[Nut-upsdev] [nut-commits] svn commit r2832 - in trunk/docs: . website

Charles Lepple clepple at gmail.com
Fri Feb 25 02:35:35 UTC 2011


On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 10:36 AM, Arnaud Quette <aquette.dev at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Charles,
>
> 2011/2/18 Charles Lepple <clepple at gmail.com>
>>
>> On Feb 17, 2011, at 8:41 AM, Arnaud Quette wrote:
>>
>> Hi John,
>>
>> 2011/1/17 John Bayly
>>>
>>> On 14/01/2011 20:40, Arnaud Quette wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Author: aquette
>>>> Date: Fri Jan 14 20:40:06 2011
>>>> New Revision: 2832
>>>> URL: http://trac.networkupstools.org/projects/nut/changeset/2832
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> +link:http://www.networkupstools.org/source/2.6/nut-2.6.0.tar.gz.sig[signature]
>>>
>>> May I suggest that you also provide checksums for the tarball? I'm
>>> updating the FreeBSD port, and wanted to verify the SHA256 sum. As it's been
>>> downloaded from the NUT website, I know the odds of the source being tainted
>>> are astronomical, but if it's for a distribution, I thought I'd be extra
>>> cautious.
>>> As it is I've verified the GPG sig (never used it before) and used the
>>> computed SHA sum.
>>
>> I've added a SHA256 hash, and referenced it in the download section:
>> http://www.networkupstools.org/download.html
>>
>> I've not yet updated the documentation, but it's simple as downloading the
>> nut archive and the matching .sha256 file. Then using:
>> $ sha256sum -c nut-2.6.0.tar.gz.sha256
>>
>> Arnaud,
>> I go through a similar set of steps for Fink packages. If there is a GPG
>> signature, I'll verify that, since it provides a little more chain-of-trust
>> information. However, if I am just downloading a single file, it is
>> typically easier to just verify the hash by inspection - that is, with the
>> SHA256 on the web page rather than a separate file download.
>> Also, there is a bit more of an audit trail if the hash is in our web
>> pages in SVN.
>
> I may be too far away, in other consideration...
> but, are you saying that it would be better to embed the SHA256 hash
> directly on the web page, or simply that searching for this file may be too
> hard for the user?
>
> for the former, the web page always need a modification for new publication
> (svn commit then push on www.n.o). So changing the stable release name, and
> at the same time adding the hash would not be a problem.

I like this because there is a history of the hashes in SVN. The
.sha256 file is not version controlled.

> for the latter, the file is named <release-file>.sha256, so for example
> nut-2.6.0.tar.gz.sha256, which allows checking automation.

I guess I'm not sure I see the advantage of putting it in a separate file.

-- 
- Charles Lepple



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