/mandos/trunk

To get this branch, use:
bzr branch http://bzr.recompile.se/loggerhead/mandos/trunk

« back to all changes in this revision

Viewing changes to intro.xml

  • Committer: Teddy Hogeborn
  • Date: 2019-03-03 01:08:58 UTC
  • Revision ID: teddy@recompile.se-20190303010858-c2l0sr6ekvzo7rlb
mandos-ctl: Separate determining what to do and actually doing it

* mandos-ctl (defaultkeywords): Removed; value moved into
                                PrintTableCmd.
  (Command): New abstract base class for commands to be run.
  (PrintCmd, PropertyCmd): New abstract classes for commands.
  (ValueArgumentMixIn, MillisecondsValueArgumentMixIn): New mixins for
                                                        commands.
  (PrintTableCmd, DumpJSONCmd, IsEnabledCmd, RemoveCmd, ApproveCmd,
  DenyCmd, EnableCmd, DisableCmd, BumpTimeoutCmd, StartCheckerCmd,
  StopCheckerCmd, ApproveByDefaultCmd, DenyByDefaultCmd,
  SetCheckerCmd, SetTimeoutCmd, SetExtendedTimeoutCmd,
  SetApprovalDelayCmd, SetApprovalDurationCmd): New commands.
  (main): Don't look directly at options and do things; instead go
          through all options and add commands to a list, then run all
          commands on clients.

Show diffs side-by-side

added added

removed removed

Lines of Context:
1
1
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2
2
<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3
3
"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
4
 
<!ENTITY TIMESTAMP "2018-02-08">
 
4
<!ENTITY TIMESTAMP "2019-02-10">
5
5
<!ENTITY % common SYSTEM "common.ent">
6
6
%common;
7
7
]>
38
38
      <year>2016</year>
39
39
      <year>2017</year>
40
40
      <year>2018</year>
 
41
      <year>2019</year>
41
42
      <holder>Teddy Hogeborn</holder>
42
43
      <holder>Björn Påhlsson</holder>
43
44
    </copyright>
67
68
      The computers run a small client program in the initial RAM disk
68
69
      environment which will communicate with a server over a network.
69
70
      All network communication is encrypted using TLS.  The clients
70
 
      are identified by the server using an OpenPGP key; each client
 
71
      are identified by the server using a TLS public key; each client
71
72
      has one unique to it.  The server sends the clients an encrypted
72
73
      password.  The encrypted password is decrypted by the clients
73
 
      using the same OpenPGP key, and the password is then used to
 
74
      using a separate OpenPGP key, and the password is then used to
74
75
      unlock the root file system, whereupon the computers can
75
76
      continue booting normally.
76
77
    </para>
200
201
      <para>
201
202
        No.  The server only gives out the passwords to clients which
202
203
        have <emphasis>in the TLS handshake</emphasis> proven that
203
 
        they do indeed hold the OpenPGP private key corresponding to
204
 
        that client.
 
204
        they do indeed hold the private key corresponding to that
 
205
        client.
205
206
      </para>
206
207
    </refsect2>
207
208