM keyref also works
This week:
- Lower priority of T4563: gpg-agent fails to sign request of PKISSH
- because it is the bug of PKISSH, basically,
- it is occurred when remote machine is OpenSSH and PKISSH client wrongly considers handling of SSH_AGENT_RFC6187_OPAQUE_ECDSA_SIGNATURE is needed for different signature format (not OpenSSH, but DER).
- it is wrong because OpenSSH (or ssh-agent emulation of gpg-agent) never supports SSH_AGENT_RFC6187_OPAQUE_ECDSA_SIGNATURE flag and signature in DER format.
- it is also wrong that it is PKISSH which supports SSH_AGENT_RFC6187_OPAQUE_ECDSA_SIGNATURE flag and signature in DER format, but actually not used by its server implementation.
- because it is the bug of PKISSH, basically,
- libgcrypt
- Gnuk in 2022
- Curve448 support
Comment Actions
Last week:
- Active Directory work
This week:
- Fix LDAP bugs lingering for 20 years or so.
- Finish global options for 2.2
Comment Actions
Last week:
- Refactored GpgOL's attachment and e-mail encryption handling
- Works well, but draft encryption is very broken and I don't know yet how to fix it.
This week:
- Some documentation work.
- Looking at the onboarding experience for new users. / Newcertificatewizard.
- More GpgOL. Fix draft encryption and make the encryption code more explicit.
- It's currently too event driven, and the states are inconsistent.