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  • Committer: Teddy Hogeborn
  • Date: 2019-02-11 06:14:29 UTC
  • mto: (237.7.594 trunk)
  • mto: This revision was merged to the branch mainline in revision 376.
  • Revision ID: teddy@recompile.se-20190211061429-n6n5zk29iatshlb3
Fix Debian package dependencies

* debian/control (Build-Depends): Changed GnuTLS dependencies to
                                  "libgnutls30 (>= 3.3.0),
                                  libgnutls28-dev (>= 3.6.6) |
                                  libgnutls28-dev (<< 3.6.0)".  (We
                                  can't depend on the virtual package
                                  "gnutls-dev", since we need the
                                  version restrictions.)
  (Package: mandos/Depends): Remove dependency on libgnutls28-dev
                             package.
  (Package: mandos/Suggests): New; set to "libc6-dev,
                              c-compiler". (Used to find value of
                              "SO_BINDTODEVICE").
  (Package: mandos-client/Depends): Don't depend on openssl anymore;
                                    instead depend on either a
                                    gnutls-bin (>= 3.6.6) (in which
                                    case TLS key generation will
                                    work), or on libgnutls30 (<<
                                    3.6.0) (in which case TLS key
                                    generation will not be needed).

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  program in the initial <acronym>RAM</acronym> disk environment which
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  will communicate with a server over a network.  All network
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  communication is encrypted using <acronym>TLS</acronym>.  The
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  clients are identified by the server using an OpenPGP key; each
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  client has one unique to it.  The server sends the clients an
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  encrypted password.  The encrypted password is decrypted by the
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  clients using the same OpenPGP key, and the password is then used to
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  unlock the root file system, whereupon the computers can continue
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  booting normally.
 
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  clients are identified by the server using a TLS key; each client
 
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  has one unique to it.  The server sends the clients an encrypted
 
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  password.  The encrypted password is decrypted by the clients using
 
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  a separate OpenPGP key, and the password is then used to unlock the
 
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  root file system, whereupon the computers can continue booting
 
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  normally.
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</para>