swign(1)

Contents

NAME

       swign -- Create a tar archive of a directory with an embedded GPG
       signature.

SYNOPSIS

       swign [options] [-u gpg-name] [--homedir=gpg-homedir] @- # Write to stdout

       swign [options] [-u gpg-name] [--homedir=gpg-homedir] @.  # Sign directory

       swign -S [options] [-u gpg-name] [--homedir=gpg-homedir]

       swign -E [options] [-u gpg-name] [--homedir=gpg-homedir]

DESCRIPTION

       swign reads a PSF (Product Specfication File) to generate and load the
       package catalog into the current directory and then writes the
       cooresponding archive to stdout.  The PSF is read from standard input
       by default.  To use an internally generated PSF with name and revision
       attributes determined from the name of the current directory use '-s.'.

       The PSF is scanned for replacement tokens for tag and revision
       attributes determined from the current directoy name.  It is expected
       that the current directory name have the form: 'tag-revision'.  The
       replacement string has the form '%__NAME' where NAME is 'tag' or
       'revision'.  The directory derived values can be overridden with the
       '--revision' or '--name-version' options.

       swign by default will remove and re-create the ./catalog/ meta-data
       directory, then use GNU tar to write the current directory as a tar
       archive to stdout.  The result is a tar archive written entirely with
       GNU tar that contains an embedded GPG signature in the control file
       './catalog/dfiles/signature'.  The contents of './catalog/' are
       consistent with the POSIX packaging standard ISO/IEC 15068-2:1999.  The
       package layout of the resulting archive is unchanged except for the
       addition of the './catalog' directory.

       The contents of the archive is the contents of the current directory
       ".".  The pathnames in the archive are prefixed by the base name of
       ".".  The owner and group of all the files in the emitted archive are
       specified by the PSF file and command line options.

       In order for the signature to be valid, the file ownerships specified
       in the PSF must be consistent with the 'swign' command.  swign will
       read the PSF to determine these ownerships automatically from the
       'file_permissions' directive unless the '-o' or '-g' command line
       options are used or if this feature is disabled using the '--no-psf-
       detect' option is given.

       The default ownerships for all the files are the current user's owner
       and group.  If the -o (or -g) option is used with a empty string for
       the option arg then the file ownerships of the source files are used.
       This script assumes GNU tar is installed.

       After writing the ./catalog/ file and before writing the archive, the
       file list stored in ./catalog/dfiles/files is compared to the current
       directory contents, if any difference is found the archive is not
       written and error returned.

OPTIONS

       --help
              show help.


       --show-psf
              show the PSF to stdout, and then exit.


       --no-psf-detect
              Disable automatic detection of the PSF's file ownerships policy.


       --no-remove
              Don't remove the ./catalog directory before overwriting.


       --file-ownerships
              Use the file ownerships and permissions of the source files.



       -u, --local-user name
              Use name as the user ID to sign.


       --homedir=DIR
              Set the name of the home directory to DIR.  If not specified
              then use "~/.gnupg".


       -s, --source=FILE
              Specify a PSF file name or one of two special names, '-' for
              stdin, and '.' for the internally generated PSF.


       -T, --show-names-only
              show some info (for help and debugging) and exit.


       -t, --run-sanity-check
              Instead of writing stdout, write the archive to
              ../packageDirName.swigntest.tar.gz and run some sanity tests.


       -S, --sign-only
              Write the ./catalog/ file containing the digest and signature
              into "." and then exit without writing the archive to stdout.
              Same as using "." as the target such as 'swign @.'


       -E, --emit-only
              Do not write the ./catalog/ file containing the digest and
              signature into "." and then write the archive to stdout.  This
              does not affect the directory contents.


       -D, --with-checkdigest FILE
              Include the checkdigest control script sourced from FILE.  This
              is only needed when not supplying a PSF, that is this option
              modifies an internally generated PSF.


       -o, --owner OWNER
              Specify owner.  Use an empty string "" to specify the source
              file owner.


       -g, --group GROUP
              Specify group.  Use an empty string "" to specify the source
              file group.


       --name-version=NAME-REV
              Specify a product tag and revision as dash delimited.


       -r, --revision REV
              Specify a product revision.  This will override a revision part
              of the current directory's name.


       -x format
              Specify the archive format.  Must be one of the formats of
              swpackage.


       @-
              Target, only supported target is standard output.

EXTERNAL EFFECTS

       The program will remove and replace a file in "." named ./catalog/.
       Nothing outside of './catalog/' is modified.
       Standard output is the target for the tar archive.
       When using the '-t' option an archive file is written to
       ../packageDirName.swigntest.tar.gz

       A copy of the PSF is made in /var/tmp/swign$$.  It is normally created
       and erased by the program.

EXAMPLES

       Show the internally generated PSF to stdout.  Change directory into the
       directory to package, then type

          swign -s. --show-psf
          #
          # or specify a owner and group policy
          swign -s. -o 0 -g 0 --show-psf



       Create a signed metadata (i.e. catalog/) directory of a live directory,
       for example /bin

              swign -D $HOME/checkdigest.sh -u "YourGPGNAME" -o "" -g "" @.



       Generate the package (and verify it) using a PSF that you supply on
       standard input.  Change directory into the directory to package, then
       type

          swign -o 0 -g 0 --show-psf | swign -s - -u "gpgName" @- | swverify -d @-



       Example of directory signing and authentication.

          swign -u YourGPGName -s. --file-ownerships -D /HOME/checkdigest.sh --sign-only
          swverify -d @.
          swign  --file-ownerships -emit-only | swverify -d @-


TESTING

       After running successfully with options -S  and -D FILE  the following
       should be true (report no error).

                 swverify --checksig .   # Deprecated form
                     -or-
                 swverify -d @.     # POSIX syntax



       Similarly,

                 swign -u "your GPG Name" @- | swverify --checksig -
                     -or-
                 swign -u "your GPG Name" @- | swverify -d @-

       If a checkdigest script is included then you should unpack the package
       at a new location and run  swverify -d @. in the new location.  The
       checkdigest script is a vendor extension control file that is part of
       the GPG signed ./catalog directory.  As an implementation extension
       behavior the swverify program will execute this script after
       verification of the signature.  The script may take any action at this
       point, but the intention is that it be used to verify the contents of
       the package directory using GNU tools such as md5sum, sha1sum, and tar.

       If a checkdigest script is not included, then the package user will
       have to manually execute the commands that would have been executed by
       the script using the file meta-data in an authenticated INFO file.
       When verifying the unpacked directory form of a package,  the swverify
       program will return an error if the checkdigest script is not present,
       though, it is not required for verification of the tar archive file
       itself using swverify.

       Swign can be used to sign any directory using the file ownerships of
       the source files.  The following commands act as a test of swpackage's
       ability to generate an archive identical to GNU tar.  (Note: the script
       checkdigest.sh is found in ./bin of the source distribution.)

              swign -D $HOME/checkdigest.sh -u "Test User" -o "" -g "" -S;
              swverify -d @.

PSF ATTRIBUTE REPLACEMENT

       A PSF that is provided using the '-s' option will be scanned for a
       special character sequence '%__NAME'  where NAME is either 'tag' or
       'revision'.  'tag' is replaced with the package name portion of the
       currrent directory.  'revision' is replaced with the version portion.

SAMPLE SOURCE PACKAGE PSF

       # PSF.in  -- INPUT file to swign
       # This file contains the replacement macros %__tag and %__revision which
       # are only processed by swign.

       # The distribution object need not have any attributes.
       distribution

       # Attributes in the distribution are mostly ignored although
       # distributor control files that pertain to the distribution
       # as a whole are properly placed here.  Two examples of files
       # that are useful here are:

         AUTHORS < AUTHORS   # This places the file in ./catalog/dfiles
         COPYING < COPYING   # This places the file in ./catalog/dfiles

       # This places the checkdigest script in ./catalog/dfiles/checkdigest
       # For a description of the checkdigest script see the info document for
       # 'swbis' or the swverify manual page.
       # The checkdigest script is a verification hook for swverify used when
       # verifying the unpacked tarball (i.e. the package path name
       # prefix directory).

         checkdigest  < bin/checkdigest.sh

       # The vendor object provides attributes to describe
       # the distributor.  At this time, how these attributes
       # are used is not addressed.

       # The Vendor object is optional
       vendor
          the_term_vendor_is_misleading True  # One of: True, False
          tag shortName    # Other vendor tags could be the short name of your
                                # organization name, or  your initials, etc.
          title Your Name
          qualifier author
          description "Maintainer of somepackage"

       # Most packages do not need a bundle.  At this point in swbis'
       # development 'bundles' are mostly ignored.  Bundles are meta
       # packages, it is an object that contains other bundles and
       # products whether included in this distribution tarball or not.

       # The Bundle object is optional
       bundle
          tag somepackage

       # The product object contains the attributes of common
       # interest such as the description, version and name.

       product
          description "somepackage description
       can be mult-line"
          tag %__tag                       # This is the package name
          revision %__revision             # This is the package version
          vendor_tag shortName             # Match vendor.tag above
          title "somepackage - software"
          control_directory ""             # Empty string, Important

       # The fileset object contains the files.  The tag, revision,
       # and description attributes are mostly ignored.
       # At this time swbis supports only one (1) fileset.

       fileset
           tag sources
           control_directory ""   # Empty string, Important
           title somepackage source code
           description "The source distribution of somepackage"

       # file_permissions:
       # Here is an important policy.  This will cause 'swpackage'
       # to create the tar achive with all files owned by uid and
       # gid zero (0), the user name 'root' will not be included
       # in the uname and gname tar header fields.  This is similar
       # to the effect of GNU tar options --numeric --owner=root
       # --group=root .
       # To use the name and ids of the source files delete the line
       # or reset the file_permissions adding after or changing to:
       #    file_permissions -u 000
       #
       # NOTE:  Using "file_permissions -o 0 -g 0"  is preferred
       # because it will allow the end user to more easily verify
       # the directory (unpacked) form of the package using standard
       # non-swbis tools.

       #   file_permissions -u 000  # To use ownerships of source files
           file_permissions -o 0 -g 0

       # The following two (2) lines mean include every file in the current
       # directory.

           directory .
           file *

       # You want to exclude the files in ./catalog because it
       # should not be part of the paylaod section.  This is
       # mandatory.

          exclude catalog

       # You may also want other excludes

          exclude CVS
          exclude */CVS
          # exclude .svn
          # exclude */.svn

       # End of PSF

ENVIRONMENT

       SWPACKAGEPASSFD
              Sets the swpackage --passphrase-fd option.  Set the option arg
              to a integer value of the file descriptor, or to "env" to read
              the passphrase from the environment variable
              SWPACKAGEPASSPHRASE, or to "agent" to cause gpg to use gpg-
              agent, or "tty" to read from the terminal.


       SWPACKAGEPASSPHRASE
              Use the value as the passphrase if swpackage's --passphrase-fd
              is set to "env"


       GNUPGHOME
              Sets the --gpg-home option of swpackage.


       GNUPGNAME
              Sets the --gpg-name option of swpackage, which is turn set the
              --local-user option of gpg.


RETURN VALUE

       0 on success, non-zero on failure.

FILES

        <path>/catalog/

SEE ALSO

       info swbis

       swpackage(8), gpg

IDENTIFICATION

        swign(1): The source directory signing utility of the swbis project.
        Author: J. Lowe [email protected]
        Version: 1.13
        Last Updated: 2008-01
        Copying: GNU Free Documentation License

BUGS

       Symbolic links in a package are problematic for verifying the unpacked
       form of a package since the modification time is not preserved.  They
       have no affect on verification of the tar archive file using
       'swverify'.

       If a directory is signed using the '-S' option and has a file path
       greater than 99 chars in length then it will be unverifiable if the
       'ustar0' format and GNU tar 1.13.25 was used.

       Verification of the directory form of a distribution (i.e. the
       installed tarball path name prefix) such as running 'swverify -d @.'
       after running 'swign -S' will fail if the order of directory entries is
       not compatible with traditional Unix file system directory entry
       ordering.  This incompatibility may be present in the Ext3, reiserFS,
       and DarwinOS et.al file systems.

       The file ownership policy of the PSF, the checkdigest script (if any)
       and the command line options must agree.  The default file ownership
       policies of this program are suited to packaged products where file
       user and group ownerships are not a critical feature.



                                                                      swign(1)