On 2020-01-31 11:34, Manuel Bouyer wrote:
On Fri, Jan 31, 2020 at 11:08:05AM +0100, Johnny Billquist wrote:
On 2020-01-31 10:25, yarl-baudig%mailoo.org@localhost wrote:
That's exactly the answer I was waiting and hoping for. Thank you.
I'll follow tech-pkg from now on. Packages must be signed.
And with that signature, you know that what you got from the server was not
tampered with during transport to you, which is the same thing https would
give you. And which still means you have no idea if the software is sane,
proper, does what you think, or hasn't been tampered with.
No it's not the same thing.
package signature guarantees that the data have not been modified since it
has been built.
https guarantees that the data have not been modified between the http server
and client. It doesn't tell anything about what happened to the binary pkg
between the build server and the http server at the time you download it.
Right you are. I was too fast and loose on that one.
Signatures are better in that sense. However, you then also have to trust
that the signature have not been altered along with a alteration of the
package... So does a signature really tell you much at all? I guess if you
then had signatures with public/private keys. But then again, that don't
really work if you have multiple places doing builds, unless they then share
the private key, but that in turn leads to the question about how private do
you then think that key is?