Noteworthy changes in version 1.4.11 (2010-10-18)
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* Bug fixes and portability changes.
* Minor changes for better interoperability with GnuPG-2.
Noteworthy changes in version 1.4.10 (2009-09-02)
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* 2048 bit RSA keys are now generated by default. The default
hash algorithm preferences has changed to prefer SHA-256 over
SHA-1. 2048 bit DSA keys are now generated to use a 256 bit
hash algorithm
* Support v2 OpenPGP cards.
* The algorithm to compute the SIG_ID status has been changed to
match the one from 2.0.10.
* Improved file locking. Implemented it for W32.
* Fixed a memory leak which made imports of many keys very slow.
* Many smaller bug fixes.
* Support for the Camellia cipher (RFC-5581).
* Support for HKP keyservers over SSL ("HKPS").
Addresses a recent security issue that only impacts 1.4.8 and 2.0.8
* Improved AES encryption performance by more than 20% (on ia32).
Decryption is also a bit faster.
* Fixed possible memory corruption bug in 1.4.8 while importing
OpenPGP keys.
Noteworthy changes in version 1.4.8 (2007-12-20)
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*******************************************
* A decade of GnuPG: g10-0.0.0.tar.gz was *
* released exactly 10 years ago. *
*******************************************
* Changed the license to GPLv3.
* Improved detection of keyrings specified multiple times.
* Changes to better cope with broken keyservers.
* Minor bug fixes.
* The new OpenPGP standard is now complete, and has been published
as RFC-4880. The GnuPG --openpgp mode (note this is not the
default) has been updated to match the new standard. The
--rfc2440 option can be used to return to the older RFC-2440
behavior. The main differences between the two are
"--enable-dsa2 --no-rfc2440-text --escape-from-lines
--require-cross-certification".
* By default (i.e. --gnupg mode), --require-cross-certification is
now on. --rfc2440-text and --force-v3-sigs are now off.
* Allow encryption using legacy Elgamal sign+encrypt keys if
option --rfc2440 is used.
* Fixed the auto creation of the key stub for smartcards.
* Fixed a rare bug in decryption using the OpenPGP card.
* Fix RFC-4880 typo in the SHA-224 hash prefix. Old SHA-224
signatures will continue to work.
This fixes a security problem which is rather an application issue:
The user wasn't notified about additional text (not covered by the
signature) unless the --status-fd flag is used.
Noteworthy changes in version 1.4.6 (2006-12-06)
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* Fixed a serious and exploitable bug in processing encrypted
packages. [CVE-2006-6235].
* Fixed a buffer overflow in gpg. [bug#728, CVE-2006-6169]
(already fixed in pkgsrc)
* Fixed a bug while decrypting certain compressed and encrypted
messages. [bug#537]
* Added --s2k-count to set the number of times passphrase mangling
is repeated. The default is 65536 times.
* Added --passphrase-repeat to set the number of times GPG will
prompt for a new passphrase to be repeated. This is useful to
help memorize a new passphrase. The default is 1 repetition.
* Added a GPL license exception to the keyserver helper programs
gpgkeys_ldap, gpgkeys_curl, and gpgkeys_hkp, to clarify any
potential questions about the ability to distribute binaries
that link to the OpenSSL library. GnuPG does not link directly
to OpenSSL, but libcurl (used for HKP, HTTP, and FTP) and
OpenLDAP (used for LDAP) may. Note that this license exception
is considered a bug fix and is intended to forgive any
violations pertaining to this issue, including those that may
have occurred in the past.
* Man pages are now build from the same source as those of GnuPG-2.
While fixing a bug reported by Hugh Warrington, a buffer overflow has
been identified in all released GnuPG versions. The current versions
1.4.5 and 2.0.0 are affected. A small patch is provided.
...
2006-11-27 Werner Koch <wk@g10code.com>
* openfile.c (ask_outfile_name): Fixed buffer overflow occurring
if make_printable_string returns a longer string. Fixes bug 728.
Bump PKGREVISION.
security update, recommended by gnupg.org
(fixes CVE-2006-3746)
changes:
* More DSA2 tweaks.
* Fixed a problem uploading certain keys to the smart card.
* Fixed 2 more possible memory allocation attacks.
* Added Norwegian translation.
Noteworthy changes in version 1.4.4 (2006-06-25)
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* User IDs are now capped at 2048 byte. This avoids a memory
allocation attack (see CVE-2006-3082).
[was already fixed in pkgsrc]
* Added support for the SHA-224 hash. Like the SHA-384 hash, it
is mainly useful when DSS (the US Digital Signature Standard)
compatibility is desired.
* Added support for the latest update to DSA keys and signatures.
This allows for larger keys than 1024 bits and hashes other than
SHA-1 and RIPEMD/160. Note that not all OpenPGP implementations
can handle these new keys and signatures yet. See
"--enable-dsa2" in the manual for more information.
"parse-packet.c in GnuPG (gpg) 1.4.3 and 1.9.20, and earlier versions,
allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (gpg crash) and
possibly overwrite memory via a message packet with a large length,
which could lead to an integer overflow, as demonstrated using the
--no-armor option."
Patch from GnuPG CVS repository.
Bump PKGREVISION.
PKGLOCALEDIR and which install their locale files directly under
${PREFIX}/${PKGLOCALEDIR} and sort the PLIST file entries. From now
on, pkgsrc/mk/plist/plist-locale.awk will automatically handle
transforming the PLIST to refer to the correct locale directory.
Noteworthy changes in version 1.4.3 (2006-04-03)
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* If available, cURL-based keyserver helpers are built that can
retrieve keys using HKP or any protocol that cURL supports
(HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, FTPS, etc). If cURL is not available, HKP
and HTTP are still supported using a built-in cURL emulator. To
force building the old pre-cURL keyserver helpers, use the
configure option --enable-old-keyserver-helpers. Note that none
of this affects finger or LDAP support, which are unchanged.
Note also that a future version of GnuPG will remove the old
keyserver helpers altogether.
* Implemented Public Key Association (PKA) signature verification.
This uses special DNS records and notation data to associate a
mail address with an OpenPGP key to prove that mail coming from
that address is legitimate without the need for a full trust
path to the signing key.
* When exporting subkeys, those specified with a key ID or
fingerpint and the '!' suffix are now merged into one keyblock.
* Added "gpg-zip", a program to create encrypted archives that can
interoperate with PGP Zip.
* Added support for signing subkey cross-certification "back
signatures". Requiring cross-certification to be present is
currently off by default, but will be changed to on by default
in the future, once more keys use it. A new "cross-certify"
command in the --edit-key menu can be used to update signing
subkeys to have cross-certification.
* The key cleaning options for --import-options and
--export-options have been further polished. "import-clean" and
"export-clean" replace the older
import-clean-sigs/import-clean-uids and
export-clean-sigs/export-clean-uids option pairs.
* New "minimize" command in the --edit-key menu removes everything
that can be removed from a key, rendering it as small as
possible. There are corresponding "export-minimal" and
"import-minimal" commands for --export-options and
--import-options.
* New --fetch-keys command to retrieve keys by specifying a URI.
This allows direct key retrieval from a web page or other
location that can be specified in a URI. Available protocols
are HTTP and finger, plus anything that cURL supplies, if built
with cURL support.
* Files containing several signed messages are not allowed any
longer as there is no clean way to report the status of such
files back to the caller. To partly revert to the old behaviour
the new option --allow-multisig-verification may be used.
* The keyserver helpers can now handle keys in either ASCII armor
or binary format.
* New auto-key-locate option that takes an ordered list of methods
to locate a key if it is not available at encryption time (-r or
--recipient). Possible methods include "cert" (use DNS CERT as
per RFC2538bis, "pka" (use DNS PKA), "ldap" (consult the LDAP
server for the domain in question), "keyserver" (use the
currently defined keyserver), as well as arbitrary keyserver
URIs that will be contacted for the key.
* Able to retrieve keys using DNS CERT records as per RFC-2538bis
(currently in draft): http://www.josefsson.org/rfc2538bis
pkgsrc change:
make architecture-specific options really architecture-specific.
* Files containing several signed messages are not allowed any
longer as there is no clean way to report the status of such
files back to the caller. To partly revert to the old behaviour
the new option --allow-multisig-verification may be used.
Noteworthy changes in version 1.4.2 (2005-07-26)
------------------------------------------------
* New command "verify" in the card-edit menu to display
the Private-DO-3. The Admin command has been enhanced to take
the optional arguments "on", "off" and "verify". The latter may
be used to verify the Admin Pin without modifying data; this
allows displaying the Private-DO-4 with the "list" command.
* Rewrote large parts of the card code to optionally make use of a
running gpg-agent. If --use-agent is being used and a gpg-agent
with enabled scdaemon is active, gpg will now divert all card
operations to that daemon. This is required because both,
scdaemon and gpg require exclusive access to the card reader. By
delegating the work to scdaemon, both can peacefully coexist and
scdaemon is able to control the use of the reader. Note that
this requires at least gnupg 1.9.17.
* Fixed a couple of problems with the card reader.
* Command completion is now available in the --edit-key and
--card-edit menus. Filename completion is available at all
filename prompts. Note that completion is only available if the
system provides a readline library.
* New experimental HKP keyserver helper that uses the cURL
library. It is enabled via the configure option --with-libcurl
like the other (also experimental) cURL helpers.
* New key cleaning options that can be used to remove unusable
(expired, revoked) signatures from a key. This is available via
the new "clean" command in --edit-key on a key by key basis, as
well as via the import-clean-sigs/import-clean-uids and
export-clean-sigs/export-clean-uids options for --import-options
and --export-options. These are currently off by default, and
replace the import-unusable-sigs/export-unusable-sigs options
from version 1.4.1.
* New export option export-reset-subkey-passwd.
* New option --limit-card-insert-tries.