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Commit 8321431c authored by Thorsten Alteholz's avatar Thorsten Alteholz
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Import Debian changes 4.21-1

pollen (4.21-1) sid; urgency=medium

  * first upload to Debian
  * debian/control: use dh11
  * debian/control: set standard to 4.3.0
  * debian/control: remove anerd mentions
  * debian/copyright: use https for copyright-format-uri
  * debian/rules: dh11 does not allow "--with systemd"
  * remove deprecated upstart init files
  * remove unused overrides

pollen (4.21-0ubuntu1) yakkety; urgency=medium

  * check_pollen:
    - note the number of short bytes in the error log message

pollen (4.20-0ubuntu1) wily; urgency=medium

  * debian/pollen.upstart: LP: #1505473
    - remove typo in the upstart config which was preventing the service from starting
  * rebuild the packages for upload

pollen (4.19-0ubuntu1) wily; urgency=medium

  * debian/pollen.upstart: LP: #1505473
    - remove typo in the upstart config which was preventing the service from starting

pollen (4.18-0ubuntu1) wily; urgency=medium

  * pollen.go:
    - add the "available"  word to the log

pollen (4.17-0ubuntu1) unstable; urgency=medium

  * debian/pollen.postrm:
    - clear out certificates on purge
  * debian/pollen.default:
    - quote the variable definition, for consistency
  * debian/pollen.postinst:
    - fix ssl cert generation, country must be <2 chars
  * debian/pollen.service:
    - put braces around environment variables; required to work at all
  * pollen.go, usr.bin.pollen:
    - log the entropy bits before and after the transaction

pollen (4.16-0ubuntu1) vivid; urgency=medium

  [ Matthias Klose ]
  * debian/control:
    - Build everywhere

pollen (4.15-0ubuntu1) vivid; urgency=medium

  [ Didier Roche ]
  * debian/control, debian/pollen.service, debian/rules:
    - Add systemd unit, following similar restart on failure and device
    checking logic
    - Bump Standards-Version

pollen (4.14-0ubuntu1) vivid; urgency=medium

  * pollen.go: LP: #1383738
    - remove SSLv3 support

pollen (4.13-0ubuntu1) vivid; urgency=medium

  * debian/pollen-restart.upstart, debian/pollen.upstart, debian/rules:
    - LP: #1386052
    - add a new upstart job that restarts pollen any time the rsyslog server
      is restarted
    - this is necessary to work around a bug in the golang syslog library
      where syslog restarts break logging
      + https://code.google.com/p/go/issues/detail?id=2264#c8

pollen (4.12-0ubuntu1) utopic; urgency=medium

  * debian/control:
    - recommend rng-tools;  we can do this, since pollen is in universe
  * debian/pollen.postinst:
    - minor change to the default self-signed cert;  use 'localhost'
      for the hostname;  this is useful for testing pollinate against
      the localhost with a self-signed cert
  * README:
    - update docs;  pollinate no longer runs daily by default
  * README:
    - update some docs
  * check_pollen:
    - ensure that the nagios check catches log failures

pollen (4.11-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=medium

  * pollen_test.go:
    - fix FTBFS
    - hardcode device to /dev/urandom in unit tests, otherwise, our
      entropy starved vm-based builders will fail the unit tests
      and fail the build

pollen (4.10-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * debian/control, debian/pollen.default, pollen.go, usr.bin.pollen:
    - LP: #1293958
    - suggest rng-tools (universe), which is needed to leverage tpm for
      /dev/random entropy
    - change default entropy source for pollen server to /dev/random
    - update inline configuration documentation to reflect reality
    - add rw of /dev/random to our apparmor whitelist

pollen (4.9-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * debian/rules: LP: #1288807
    - fix FTBFS, build using golang 'go build' rather than gccgo

pollen (4.8-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  [ JuanJo Ciarlante and Dustin Kirkland ]
  * check_pollen:
    - use the new -t|--testing flag, to verify communications with the
      server, runable as a non-privileged user, but not affecting the
      local PRNG

pollen (4.7-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  [ John Arbash Meinel ]
  * .gitignore, pollen.go, pollen_test.go:
    - This changes the 'handler' from being just a func() using global
      state to being a struct with local state.
    - It then moves the things like dev and log to being members of the
      struct, with interfaces that let us override them in the test suite.
    - It then adds a bunch of tests about how we handle failures, errors,
      logging, the size flag, etc.
    - The interfaces also mean that we won't try to spam syslog while running
      the test suite.
    - Another small change is that if you do:
         pollen -https-port=""
      Then it won't try to bind to the HTTP port with a cert.
    - Since I'm not the official source for pollen, it helped for testing at
      least the HTTP requests manually.
    - This also fixes the help text for "-size" since it doesn't actually
      change how much content we send on the wire, but how much content we
      read from /dev/urandom (but it adds tests for that fact).
    - go fmt, and some formatting tweaks
    - actually do the right formatting
    - use microsecond timing (ms was always 0)
    - capture the length of time serving requests takes

  [ Dustin Kirkland ]
  * pollen.go:
    - put brackets around request length of time value

pollen (4.6-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  [ Caleb Spare ]
  * pollen.go:
    - Require the challenge query-string param to be provided
    - don't create the random device, if it doesn't exist

  [ Dustin Kirkland ]
  * pollen_test.go:
    - update test to handle required challenge string
  * pollen.go:
    - incorporate feedback from Adam Langley
    - catch errors reading the random device
    - add a note as to why we're checksumming the random seed
    - update message when challenge empty

  [ Caleb Spare and Dustin Kirkland ]
  * debian/pollen.upstart, pollen.8, pollen.go:
    - Use flags rather than positional arguments, and plumb bytes argument
      through

  [ Dustin Kirkland and Matt Croydon ]
  * debian/pollen.default, debian/pollen.upstart, pollen.8, pollen.go:
    - add support for specifying the TLS cert and key as command line
      flags

pollen (4.5-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  [ Caleb Spare ]
  * pollen.go, pollen_test.go:
    - Bring naming in line with Go conventions
    - Use shorter parameter names for an http.HandlerFunc
    - Remove an unnecessary string conversion
    - Print useful error if wrong arguments are given rather than crashing
    - Don't ignore errors
    - Rename http[s]Port to http[s]Addr for accuracy
    - Handle errors starting the http servers
    - Change some naming in the test
    - Read from the provided device rather than always /dev/urandom

pollen (4.4-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  [ Casey Marshall ]
  * debian/control, debian/rules, Makefile, pollen.go, pollen_test.go:
    - add unit tests for pollen server

  [ Dustin Kirkland ]
  * debian/pollen.lintian-overrides:
    - override expected Lintian gripes

pollen (4.3-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * check_pollen:
    - ensure that the nagios script uses the -r|--reseed option

pollen (4.2-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * pollen.go:
    - remove redundant line
  * README:
    - remove deprecated bit of documentation

pollen (4.1-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * debian/control:
    - build on amd64 and i386 only
    - these are the only builds I've been able to confirm when building
      with golang-go
    - note that this undoes the fix for LP: #1274074, but that's the
      way it has to be, until either golang-go supports more architectures
      or gccgo doesn't suck

pollen (4.0-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * check_pollen, debian/control, debian/copyright,
    debian/pollinate.default, debian/pollinate.install,
    debian/pollinate.manpages, debian/pollinate.postinst,
    debian/pollinate.postrm, debian/pollinate.upstart,
    entropy.ubuntu.com.pem, INSTALL, Makefile, pollinate, pollinate.1:
    - split pollen and pollinate into separate projects and packages
    - re-enable the pollen build

pollen (3.17-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * pollinate:
    - improve kernel debug info
  * debian/control, debian/pollen.install, Makefile:
    - TEMPORARILY disabling the building of pollen, until
      either gccgo or golang-go get promoted to main
    - this should be reverted as soon as a go compiler
      is available as a build dep

pollen (3.16-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * pollinate:
    - minor standardization of the user agent string

pollen (3.15-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * debian/control: LP: #1274074
    - build on any architecure, now that we build with gccgo

pollen (3.14-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * debian/pollinate.postinst:
    - fix order of operations, packaging breakage

pollen (3.13-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * README:
    - fix more minor typos
    - explain "did some work"
  * debian/rules, Makefile:
    - fix the build for gccgo
    - must use the -g parameter
    - don't strip binaries
    - these are ugly, but are the result of gccgo vs golang-go
  * pollinate:
    - remove unused variable $cmd
  * debian/pollinate.upstart:
    - our upstart job should start on starting cloud-init, to ensure that
      we get run before generating SSH keys
  * debian/pollinate.install, debian/pollinate.postrm, pollen.go,
    pollinate, pollinate.cron.d, README:
    - drop the tag and cronjob per feedback from sarnold in the code audit
      in LP: #1246098
  * debian/pollinate.default, pollinate:
    - add helpful debug info to user agent, similar to chrome and firefox,
  * debian/pollinate.postinst, debian/pollinate.postrm,
    debian/pollinate.upstart, pollinate, pollinate.1:
    - use a pollinate user, rather than the daemon user
    - by default, only run pollinate once per system instantiation
    - offer reseeding as an option, though
  * debian/control:
    - need to depend on adduser

pollen (3.12-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * README:
    - minor documentation feedback from Kees Cook
    - note that pollen servers can of course be run internally
  * debian/control:
    - clean up package descriptions a bit

pollen (3.11-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * README:
    - updates to the README
  * debian/copyright, pollinate:
    - the client should really be GPLv3, rather than AGPL
  * debian/copyright:
    - point to the local copy of GPLv3 license

pollen (3.10-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * debian/pollinate.cron.d, debian/pollinate.postinst, pollinate:
    - have each client choose a random time of day to reseed,
      at first run, rather than at package installation time
    - this requires a very clever hack(!)
    - install a "template" at /etc/cron.d/pollinate, with __MINUTE__
      and __HOUR__ symbols that should be replaced by the client,
      at first run
    - cron requires that /etc/cron.d/pollinate be owned by root
    - ideally we'd run the pollinate script as a non-root user (ie, daemon),
      by specifying the daemon user in upstart and in the cronjob
    - but daemon can't write to /etc/cron.d/pollinate, if it's owned by root
    - so here's the hack...
      + the upstart job installed by the package has "setuid root"
      + on its first run (which will be either at package install time, or
        at boot), it will run as root and: a) update the cronjob to a random
        time, and b) update the upstart job to run as daemon
      + woot
      + this works because both are conffiles
  * debian/pollen.postinst, debian/pollinate.postinst,
    debian/pollinate.postrm, pollinate:
    - use /var/cache/pollinate, rather than /var/lib/pollinate
    - this should make it more obvious that this data can be cleared out,
      and should be cleared out, on re-bundles or snapshots and reimages
  * debian/control, Makefile:
    - switch from golang-go to gcc-go, so that we can get this source
      package into Ubuntu main
  * pollinate, pollinate.1:
    - separate the pool and the server variables
  * debian/control:
    - no need to depend on bsdutils, it's essential
    - pollen depends on adduser
  * usr.bin.pollen:
    - update apparmor profile to allow reading of /usr/bin/pollen
      - oddly, this was introduced when switching compilers
  * debian/copyright:
    - lintian/dep5 cleanup

pollen (3.9-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * debian/pollinate.default:
    - don't use quiet by default, do use binary
  * pollinate:
    - save ourselves an unneeded fork
  * debian/control:
    - drop haveged as a suggests
  * debian/pollinate.default, debian/pollinate.install,
    entropy.ubuntu.com.pem:
    - install entropy.ubuntu.com.pem's certificate and intermediate
      chain, to get rid of --insecure curl option
  * debian/control, pollinate:
    - log to the system log, using the logger utility
    - add a final message, noting successful (re-)seed
    - have pollinate depend on bsdutils, which provides logger

pollen (3.8-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * debian/pollinate.default, debian/pollinate.postinst,
    debian/pollinate.upstart, pollinate:
    - fix the (broken) options setting in the pollinate default file
    - change the tag creation to happen during the pollinate runtime,
      rather than at package installation; this makes it more useful
      for downstreams and remixes of Ubuntu
    - ensure the daemon user owns the /var/lib/pollinate directory
    - run the pollinate upstart script as the daemon user
  * debian/pollinate.cron.d, debian/pollinate.postinst,
    debian/pollinate.postrm:
    - run the pollinate cronjob (reseed) once per day, rather than once
      per hour
    - purge pollinate files more effectively

pollen (3.7-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * debian/control:
    - demote haveged to suggests, based on feedback from Seth Arnold
      in LP: #1246098
  * pollinate:
    - ensure both -c and -i can be used, without losing CURL_OPTS,
      as identified by Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
  * pollinate:
    - drop unused IPV6 variable, per review by Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
  * debian/pollen.postinst:
    - use pollen as our fake email address, suggested by Seth Arnold
      in LP: #1246098
  * debian/pollinate.cron.d:
    - add notes in the comments about NIST DRBG Special Publication 800-90A
      recommendations on reseeding
    - add notes in the comments about why we choose a random minute
    - fix a bug, that was causing the cronjob to run far more frequently
      than desired
    - Addresses some issues raised by Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
  * debian/pollen.upstart, pollen.8, pollen.go:
    - add DEVICE as the 3rd argument to the pollen server in the upstart
      script
    - test that DEVICE is a special in upstart
    - document that the DEVICE is now a required argument
  * debian/pollen.install, Makefile, pollen:
    - build static binary at package build time, rather than dynamically
      compiling at each run, per feedback from Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
    - use a very simple, basic Makefile
  * debian/control:
    - move golang-go to a build-dependency, rather than a runtime dependency
  * debian/control, debian/pollen.postinst, debian/pollen.postrm,
    debian/pollen.upstart:
    - create a new user, pollen:daemon, in the postinst, remove in postrm
    - depend on libcap2-bin, which provides setcap
    - use setcap to allow the pollen binary to bind to privileged ports
    - run the pollen daemon as the pollen user
    - per feedback from Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
  * debian/pollen.upstart:
    - use setuid in upstart to run the pollen daemon as the pollen user
  * debian/pollen.postinst:
    - change pollen user's shell to /bin/false
  * debian/control, debian/pollen.install, debian/pollen.postinst,
    debian/rules, usr.bin.pollen:
    - add an apparmor profile for the pollen server, per suggestion
      by Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
    - big thanks to Jamie Strandboge and Seth Arnold for assistance
  * debian/pollinate.postinst:
    - these chowns are not necessary; thanks for catching Michael Terry
      in LP: #1246098
  * debian/control: LP: #1259014
    - have the pollen server depend on ent, which is used by the
      check_pollen nagios script

pollen (3.6-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * pollinate:
    - remove sourcing of an rc config file from $HOME, per security
      review from Seth Arnold
  * pollinate.1:
    - update documentation to note that multiple servers can be specified
      on the command line
  * debian/pollinate.default:
    - use the entropy.ubuntu.com beta site for testing
    - note that we're specifying the --insecure option here, as this is
      very much a work in progress
  * debian/pollinate.upstart:
    - start pollinate when we have networking up and running, or
      when we start ssh
  * pollen.go:
    - drop the nanosecond timestamp collection on the server
    - a good server should have real entropy hardware, and a busy server
      will have network traffic entropy already captured by the kernel
    - Suggestion by Seth Arnold in a security review
  * debian/pollen.default, pollinate:
    - drop timestamp based salting, not terribly valuable
    - per security review by Seth Arnold
  * pollinate:
    - drop unused $bin variable

pollen (3.5-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low

  * README:
    - enhance and update design documentation
  * debian/copyright:
    - update to DEP-5 format

pollen (3.4-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low

  * check_pollen, debian/control:
    - improve the nagios check
    - warn if:
      + insufficient bytes are retrieved
      + less than 5-bits-per-byte of entropy are calculated
      + an out of whack arithmetic mean
    - have pollen server recommend ent, which is used by the nagios check

pollen (3.3-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low

  * pollen-nagios-check:
    - added nagios check script
  * check_pollen, debian/pollen.install:
    - rename check script and install in nagios plugins directory

pollen (3.2-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low

  * README:
    - update design documentation
  * pollinate, pollinate.1:
    - support printing random seed to standard out
    - useful for debugging
    - add a -q|--quiet option to silence log messages
  * pollinate, pollinate.1:
    - add an option for binary data output
  * debian/pollen.default, debian/pollen.upstart, pollen.8, pollen.go:
    - re-enable support for both encrypted and non-encrypted connections
    - use a go subroutine to serve both out of the same process
    - document these changes
    - default to 80 and 443, allow admin to override easily via config
  * debian/control:
    - update package descriptions
  * pollinate:
    - default to, but do not force, https

pollen (3.1-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low

  * pollen.go
    - use a global for the dev writer
    - write a few more timestamps into the mix during the response
      handler
    - change logging verbiage
  * pollinate:
    - use a single temp directory, rather than multiple temp files
    - use a trap to cleanup the temp directory
    - uptdate the logging verbiage
    - use an etc default file if available
  * debian/pollen.default:
    - drop "TCP_" in the TCP_PORT variable
  * pollen.go:
    - just use two timestamps
  * pollinate:
    - improve usability; prepend https
  * debian/pollinate.cron.d, debian/pollinate.default,
    debian/pollinate.upstart, pollinate, pollinate.1:
    - use an upstart job, rather than an @reboot cronjob,
      to do the initial prng seeding
    - fix the default config file

pollen (3.0-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low

  * anerd, anerd-server-tcp.1 => anerd-server.1, anerd-server-tcp =>
    anerd-server, anerd-server-tcp.go => anerd-server.go, anerd-server-
    udp.1, anerd-server-udp.c, configure.ac, debian/anerd-
    client.default, debian/anerd-server.anerd-server-tcp.upstart =>
    debian/anerd-server.upstart, debian/anerd-server.anerd-server-
    udp.upstart, debian/anerd-server.default, debian/anerd-
    server.install, debian/anerd-server.manpages, debian/control,
    debian/rules, Makefile.am:
    - completely deprecate the UDP operation of both the client and
      the server
    - the TLS server over TCP is the only supported protocol going
      forward
    - this will necessitate a major version bump
  * anerd.1 => pollinate.1, anerd => pollinate, anerd-server.1 =>
    pollen.8, anerd-server.go => pollen.go, anerd-server => pollen,
    ChangeLog, debian/anerd-client.cron.d => debian/pollinate.cron.d,
    debian/anerd-client.default => debian/pollinate.default,
    debian/anerd-client.install => debian/pollinate.install,
    debian/anerd-client.manpages => debian/pollinate.manpages,
    debian/anerd-client.postinst => debian/pollinate.postinst,
    debian/anerd-client.postrm => debian/pollinate.postrm, debian/anerd-
    server.default => debian/pollen.default, debian/anerd-server.install
    => debian/pollen.install, debian/anerd-server.manpages =>
    debian/pollen.manpages, debian/anerd-server.postinst =>
    debian/pollen.postinst, debian/anerd-server.upstart =>
    debian/pollen.upstart, debian/control, debian/copyright,
    img/anerd_14.png, img/anerd_192.png, img/anerd_64.png,
    img/anerd.png, initramfs/hooks/anerd-client-udp,
    initramfs/scripts/init-bottom/anerd, NEWS, README, === removed
    directory initramfs, === removed directory initramfs/hooks, ===
    removed directory initramfs/scripts, === removed directory
    initramfs/scripts/init-bottom:
    - rename anerd server/client to pollen / pollinate
      to reflect that this data is intended to "seed" a random
      number generator
  * debian/control, debian/pollen.manpages:
    - package maintenace for package/project rename
    - move manpage to section 8
  * pollen.8, pollinate, pollinate.1:
    - documentation updated
  * debian/control, pollen.8, pollinate:
    - update some documentation and descriptions
  * img/pollen_14.png, img/pollen_192.png, img/pollen_64.png:
    - added new pollen logos
  * debian/control:
    - drop suggests

anerd (2.4-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low

  * anerd-client-tcp.go:
    - deprecated, use the shell (curl) one for better timestamping
      salt
  * anerd-server-tcp.go:
    - log user-agent and nanosecond timestamp
  * anerd, anerd-server-tcp.go:
    - rename "tip" to "challenge", use for challenge/response
    - verify challenge/response, to ensure personalized communication
  * anerd:
    - use a common logging function throughout
  * anerd-server-tcp.go:
    - open syslog only once
  * anerd, debian/control:
    - lower socat to a suggests, while still requiring curl
    - dynamically check for socat/curl and error appropriately
    - update package description
    - recommend haveged on the server
  * debian/anerd-server.default:
    - do not run the UDP, by default; local admin can enable by
      setting a port in /etc/default/anerd-server
  * anerd, anerd-server-tcp.go, debian/anerd-client.postinst,
    debian/anerd-server.postrm:
    - rename uuid to tag
    - generate on package install, remove on purge
  * anerd, debian/anerd-server.postrm => debian/anerd-client.postrm:
    - silence search for helper utilities
    - fix maintainer script name
  * anerd:
    - silence missing tag error messages for now

anerd (2.3-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low

  [ Matthias Klose ]
  * debian/control: LP: #1139188
    - Don't build anerd-server on powerpc (no golang-go, prevents
      migration from raring-proposed to raring).

anerd (2.2-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low

  * === added directory img, img/anerd_14.png, img/anerd_192.png,
    img/anerd_64.png, img/anerd.png:
    - added icons
  * anerd-server-tcp.go:
    - gofmt
  * anerd-server-tcp.go:
    - make this code more go-like, after some code review with Tim Penney
  * anerd-server-tcp.go:
    - drop unnecessary json formatting

anerd (2.1-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low

  * anerd-client-tcp.go:
    - default to anerd.us
  * anerd, anerd-client-tcp.go, anerd-server-tcp.go, debian/anerd-
    client.default:
    - anerd.us is now serving on 443
  * anerd, anerd-server-tcp.go:
    - add syslog logging to the anerd tcp server
    - use post for the tip from the anerd tcp client
  * anerd, debian/control:
    - use uuidgen -r for uuid and tip
  * anerd, anerd-server-udp.c:
    - add UDP to syslog messages
    - fix uuid related typo
    - add --insecure option
  * anerd, anerd-client-tcp.go, anerd-server-tcp.go, debian/control:
    - use sha512sum rather than uuidgen
  * anerd, debian/anerd-client.cron.d:
    - run at reboot, and hourly thereafter
    - shorten some function names
  * debian/anerd-client.cron.d, debian/anerd-client.postinst:
    - randomize the hourly cronjob to distribute load on the
      server, if possible
  * debian/control:
    - fix a lintian annoyance
  * anerd, anerd-server-tcp.go, anerd-server-udp.c:
    - drop byte counts in logging, as these can be misleading
  * anerd-server-tcp.go:
    - salt data with nanosecond timestamp

anerd (2.0-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low

  * anerd-tcp.go:
    - pretty print the json
  * anerd-client, anerd-client.1, anerd-tcp, anerd-tcp.1, anerd-tcp.go,
    anerd-udp.1, anerd-udp.c, debian/anerd-server.anerd-tcp.upstart,
    debian/anerd-server.anerd-udp.upstart, debian/control:
    - drop the "asynchronous" part of aNerd, this really isn't
      necessary in the description anymore
  * anerd-tcp.go:
    - reduce the default size to 64 bytes, which is sufficient to seed
      any random number generator
  * anerd-tcp.go, debian/anerd-server.default:
    - change the default size to 64 bytes
    - add some notes in the comments in the configuration file
    - always uses TLS encryption for the TCP implementation
  * anerd-tcp.1 => anerd-server-tcp.1, anerd-tcp => anerd-server-tcp,
    anerd-tcp.go => anerd-server-tcp.go, anerd-udp.1 => anerd-server-
    udp.1, anerd-udp.c => anerd-server-udp.c, debian/anerd-server.anerd-
    tcp.upstart => debian/anerd-server.anerd-server-tcp.upstart,
    debian/anerd-server.anerd-udp.upstart => debian/anerd-server.anerd-
    server-udp.upstart, debian/anerd-server.install, debian/anerd-
    server.manpages, debian/rules, Makefile.am:
    - rename anerd-tcp to anerd-server-tcp
    - rename anerd-udp to anerd-server-udp
  * debian/anerd-client.default:
    - change to the new anerd.us server, which supports TCP, TLS, and UDP
  * anerd, anerd-client, anerd-client.1 => anerd.1, anerd-client-tcp.go,
    anerd-server-tcp, debian/anerd-client.cron.d, debian/anerd-
    client.default, debian/anerd-client.install, debian/anerd-
    client.manpages, debian/anerd-server.anerd-server-tcp.upstart,
    debian/anerd-server.install, debian/control, initramfs/hooks/anerd-
    client => initramfs/hooks/anerd-client-udp, initramfs/scripts/init-
    bottom/anerd-client => initramfs/scripts/init-bottom/anerd,
    Makefile.am:
    - major rework of client, combine udp/tcp clients into a single
      shell script
  * anerd, anerd-client-tcp.go, anerd-server-tcp, anerd-server-tcp.go,
    anerd-server-udp.c, COPYING, debian/copyright,
    initramfs/scripts/init-bottom/anerd:
    - changed license back to AGPL
  * debian/anerd-client.default, debian/anerd-server.default:
    - deprecate hash as a configurable; use sha512sum
  * anerd:
    - use socat in verbose mode, to add more timestamps to the log
    - hash the timestamped log output
  * debian/control:
    - bump standards

anerd (1.4-0ubuntu1) raring; urgency=low

  [ Dustin Kirkland ]
  * anerd-tcp.go:
    - add a very small, basic anerd-tcp server
    - clean up via gofmt
  * anerd-client:
    - count the number of bytes received correctly using a tmpfile
    - adjust info messages slightly
  * anerd.c:
    - drop crc from logging, change messages to info from debug
  * debian/anerd-client.default:
    - default to anerd.gazzang.net now that its up for good
  * anerd-tcp, anerd-tcp.go, debian/anerd-tcp-common.install,
    debian/anerd-tcp.postinst, debian/anerd-tcp.upstart, debian/anerd-
    web.upstart, debian/control:
    - create two small packages, one to launch anerd-tcp->80 and
      anerd-tcp->443
      + both depend on anerd-tcp-common, which provides the go script
    - add a postinst that generates a self-signed cert if there is none;
      obviously, one would want to replace these with real certs if
      security matters to you
    - create two upstart scripts that start the web service on each port
      + means you can install one, or the other, or both
  * anerd-client, debian/anerd-client.default:
    - fix communication with remote servers
    - make the wait time configurable, 0.1s by default
    - only broadcast when no specific servers are specified
    - add message on broadcast bytes sent
  * anerd-tcp:
    - add interpreter
  * anerd-tcp.1, debian/anerd-tcp-common.manpages:
    - add documentation
  * anerd-tcp.go:
    - ensure that we read enough bytes
  * anerd.1 => anerd-udp.1, anerd.c => anerd-udp.c, anerd-web.1 =>
    anerd-tcp.1, anerd-web => anerd-tcp, anerd-web.go => anerd-tcp.go,
    debian/anerd-server.anerd-udp.upstart, debian/anerd-server.default,
    debian/anerd-server.install, debian/anerd-server.manpages,
    debian/anerd-server.upstart => debian/anerd-server.anerd-
    tcp.upstart, debian/anerd-web-common.install, debian/anerd-web-
    common.manpages, debian/anerd-webs.postinst => debian/anerd-
    server.postinst, debian/anerd-webs.upstart, debian/anerd-
    web.upstart, debian/control, debian/rules, Makefile.am:
    - rename the C program to anerd-udp
    - create separate upstart scripts for anerd-tcp and anerd-udp
    - update documentation
    - drop anerd-web* packages
  * debian/anerd-client.postinst, debian/control, debian/anerd-client.install:
    - keep the initramfs code, but don't automatically update the initramfs
      for now, as this can render a machine without networking unbootable;
      re-enable this when we have a workaround for that
  * debian/anerd-server.postinst:
    - fix typo

  [ Hector Acosta ]
  * anerd.c:
    - Only call srandom() once

anerd (1.3-0ubuntu1) raring; urgency=low

  * anerd.1, anerd.c, anerd-client, anerd-client.1, AUTHORS,
    debian/anerd-server.upstart, debian/copyright:
    - updated email addresses and author information

anerd (1.2-0ubuntu1) raring; urgency=low

  [ Dustin Kirkland ]
  * debian/control, debian/cron.d:
    - use run-one for cronjob
  * anerd-client:
    - clean up client, make more modular, remove some variables, uses pipes
      to keep everything in memory
  * debian/anerd-client.install, debian/anerd-server.install,
    debian/control, debian/copyright, debian/cron.d => debian/anerd-
    client.cron.d, debian/default => debian/anerd-client.default,
    debian/upstart => debian/anerd-server.upstart:
    - split package into a server and client package, with a meta
      package depending on both
  * anerd.1, anerd-client.1:
    - manpage fixes
  * debian/anerd-client.cron.d, debian/anerd-client.default:
    - add some inline documentation
    - use the default file for setting defaults (ie, uncomment)
  * debian/control:
    - bump standards
  * debian/anerd-server.manpages, debian/manpages => debian/anerd-
    client.manpages, Makefile.am:
    - install manpages (perhaps there's a better automake way of doing this?)
  * anerd.c:
    - rename "sum" to "crc"
  * debian/anerd-server.upstart:
    - upstart needs to expect the fork
    - upstart does not need to sudo to the daemon user because anerd does
      this automatically
  * anerd-client:
    - use a $cmd variable populated with correct parameters
  * anerd-client, debian/control:
    - reluctantly add support for netcat
  * anerd-client, anerd-client.1:
    - use a default file for configuration
  * anerd-client:
    - emulate the syslog printing from the server

  [ Wesley Wiedenmeier ]
  * anerd.c, anerd-client, debian/default:
    - add ipv6 support
  * anerd.1, anerd.c, anerd-client.1, debian/manpages:
    - added manpages
    - dropped unused global

anerd (1.1-0ubuntu1) quantal; urgency=low

  * anerd.c:
    - define the default total exchange size
    - also define and use a default payload size
    - break up the total exchange to a bunch of smaller payloads, to increase
      the randomness of UDP packet ordering and timing
    - improve some inline documentation
    - lower logging to debug from info
    - allocate an extra byte for the data binary string
    - use a separate pointer for segmenting and moving through the data string
    - no need for null-bytes, since binary data could have null bytes within
    - alphabetize includes
    - change perrors to syslog errors
    - move daemon() function
  * Makefile.am:
    - fix up the build, clean out the binary and log files
  * anerd.c, anerd-client, debian/control, debian/cron.d,
    debian/default, debian/install, Makefile.am:
    - drop the anerd client in the C program entirely
    - the C program is now the server exclusively
    - add a bash script client, which can loop over a pool of anerd servers,
      and broadcast to the local network
    - recommend the socat package/utility, which is used to broadcast to the
      local network from the bash script
    - add a cron job to run the anerd-client regularly
    - add a default configuration file for configuring the pool and other
      tunables
    - remove the unnessary install file

anerd (1.0-0ubuntu1) quantal; urgency=low

  [ Dustin Kirkland ]
  * initial release
  * === added directory debian, === added directory debian/source,
    anerd, debian/compat, debian/control, debian/copyright,
    debian/install, debian/rules, debian/source/format, debian/upstart:
    - added packaging
  * anerd, anerd.conf, debian/install, debian/upstart:
    - add a configuration file
    - run as daemon (non-root) user
  * anerd.c, AUTHORS, ChangeLog, configure.ac, COPYING,
    debian/copyright, debian/upstart, INSTALL, Makefile.am, NEWS,
    README:
    - ported from python to C
    - added autoconf/automake build
    - changed license from GPLv3 to Apache2.0 for portability to other
      UNIX platforms
  * anerd.conf, debian/control, debian/install, debian/upstart:
    - drop conf file, add options to upstart script
    - update build deps
  * anerd.c:
    - use syslog, open files/sockets only once per fork
    - catch all responses to a client broadcast
    - use a common function for salt calculation
    - implement a very simple checksum of random data
    - use uint64_t for platform compatibility
    - add entropy to pool in client read
    - simplify salt generation
    - simplify log printing
    - whitespace changes only, 80 char width
  * debian/install:
    - drop installation of default file

  [ Wesley Wiedenmeier ]
  * anerd.c:
    - use getopt for command line parsing
    - Modified code to fork twice then kill the parent process,
      freeing the terminal that spawns the daemons, added daemonize()
      function to safely daemonize the program.
    - Improved entering into daemon status by moving daemon() call to
      after intilization of server and client, so that errors
      encountered in intilization are written to the terminal.
parent a1d25e0d
No related branches found
Tags debian/4.21-1
No related merge requests found
pollen (4.21-1) sid; urgency=medium
* first upload to Debian
* debian/control: use dh11
* debian/control: set standard to 4.3.0
* debian/control: remove anerd mentions
* debian/copyright: use https for copyright-format-uri
* debian/rules: dh11 does not allow "--with systemd"
* remove deprecated upstart init files
* remove unused overrides
-- Thorsten Alteholz <debian@alteholz.de> Tue, 05 Feb 2019 18:25:58 +0100
pollen (4.21-0ubuntu1) yakkety; urgency=medium
* check_pollen:
- note the number of short bytes in the error log message
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 13 Oct 2015 10:25:58 -0700
pollen (4.20-0ubuntu1) wily; urgency=medium
* debian/pollen.upstart: LP: #1505473
- remove typo in the upstart config which was preventing the service from starting
* rebuild the packages for upload
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 13 Oct 2015 10:25:54 -0700
pollen (4.19-0ubuntu1) wily; urgency=medium
* debian/pollen.upstart: LP: #1505473
- remove typo in the upstart config which was preventing the service from starting
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 13 Oct 2015 10:21:08 -0700
pollen (4.18-0ubuntu1) wily; urgency=medium
* pollen.go:
- add the "available" word to the log
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 09 Sep 2015 15:22:56 -0500
pollen (4.17-0ubuntu1) unstable; urgency=medium
* debian/pollen.postrm:
- clear out certificates on purge
* debian/pollen.default:
- quote the variable definition, for consistency
* debian/pollen.postinst:
- fix ssl cert generation, country must be <2 chars
* debian/pollen.service:
- put braces around environment variables; required to work at all
* pollen.go, usr.bin.pollen:
- log the entropy bits before and after the transaction
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Sat, 02 May 2015 18:39:13 -0500
pollen (4.16-0ubuntu1) vivid; urgency=medium
[ Matthias Klose ]
* debian/control:
- Build everywhere
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 25 Mar 2015 09:44:01 -0500
pollen (4.15-0ubuntu1) vivid; urgency=medium
[ Didier Roche ]
* debian/control, debian/pollen.service, debian/rules:
- Add systemd unit, following similar restart on failure and device
checking logic
- Bump Standards-Version
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 07 Jan 2015 13:06:05 -0600
pollen (4.14-0ubuntu1) vivid; urgency=medium
* pollen.go: LP: #1383738
- remove SSLv3 support
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Fri, 31 Oct 2014 16:31:23 -0500
pollen (4.13-0ubuntu1) vivid; urgency=medium
* debian/pollen-restart.upstart, debian/pollen.upstart, debian/rules:
- LP: #1386052
- add a new upstart job that restarts pollen any time the rsyslog server
is restarted
- this is necessary to work around a bug in the golang syslog library
where syslog restarts break logging
+ https://code.google.com/p/go/issues/detail?id=2264#c8
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Fri, 31 Oct 2014 16:08:39 -0500
pollen (4.12-0ubuntu1) utopic; urgency=medium
* debian/control:
- recommend rng-tools; we can do this, since pollen is in universe
* debian/pollen.postinst:
- minor change to the default self-signed cert; use 'localhost'
for the hostname; this is useful for testing pollinate against
the localhost with a self-signed cert
* README:
- update docs; pollinate no longer runs daily by default
* README:
- update some docs
* check_pollen:
- ensure that the nagios check catches log failures
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 23 Jul 2014 00:08:54 -0700
pollen (4.11-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=medium
* pollen_test.go:
- fix FTBFS
- hardcode device to /dev/urandom in unit tests, otherwise, our
entropy starved vm-based builders will fail the unit tests
and fail the build
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 18 Mar 2014 22:56:20 +0900
pollen (4.10-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* debian/control, debian/pollen.default, pollen.go, usr.bin.pollen:
- LP: #1293958
- suggest rng-tools (universe), which is needed to leverage tpm for
/dev/random entropy
- change default entropy source for pollen server to /dev/random
- update inline configuration documentation to reflect reality
- add rw of /dev/random to our apparmor whitelist
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 18 Mar 2014 16:31:47 +0900
pollen (4.9-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* debian/rules: LP: #1288807
- fix FTBFS, build using golang 'go build' rather than gccgo
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Thu, 06 Mar 2014 09:24:48 -0600
pollen (4.8-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
[ JuanJo Ciarlante and Dustin Kirkland ]
* check_pollen:
- use the new -t|--testing flag, to verify communications with the
server, runable as a non-privileged user, but not affecting the
local PRNG
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Fri, 28 Feb 2014 11:13:09 -0600
pollen (4.7-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
[ John Arbash Meinel ]
* .gitignore, pollen.go, pollen_test.go:
- This changes the 'handler' from being just a func() using global
state to being a struct with local state.
- It then moves the things like dev and log to being members of the
struct, with interfaces that let us override them in the test suite.
- It then adds a bunch of tests about how we handle failures, errors,
logging, the size flag, etc.
- The interfaces also mean that we won't try to spam syslog while running
the test suite.
- Another small change is that if you do:
pollen -https-port=""
Then it won't try to bind to the HTTP port with a cert.
- Since I'm not the official source for pollen, it helped for testing at
least the HTTP requests manually.
- This also fixes the help text for "-size" since it doesn't actually
change how much content we send on the wire, but how much content we
read from /dev/urandom (but it adds tests for that fact).
- go fmt, and some formatting tweaks
- actually do the right formatting
- use microsecond timing (ms was always 0)
- capture the length of time serving requests takes
[ Dustin Kirkland ]
* pollen.go:
- put brackets around request length of time value
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 26 Feb 2014 10:51:06 -0600
pollen (4.6-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
[ Caleb Spare ]
* pollen.go:
- Require the challenge query-string param to be provided
- don't create the random device, if it doesn't exist
[ Dustin Kirkland ]
* pollen_test.go:
- update test to handle required challenge string
* pollen.go:
- incorporate feedback from Adam Langley
- catch errors reading the random device
- add a note as to why we're checksumming the random seed
- update message when challenge empty
[ Caleb Spare and Dustin Kirkland ]
* debian/pollen.upstart, pollen.8, pollen.go:
- Use flags rather than positional arguments, and plumb bytes argument
through
[ Dustin Kirkland and Matt Croydon ]
* debian/pollen.default, debian/pollen.upstart, pollen.8, pollen.go:
- add support for specifying the TLS cert and key as command line
flags
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 18 Feb 2014 23:18:55 -0600
pollen (4.5-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
[ Caleb Spare ]
* pollen.go, pollen_test.go:
- Bring naming in line with Go conventions
- Use shorter parameter names for an http.HandlerFunc
- Remove an unnecessary string conversion
- Print useful error if wrong arguments are given rather than crashing
- Don't ignore errors
- Rename http[s]Port to http[s]Addr for accuracy
- Handle errors starting the http servers
- Change some naming in the test
- Read from the provided device rather than always /dev/urandom
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 18 Feb 2014 14:50:52 -0600
pollen (4.4-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
[ Casey Marshall ]
* debian/control, debian/rules, Makefile, pollen.go, pollen_test.go:
- add unit tests for pollen server
[ Dustin Kirkland ]
* debian/pollen.lintian-overrides:
- override expected Lintian gripes
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Mon, 17 Feb 2014 12:51:51 -0600
pollen (4.3-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* check_pollen:
- ensure that the nagios script uses the -r|--reseed option
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Mon, 17 Feb 2014 09:38:51 -0600
pollen (4.2-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* pollen.go:
- remove redundant line
* README:
- remove deprecated bit of documentation
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 11 Feb 2014 18:04:08 -0600
pollen (4.1-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* debian/control:
- build on amd64 and i386 only
- these are the only builds I've been able to confirm when building
with golang-go
- note that this undoes the fix for LP: #1274074, but that's the
way it has to be, until either golang-go supports more architectures
or gccgo doesn't suck
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 11 Feb 2014 10:11:19 -0600
pollen (4.0-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* check_pollen, debian/control, debian/copyright,
debian/pollinate.default, debian/pollinate.install,
debian/pollinate.manpages, debian/pollinate.postinst,
debian/pollinate.postrm, debian/pollinate.upstart,
entropy.ubuntu.com.pem, INSTALL, Makefile, pollinate, pollinate.1:
- split pollen and pollinate into separate projects and packages
- re-enable the pollen build
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 11 Feb 2014 09:40:21 -0600
pollen (3.17-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* pollinate:
- improve kernel debug info
* debian/control, debian/pollen.install, Makefile:
- TEMPORARILY disabling the building of pollen, until
either gccgo or golang-go get promoted to main
- this should be reverted as soon as a go compiler
is available as a build dep
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Mon, 10 Feb 2014 14:16:08 -0600
pollen (3.16-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* pollinate:
- minor standardization of the user agent string
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 05 Feb 2014 13:57:42 +0200
pollen (3.15-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* debian/control: LP: #1274074
- build on any architecure, now that we build with gccgo
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 05 Feb 2014 12:31:20 +0200
pollen (3.14-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* debian/pollinate.postinst:
- fix order of operations, packaging breakage
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 05 Feb 2014 11:34:36 +0200
pollen (3.13-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* README:
- fix more minor typos
- explain "did some work"
* debian/rules, Makefile:
- fix the build for gccgo
- must use the -g parameter
- don't strip binaries
- these are ugly, but are the result of gccgo vs golang-go
* pollinate:
- remove unused variable $cmd
* debian/pollinate.upstart:
- our upstart job should start on starting cloud-init, to ensure that
we get run before generating SSH keys
* debian/pollinate.install, debian/pollinate.postrm, pollen.go,
pollinate, pollinate.cron.d, README:
- drop the tag and cronjob per feedback from sarnold in the code audit
in LP: #1246098
* debian/pollinate.default, pollinate:
- add helpful debug info to user agent, similar to chrome and firefox,
* debian/pollinate.postinst, debian/pollinate.postrm,
debian/pollinate.upstart, pollinate, pollinate.1:
- use a pollinate user, rather than the daemon user
- by default, only run pollinate once per system instantiation
- offer reseeding as an option, though
* debian/control:
- need to depend on adduser
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 04 Feb 2014 11:51:22 +0200
pollen (3.12-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* README:
- minor documentation feedback from Kees Cook
- note that pollen servers can of course be run internally
* debian/control:
- clean up package descriptions a bit
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 28 Jan 2014 22:16:10 +0000
pollen (3.11-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* README:
- updates to the README
* debian/copyright, pollinate:
- the client should really be GPLv3, rather than AGPL
* debian/copyright:
- point to the local copy of GPLv3 license
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Mon, 27 Jan 2014 13:54:16 +0000
pollen (3.10-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* debian/pollinate.cron.d, debian/pollinate.postinst, pollinate:
- have each client choose a random time of day to reseed,
at first run, rather than at package installation time
- this requires a very clever hack(!)
- install a "template" at /etc/cron.d/pollinate, with __MINUTE__
and __HOUR__ symbols that should be replaced by the client,
at first run
- cron requires that /etc/cron.d/pollinate be owned by root
- ideally we'd run the pollinate script as a non-root user (ie, daemon),
by specifying the daemon user in upstart and in the cronjob
- but daemon can't write to /etc/cron.d/pollinate, if it's owned by root
- so here's the hack...
+ the upstart job installed by the package has "setuid root"
+ on its first run (which will be either at package install time, or
at boot), it will run as root and: a) update the cronjob to a random
time, and b) update the upstart job to run as daemon
+ woot
+ this works because both are conffiles
* debian/pollen.postinst, debian/pollinate.postinst,
debian/pollinate.postrm, pollinate:
- use /var/cache/pollinate, rather than /var/lib/pollinate
- this should make it more obvious that this data can be cleared out,
and should be cleared out, on re-bundles or snapshots and reimages
* debian/control, Makefile:
- switch from golang-go to gcc-go, so that we can get this source
package into Ubuntu main
* pollinate, pollinate.1:
- separate the pool and the server variables
* debian/control:
- no need to depend on bsdutils, it's essential
- pollen depends on adduser
* usr.bin.pollen:
- update apparmor profile to allow reading of /usr/bin/pollen
- oddly, this was introduced when switching compilers
* debian/copyright:
- lintian/dep5 cleanup
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Thu, 16 Jan 2014 11:39:42 -0600
pollen (3.9-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* debian/pollinate.default:
- don't use quiet by default, do use binary
* pollinate:
- save ourselves an unneeded fork
* debian/control:
- drop haveged as a suggests
* debian/pollinate.default, debian/pollinate.install,
entropy.ubuntu.com.pem:
- install entropy.ubuntu.com.pem's certificate and intermediate
chain, to get rid of --insecure curl option
* debian/control, pollinate:
- log to the system log, using the logger utility
- add a final message, noting successful (re-)seed
- have pollinate depend on bsdutils, which provides logger
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Thu, 16 Jan 2014 08:01:28 -0600
pollen (3.8-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* debian/pollinate.default, debian/pollinate.postinst,
debian/pollinate.upstart, pollinate:
- fix the (broken) options setting in the pollinate default file
- change the tag creation to happen during the pollinate runtime,
rather than at package installation; this makes it more useful
for downstreams and remixes of Ubuntu
- ensure the daemon user owns the /var/lib/pollinate directory
- run the pollinate upstart script as the daemon user
* debian/pollinate.cron.d, debian/pollinate.postinst,
debian/pollinate.postrm:
- run the pollinate cronjob (reseed) once per day, rather than once
per hour
- purge pollinate files more effectively
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 15 Jan 2014 16:49:35 -0600
pollen (3.7-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* debian/control:
- demote haveged to suggests, based on feedback from Seth Arnold
in LP: #1246098
* pollinate:
- ensure both -c and -i can be used, without losing CURL_OPTS,
as identified by Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
* pollinate:
- drop unused IPV6 variable, per review by Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
* debian/pollen.postinst:
- use pollen as our fake email address, suggested by Seth Arnold
in LP: #1246098
* debian/pollinate.cron.d:
- add notes in the comments about NIST DRBG Special Publication 800-90A
recommendations on reseeding
- add notes in the comments about why we choose a random minute
- fix a bug, that was causing the cronjob to run far more frequently
than desired
- Addresses some issues raised by Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
* debian/pollen.upstart, pollen.8, pollen.go:
- add DEVICE as the 3rd argument to the pollen server in the upstart
script
- test that DEVICE is a special in upstart
- document that the DEVICE is now a required argument
* debian/pollen.install, Makefile, pollen:
- build static binary at package build time, rather than dynamically
compiling at each run, per feedback from Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
- use a very simple, basic Makefile
* debian/control:
- move golang-go to a build-dependency, rather than a runtime dependency
* debian/control, debian/pollen.postinst, debian/pollen.postrm,
debian/pollen.upstart:
- create a new user, pollen:daemon, in the postinst, remove in postrm
- depend on libcap2-bin, which provides setcap
- use setcap to allow the pollen binary to bind to privileged ports
- run the pollen daemon as the pollen user
- per feedback from Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
* debian/pollen.upstart:
- use setuid in upstart to run the pollen daemon as the pollen user
* debian/pollen.postinst:
- change pollen user's shell to /bin/false
* debian/control, debian/pollen.install, debian/pollen.postinst,
debian/rules, usr.bin.pollen:
- add an apparmor profile for the pollen server, per suggestion
by Seth Arnold in LP: #1246098
- big thanks to Jamie Strandboge and Seth Arnold for assistance
* debian/pollinate.postinst:
- these chowns are not necessary; thanks for catching Michael Terry
in LP: #1246098
* debian/control: LP: #1259014
- have the pollen server depend on ent, which is used by the
check_pollen nagios script
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 15 Jan 2014 10:59:34 -0600
pollen (3.6-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* pollinate:
- remove sourcing of an rc config file from $HOME, per security
review from Seth Arnold
* pollinate.1:
- update documentation to note that multiple servers can be specified
on the command line
* debian/pollinate.default:
- use the entropy.ubuntu.com beta site for testing
- note that we're specifying the --insecure option here, as this is
very much a work in progress
* debian/pollinate.upstart:
- start pollinate when we have networking up and running, or
when we start ssh
* pollen.go:
- drop the nanosecond timestamp collection on the server
- a good server should have real entropy hardware, and a busy server
will have network traffic entropy already captured by the kernel
- Suggestion by Seth Arnold in a security review
* debian/pollen.default, pollinate:
- drop timestamp based salting, not terribly valuable
- per security review by Seth Arnold
* pollinate:
- drop unused $bin variable
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Fri, 08 Nov 2013 09:59:35 -0600
pollen (3.5-0ubuntu1) trusty; urgency=low
* README:
- enhance and update design documentation
* debian/copyright:
- update to DEP-5 format
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 29 Oct 2013 16:55:28 -0500
pollen (3.4-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low
* check_pollen, debian/control:
- improve the nagios check
- warn if:
+ insufficient bytes are retrieved
+ less than 5-bits-per-byte of entropy are calculated
+ an out of whack arithmetic mean
- have pollen server recommend ent, which is used by the nagios check
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 11 Sep 2013 16:56:52 -0500
pollen (3.3-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low
* pollen-nagios-check:
- added nagios check script
* check_pollen, debian/pollen.install:
- rename check script and install in nagios plugins directory
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 04 Sep 2013 14:25:49 -0500
pollen (3.2-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low
* README:
- update design documentation
* pollinate, pollinate.1:
- support printing random seed to standard out
- useful for debugging
- add a -q|--quiet option to silence log messages
* pollinate, pollinate.1:
- add an option for binary data output
* debian/pollen.default, debian/pollen.upstart, pollen.8, pollen.go:
- re-enable support for both encrypted and non-encrypted connections
- use a go subroutine to serve both out of the same process
- document these changes
- default to 80 and 443, allow admin to override easily via config
* debian/control:
- update package descriptions
* pollinate:
- default to, but do not force, https
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 20 Aug 2013 18:56:11 -0500
pollen (3.1-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low
* pollen.go
- use a global for the dev writer
- write a few more timestamps into the mix during the response
handler
- change logging verbiage
* pollinate:
- use a single temp directory, rather than multiple temp files
- use a trap to cleanup the temp directory
- uptdate the logging verbiage
- use an etc default file if available
* debian/pollen.default:
- drop "TCP_" in the TCP_PORT variable
* pollen.go:
- just use two timestamps
* pollinate:
- improve usability; prepend https
* debian/pollinate.cron.d, debian/pollinate.default,
debian/pollinate.upstart, pollinate, pollinate.1:
- use an upstart job, rather than an @reboot cronjob,
to do the initial prng seeding
- fix the default config file
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Wed, 14 Aug 2013 17:45:22 -0500
pollen (3.0-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low
* anerd, anerd-server-tcp.1 => anerd-server.1, anerd-server-tcp =>
anerd-server, anerd-server-tcp.go => anerd-server.go, anerd-server-
udp.1, anerd-server-udp.c, configure.ac, debian/anerd-
client.default, debian/anerd-server.anerd-server-tcp.upstart =>
debian/anerd-server.upstart, debian/anerd-server.anerd-server-
udp.upstart, debian/anerd-server.default, debian/anerd-
server.install, debian/anerd-server.manpages, debian/control,
debian/rules, Makefile.am:
- completely deprecate the UDP operation of both the client and
the server
- the TLS server over TCP is the only supported protocol going
forward
- this will necessitate a major version bump
* anerd.1 => pollinate.1, anerd => pollinate, anerd-server.1 =>
pollen.8, anerd-server.go => pollen.go, anerd-server => pollen,
ChangeLog, debian/anerd-client.cron.d => debian/pollinate.cron.d,
debian/anerd-client.default => debian/pollinate.default,
debian/anerd-client.install => debian/pollinate.install,
debian/anerd-client.manpages => debian/pollinate.manpages,
debian/anerd-client.postinst => debian/pollinate.postinst,
debian/anerd-client.postrm => debian/pollinate.postrm, debian/anerd-
server.default => debian/pollen.default, debian/anerd-server.install
=> debian/pollen.install, debian/anerd-server.manpages =>
debian/pollen.manpages, debian/anerd-server.postinst =>
debian/pollen.postinst, debian/anerd-server.upstart =>
debian/pollen.upstart, debian/control, debian/copyright,
img/anerd_14.png, img/anerd_192.png, img/anerd_64.png,
img/anerd.png, initramfs/hooks/anerd-client-udp,
initramfs/scripts/init-bottom/anerd, NEWS, README, === removed
directory initramfs, === removed directory initramfs/hooks, ===
removed directory initramfs/scripts, === removed directory
initramfs/scripts/init-bottom:
- rename anerd server/client to pollen / pollinate
to reflect that this data is intended to "seed" a random
number generator
* debian/control, debian/pollen.manpages:
- package maintenace for package/project rename
- move manpage to section 8
* pollen.8, pollinate, pollinate.1:
- documentation updated
* debian/control, pollen.8, pollinate:
- update some documentation and descriptions
* img/pollen_14.png, img/pollen_192.png, img/pollen_64.png:
- added new pollen logos
* debian/control:
- drop suggests
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 13 Aug 2013 16:34:42 -0500
anerd (2.4-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low
* anerd-client-tcp.go:
- deprecated, use the shell (curl) one for better timestamping
salt
* anerd-server-tcp.go:
- log user-agent and nanosecond timestamp
* anerd, anerd-server-tcp.go:
- rename "tip" to "challenge", use for challenge/response
- verify challenge/response, to ensure personalized communication
* anerd:
- use a common logging function throughout
* anerd-server-tcp.go:
- open syslog only once
* anerd, debian/control:
- lower socat to a suggests, while still requiring curl
- dynamically check for socat/curl and error appropriately
- update package description
- recommend haveged on the server
* debian/anerd-server.default:
- do not run the UDP, by default; local admin can enable by
setting a port in /etc/default/anerd-server
* anerd, anerd-server-tcp.go, debian/anerd-client.postinst,
debian/anerd-server.postrm:
- rename uuid to tag
- generate on package install, remove on purge
* anerd, debian/anerd-server.postrm => debian/anerd-client.postrm:
- silence search for helper utilities
- fix maintainer script name
* anerd:
- silence missing tag error messages for now
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Fri, 09 Aug 2013 16:16:54 +0100
anerd (2.3-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low
[ Matthias Klose ]
* debian/control: LP: #1139188
- Don't build anerd-server on powerpc (no golang-go, prevents
migration from raring-proposed to raring).
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Fri, 02 Aug 2013 12:40:00 -0500
anerd (2.2-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low
* === added directory img, img/anerd_14.png, img/anerd_192.png,
img/anerd_64.png, img/anerd.png:
- added icons
* anerd-server-tcp.go:
- gofmt
* anerd-server-tcp.go:
- make this code more go-like, after some code review with Tim Penney
* anerd-server-tcp.go:
- drop unnecessary json formatting
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Thu, 01 Aug 2013 09:21:13 -0500
anerd (2.1-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low
* anerd-client-tcp.go:
- default to anerd.us
* anerd, anerd-client-tcp.go, anerd-server-tcp.go, debian/anerd-
client.default:
- anerd.us is now serving on 443
* anerd, anerd-server-tcp.go:
- add syslog logging to the anerd tcp server
- use post for the tip from the anerd tcp client
* anerd, debian/control:
- use uuidgen -r for uuid and tip
* anerd, anerd-server-udp.c:
- add UDP to syslog messages
- fix uuid related typo
- add --insecure option
* anerd, anerd-client-tcp.go, anerd-server-tcp.go, debian/control:
- use sha512sum rather than uuidgen
* anerd, debian/anerd-client.cron.d:
- run at reboot, and hourly thereafter
- shorten some function names
* debian/anerd-client.cron.d, debian/anerd-client.postinst:
- randomize the hourly cronjob to distribute load on the
server, if possible
* debian/control:
- fix a lintian annoyance
* anerd, anerd-server-tcp.go, anerd-server-udp.c:
- drop byte counts in logging, as these can be misleading
* anerd-server-tcp.go:
- salt data with nanosecond timestamp
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Mon, 29 Jul 2013 15:24:29 -0500
anerd (2.0-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low
* anerd-tcp.go:
- pretty print the json
* anerd-client, anerd-client.1, anerd-tcp, anerd-tcp.1, anerd-tcp.go,
anerd-udp.1, anerd-udp.c, debian/anerd-server.anerd-tcp.upstart,
debian/anerd-server.anerd-udp.upstart, debian/control:
- drop the "asynchronous" part of aNerd, this really isn't
necessary in the description anymore
* anerd-tcp.go:
- reduce the default size to 64 bytes, which is sufficient to seed
any random number generator
* anerd-tcp.go, debian/anerd-server.default:
- change the default size to 64 bytes
- add some notes in the comments in the configuration file
- always uses TLS encryption for the TCP implementation
* anerd-tcp.1 => anerd-server-tcp.1, anerd-tcp => anerd-server-tcp,
anerd-tcp.go => anerd-server-tcp.go, anerd-udp.1 => anerd-server-
udp.1, anerd-udp.c => anerd-server-udp.c, debian/anerd-server.anerd-
tcp.upstart => debian/anerd-server.anerd-server-tcp.upstart,
debian/anerd-server.anerd-udp.upstart => debian/anerd-server.anerd-
server-udp.upstart, debian/anerd-server.install, debian/anerd-
server.manpages, debian/rules, Makefile.am:
- rename anerd-tcp to anerd-server-tcp
- rename anerd-udp to anerd-server-udp
* debian/anerd-client.default:
- change to the new anerd.us server, which supports TCP, TLS, and UDP
* anerd, anerd-client, anerd-client.1 => anerd.1, anerd-client-tcp.go,
anerd-server-tcp, debian/anerd-client.cron.d, debian/anerd-
client.default, debian/anerd-client.install, debian/anerd-
client.manpages, debian/anerd-server.anerd-server-tcp.upstart,
debian/anerd-server.install, debian/control, initramfs/hooks/anerd-
client => initramfs/hooks/anerd-client-udp, initramfs/scripts/init-
bottom/anerd-client => initramfs/scripts/init-bottom/anerd,
Makefile.am:
- major rework of client, combine udp/tcp clients into a single
shell script
* anerd, anerd-client-tcp.go, anerd-server-tcp, anerd-server-tcp.go,
anerd-server-udp.c, COPYING, debian/copyright,
initramfs/scripts/init-bottom/anerd:
- changed license back to AGPL
* debian/anerd-client.default, debian/anerd-server.default:
- deprecate hash as a configurable; use sha512sum
* anerd:
- use socat in verbose mode, to add more timestamps to the log
- hash the timestamped log output
* debian/control:
- bump standards
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Thu, 25 Jul 2013 16:34:54 -0500
anerd (1.4-0ubuntu1) raring; urgency=low
[ Dustin Kirkland ]
* anerd-tcp.go:
- add a very small, basic anerd-tcp server
- clean up via gofmt
* anerd-client:
- count the number of bytes received correctly using a tmpfile
- adjust info messages slightly
* anerd.c:
- drop crc from logging, change messages to info from debug
* debian/anerd-client.default:
- default to anerd.gazzang.net now that its up for good
* anerd-tcp, anerd-tcp.go, debian/anerd-tcp-common.install,
debian/anerd-tcp.postinst, debian/anerd-tcp.upstart, debian/anerd-
web.upstart, debian/control:
- create two small packages, one to launch anerd-tcp->80 and
anerd-tcp->443
+ both depend on anerd-tcp-common, which provides the go script
- add a postinst that generates a self-signed cert if there is none;
obviously, one would want to replace these with real certs if
security matters to you
- create two upstart scripts that start the web service on each port
+ means you can install one, or the other, or both
* anerd-client, debian/anerd-client.default:
- fix communication with remote servers
- make the wait time configurable, 0.1s by default
- only broadcast when no specific servers are specified
- add message on broadcast bytes sent
* anerd-tcp:
- add interpreter
* anerd-tcp.1, debian/anerd-tcp-common.manpages:
- add documentation
* anerd-tcp.go:
- ensure that we read enough bytes
* anerd.1 => anerd-udp.1, anerd.c => anerd-udp.c, anerd-web.1 =>
anerd-tcp.1, anerd-web => anerd-tcp, anerd-web.go => anerd-tcp.go,
debian/anerd-server.anerd-udp.upstart, debian/anerd-server.default,
debian/anerd-server.install, debian/anerd-server.manpages,
debian/anerd-server.upstart => debian/anerd-server.anerd-
tcp.upstart, debian/anerd-web-common.install, debian/anerd-web-
common.manpages, debian/anerd-webs.postinst => debian/anerd-
server.postinst, debian/anerd-webs.upstart, debian/anerd-
web.upstart, debian/control, debian/rules, Makefile.am:
- rename the C program to anerd-udp
- create separate upstart scripts for anerd-tcp and anerd-udp
- update documentation
- drop anerd-web* packages
* debian/anerd-client.postinst, debian/control, debian/anerd-client.install:
- keep the initramfs code, but don't automatically update the initramfs
for now, as this can render a machine without networking unbootable;
re-enable this when we have a workaround for that
* debian/anerd-server.postinst:
- fix typo
[ Hector Acosta ]
* anerd.c:
- Only call srandom() once
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Fri, 15 Feb 2013 13:02:50 -0600
anerd (1.3-0ubuntu1) raring; urgency=low
* anerd.1, anerd.c, anerd-client, anerd-client.1, AUTHORS,
debian/anerd-server.upstart, debian/copyright:
- updated email addresses and author information
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 05 Feb 2013 09:50:23 -0600
anerd (1.2-0ubuntu1) raring; urgency=low
[ Dustin Kirkland ]
* debian/control, debian/cron.d:
- use run-one for cronjob
* anerd-client:
- clean up client, make more modular, remove some variables, uses pipes
to keep everything in memory
* debian/anerd-client.install, debian/anerd-server.install,
debian/control, debian/copyright, debian/cron.d => debian/anerd-
client.cron.d, debian/default => debian/anerd-client.default,
debian/upstart => debian/anerd-server.upstart:
- split package into a server and client package, with a meta
package depending on both
* anerd.1, anerd-client.1:
- manpage fixes
* debian/anerd-client.cron.d, debian/anerd-client.default:
- add some inline documentation
- use the default file for setting defaults (ie, uncomment)
* debian/control:
- bump standards
* debian/anerd-server.manpages, debian/manpages => debian/anerd-
client.manpages, Makefile.am:
- install manpages (perhaps there's a better automake way of doing this?)
* anerd.c:
- rename "sum" to "crc"
* debian/anerd-server.upstart:
- upstart needs to expect the fork
- upstart does not need to sudo to the daemon user because anerd does
this automatically
* anerd-client:
- use a $cmd variable populated with correct parameters
* anerd-client, debian/control:
- reluctantly add support for netcat
* anerd-client, anerd-client.1:
- use a default file for configuration
* anerd-client:
- emulate the syslog printing from the server
[ Wesley Wiedenmeier ]
* anerd.c, anerd-client, debian/default:
- add ipv6 support
* anerd.1, anerd.c, anerd-client.1, debian/manpages:
- added manpages
- dropped unused global
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 22 Jan 2013 10:38:24 -0600
anerd (1.1-0ubuntu1) quantal; urgency=low
* anerd.c:
- define the default total exchange size
- also define and use a default payload size
- break up the total exchange to a bunch of smaller payloads, to increase
the randomness of UDP packet ordering and timing
- improve some inline documentation
- lower logging to debug from info
- allocate an extra byte for the data binary string
- use a separate pointer for segmenting and moving through the data string
- no need for null-bytes, since binary data could have null bytes within
- alphabetize includes
- change perrors to syslog errors
- move daemon() function
* Makefile.am:
- fix up the build, clean out the binary and log files
* anerd.c, anerd-client, debian/control, debian/cron.d,
debian/default, debian/install, Makefile.am:
- drop the anerd client in the C program entirely
- the C program is now the server exclusively
- add a bash script client, which can loop over a pool of anerd servers,
and broadcast to the local network
- recommend the socat package/utility, which is used to broadcast to the
local network from the bash script
- add a cron job to run the anerd-client regularly
- add a default configuration file for configuring the pool and other
tunables
- remove the unnessary install file
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Thu, 27 Sep 2012 15:40:23 -0500
anerd (1.0-0ubuntu1) quantal; urgency=low
[ Dustin Kirkland ]
* initial release
* === added directory debian, === added directory debian/source,
anerd, debian/compat, debian/control, debian/copyright,
debian/install, debian/rules, debian/source/format, debian/upstart:
- added packaging
* anerd, anerd.conf, debian/install, debian/upstart:
- add a configuration file
- run as daemon (non-root) user
* anerd.c, AUTHORS, ChangeLog, configure.ac, COPYING,
debian/copyright, debian/upstart, INSTALL, Makefile.am, NEWS,
README:
- ported from python to C
- added autoconf/automake build
- changed license from GPLv3 to Apache2.0 for portability to other
UNIX platforms
* anerd.conf, debian/control, debian/install, debian/upstart:
- drop conf file, add options to upstart script
- update build deps
* anerd.c:
- use syslog, open files/sockets only once per fork
- catch all responses to a client broadcast
- use a common function for salt calculation
- implement a very simple checksum of random data
- use uint64_t for platform compatibility
- add entropy to pool in client read
- simplify salt generation
- simplify log printing
- whitespace changes only, 80 char width
* debian/install:
- drop installation of default file
[ Wesley Wiedenmeier ]
* anerd.c:
- use getopt for command line parsing
- Modified code to fork twice then kill the parent process,
freeing the terminal that spawns the daemons, added daemonize()
function to safely daemonize the program.
- Improved entering into daemon status by moving daemon() call to
after intilization of server and client, so that errors
encountered in intilization are written to the terminal.
-- Dustin Kirkland <kirkland@ubuntu.com> Tue, 04 Sep 2012 18:14:40 -0500
11
Source: pollen
Section: admin
Priority: optional
Maintainer: Thorsten Alteholz <debian@alteholz.de>
Build-Depends: debhelper (>= 11)
, dh-apparmor
, dh-golang
, golang-go
Standards-Version: 4.3.0
Homepage: http://launchpad.net/pollen
Package: pollen
Architecture: any
Built-Using: ${misc:Built-Using}
Depends: ${misc:Depends}, ${shlibs:Depends}
, libcap2-bin
, ent
, adduser
Recommends: pollinate
, rng-tools
Suggests: apparmor (>= 2.3)
Description: Entropy-as-a-Service web server
Pollen is an Entropy-as-a-Service web server, providing random seeds.
This can be performed over both cleartext http and encrypted
https TLS connections.
Format: https://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/copyright-format/1.0/
Upstream-Name: pollen
Upstream-Contact: Dustin Kirkland <dustin.kirkland@gmail.com>
Source: http://launchpad.net/pollen
Files: *
Copyright: 2012-2014, Dustin Kirkland <dustin.kirkland@gmail.com>
License: AGPL-3
Files: usr.bin.pollen
Copyright: 2014, Dustin Kirkland <dustin.kirkland@gmail.com>
2014 Canonical Ltd.
License: GPL-3
Files: debian/*
Copyright: 2012-2014, Dustin Kirkland <dustin.kirkland@gmail.com>
2019, Thorsten Alteholz <debian@alteholz.de>
License: AGPL-3
License: AGPL-3
GNU AFFERO GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 3, 19 November 2007
.
Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/>
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute
verbatim copies of this license document,
but changing it is not allowed.
.
Preamble
.
The GNU Affero General Public License is a free, copyleft license
for software and other kinds of works,
specifically designed to ensure cooperation with the community
in the case of network server software.
.
The licenses for most software and other practical works
are designed to take away your freedom to share and change the works.
By contrast, our General Public Licenses are intended
to guarantee your freedom to share
and change all versions of a program--
to make sure it remains free software for all its users.
.
When we speak of free software,
we are referring to freedom, not price.
Our General Public Licenses are designed
to make sure that you have the freedom
to distribute copies of free software
(and charge for them if you wish),
that you receive source code or can get it if you want it,
that you can change the software
or use pieces of it in new free programs,
and that you know you can do these things.
.
Developers that use our General Public Licenses
protect your rights with two steps:
(1) assert copyright on the software,
and (2) offer you this License
which gives you legal permission
to copy, distribute and/or modify the software.
.
A secondary benefit of defending all users' freedom is
that improvements made in alternate versions of the program,
if they receive widespread use,
become available for other developers to incorporate.
Many developers of free software are heartened and encouraged
by the resulting cooperation.
However, in the case of software used on network servers,
this result may fail to come about.
The GNU General Public License permits
making a modified version and letting the public access it on a server
without ever releasing its source code to the public.
.
The GNU Affero General Public License is designed
specifically to ensure that, in such cases,
the modified source code becomes available to the community.
It requires the operator of a network server to provide
the source code of the modified version running there
to the users of that server.
Therefore, public use of a modified version,
on a publicly accessible server,
gives the public access to the source code of the modified version.
.
An older license,
called the Affero General Public License and published by Affero,
was designed to accomplish similar goals.
This is a different license, not a version of the Affero GPL,
but Affero has released a new version of the Affero GPL
which permits relicensing under this license.
.
The precise terms and conditions
for copying, distribution and modification follow.
.
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
.
0. Definitions.
.
"This License" refers to version 3
of the GNU Affero General Public License.
.
"Copyright" also means copyright-like laws that apply
to other kinds of works, such as semiconductor masks.
.
"The Program" refers to any copyrightable work
licensed under this License.
Each licensee is addressed as "you".
"Licensees" and "recipients" may be individuals or organizations.
.
To "modify" a work means to copy from or adapt all or part of the work
in a fashion requiring copyright permission,
other than the making of an exact copy.
The resulting work is called a "modified version" of the earlier work
or a work "based on" the earlier work.
.
A "covered work" means either the unmodified Program
or a work based on the Program.
.
To "propagate" a work means to do anything with it
that, without permission, would make you directly or secondarily liable
for infringement under applicable copyright law,
except executing it on a computer or modifying a private copy.
Propagation includes copying,
distribution (with or without modification),
making available to the public,
and in some countries other activities as well.
.
To "convey" a work means any kind of propagation
that enables other parties to make or receive copies.
Mere interaction with a user through a computer network,
with no transfer of a copy,
is not conveying.
.
An interactive user interface displays "Appropriate Legal Notices"
to the extent that it includes
a convenient and prominently visible feature
that (1) displays an appropriate copyright notice,
and (2) tells the user that there is no warranty for the work
(except to the extent that warranties are provided),
that licensees may convey the work under this License,
and how to view a copy of this License.
If the interface presents
a list of user commands or options, such as a menu,
a prominent item in the list meets this criterion.
.
1. Source Code.
.
The "source code" for a work means
the preferred form of the work for making modifications to it.
"Object code" means any non-source form of a work.
.
A "Standard Interface" means
an interface that either is an official standard
defined by a recognized standards body,
or, in the case of interfaces
specified for a particular programming language,
one that is widely used among developers working in that language.
.
The "System Libraries" of an executable work include anything,
other than the work as a whole,
that (a) is included in the normal form of packaging a Major Component,
but which is not part of that Major Component,
and (b) serves only
to enable use of the work with that Major Component,
or to implement a Standard Interface
for which an implementation is available to the public
in source code form.
A "Major Component", in this context, means
a major essential component (kernel, window system, and so on)
of the specific operating system (if any)
on which the executable work runs,
or a compiler used to produce the work,
or an object code interpreter used to run it.
.
The "Corresponding Source" for a work in object code form means
all the source code needed to generate, install,
and (for an executable work) run the object code
and to modify the work,
including scripts to control those activities.
However, it does not include the work's System Libraries,
or general-purpose tools or generally available free programs
which are used unmodified in performing those activities
but which are not part of the work.
For example, Corresponding Source includes
interface definition files associated with source files for the work,
and the source code for shared libraries
and dynamically linked subprograms
that the work is specifically designed to require,
such as by intimate data communication or control flow
between those subprograms and other parts of the work.
.
The Corresponding Source need not include
anything that users can regenerate automatically
from other parts of the Corresponding Source.
.
The Corresponding Source for a work in source code form
is that same work.
.
2. Basic Permissions.
.
All rights granted under this License are granted
for the term of copyright on the Program,
and are irrevocable provided the stated conditions are met.
This License explicitly affirms your unlimited permission
to run the unmodified Program.
The output from running a covered work is covered by this License
only if the output, given its content, constitutes a covered work.
This License acknowledges your rights of fair use
or other equivalent, as provided by copyright law.
.
You may make, run and propagate
covered works that you do not convey,
without conditions
so long as your license otherwise remains in force.
You may convey covered works to others
for the sole purpose of having them
make modifications exclusively for you,
or provide you with facilities for running those works,
provided that you comply with the terms of this License
in conveying all material
for which you do not control copyright.
Those thus making or running the covered works for you
must do so exclusively on your behalf,
under your direction and control,
on terms that prohibit them from making any copies
of your copyrighted material
outside their relationship with you.
.
Conveying under any other circumstances is permitted
solely under the conditions stated below.
Sublicensing is not allowed;
section 10 makes it unnecessary.
.
3. Protecting Users' Legal Rights From Anti-Circumvention Law.
.
No covered work shall be deemed
part of an effective technological measure
under any applicable law fulfilling obligations
under article 11 of the WIPO copyright treaty
adopted on 20 December 1996,
or similar laws prohibiting or restricting
circumvention of such measures.
.
When you convey a covered work,
you waive any legal power
to forbid circumvention of technological measures
to the extent such circumvention is effected
by exercising rights under this License
with respect to the covered work,
and you disclaim any intention
to limit operation or modification of the work
as a means of enforcing, against the work's users,
your or third parties' legal rights
to forbid circumvention of technological measures.
.
4. Conveying Verbatim Copies.
.
You may convey verbatim copies of the Program's source code
as you receive it, in any medium,
provided that you conspicuously and appropriately publish
on each copy an appropriate copyright notice;
keep intact all notices
stating that this License and any non-permissive terms
added in accord with section 7 apply to the code;
keep intact all notices
of the absence of any warranty;
and give all recipients a copy of this License
along with the Program.
.
You may charge any price or no price
for each copy that you convey,
and you may offer support or warranty protection for a fee.
.
5. Conveying Modified Source Versions.
.
You may convey a work based on the Program,
or the modifications to produce it from the Program,
in the form of source code
under the terms of section 4,
provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
.
a) The work must carry prominent notices
stating that you modified it, and giving a relevant date.
.
b) The work must carry prominent notices
stating that it is released under this License
and any conditions added under section 7.
This requirement modifies
the requirement in section 4 to "keep intact all notices".
.
c) You must license the entire work, as a whole, under this License
to anyone who comes into possession of a copy.
This License will therefore apply,
along with any applicable section 7 additional terms,
to the whole of the work, and all its parts,
regardless of how they are packaged.
This License gives no permission
to license the work in any other way,
but it does not invalidate such permission
if you have separately received it.
.
d) If the work has interactive user interfaces,
each must display Appropriate Legal Notices;
however, if the Program has interactive interfaces
that do not display Appropriate Legal Notices,
your work need not make them do so.
.
A compilation of a covered work
with other separate and independent works,
which are not by their nature extensions of the covered work,
and which are not combined with it such as to form a larger program,
in or on a volume of a storage or distribution medium,
is called an "aggregate"
if the compilation and its resulting copyright are not used
to limit the access or legal rights of the compilation's users
beyond what the individual works permit.
Inclusion of a covered work in an aggregate
does not cause this License to apply
to the other parts of the aggregate.
.
6. Conveying Non-Source Forms.
.
You may convey a covered work in object code form
under the terms of sections 4 and 5,
provided that you also convey the machine-readable Corresponding Source
under the terms of this License,
in one of these ways:
.
a) Convey the object code in, or embodied in, a physical product
(including a physical distribution medium),
accompanied by the Corresponding Source
fixed on a durable physical medium
customarily used for software interchange.
.
b) Convey the object code in, or embodied in, a physical product
(including a physical distribution medium),
accompanied by a written offer,
valid for at least three years
and valid for as long as you offer spare parts or customer support
for that product model,
to give anyone who possesses the object code
either (1) a copy of the Corresponding Source
for all the software in the product that is covered by this License,
on a durable physical medium
customarily used for software interchange,
for a price no more than your reasonable cost
of physically performing this conveying of source,
or (2) access to copy the Corresponding Source
from a network server at no charge.
.
c) Convey individual copies of the object code
with a copy of the written offer to provide the Corresponding Source.
This alternative is allowed only occasionally and noncommercially,
and only if you received the object code with such an offer,
in accord with subsection 6b.
.
d) Convey the object code by offering access from a designated place
(gratis or for a charge),
and offer equivalent access to the Corresponding Source
in the same way through the same place at no further charge.
You need not require recipients to copy the Corresponding Source
along with the object code.
If the place to copy the object code is a network server,
the Corresponding Source may be on a different server
(operated by you or a third party)
that supports equivalent copying facilities,
provided you maintain clear directions next to the object code
saying where to find the Corresponding Source.
Regardless of what server hosts the Corresponding Source,
you remain obligated to ensure that it is available
for as long as needed to satisfy these requirements.
.
e) Convey the object code using peer-to-peer transmission,
provided you inform other peers
where the object code and Corresponding Source of the work
are being offered to the general public
at no charge under subsection 6d.
.
A separable portion of the object code,
whose source code is excluded
from the Corresponding Source as a System Library,
need not be included in conveying the object code work.
.
A "User Product" is either (1) a "consumer product",
which means any tangible personal property
which is normally used for personal, family, or household purposes,
or (2) anything designed or sold for incorporation into a dwelling.
In determining whether a product is a consumer product,
doubtful cases shall be resolved in favor of coverage.
For a particular product received by a particular user,
"normally used" refers to a typical or common use
of that class of product,
regardless of the status of the particular user
or of the way in which the particular user actually uses,
or expects or is expected to use,
the product.
A product is a consumer product
regardless of whether the product has substantial commercial,
industrial or non-consumer uses,
unless such uses represent the only significant mode
of use of the product.
.
"Installation Information" for a User Product means
any methods, procedures, authorization keys, or other information
required to install and execute modified versions of a covered work
in that User Product
from a modified version of its Corresponding Source.
The information must suffice to ensure
that the continued functioning of the modified object code
is in no case prevented or interfered with
solely because modification has been made.
.
If you convey an object code work under this section
in, or with, or specifically for use in, a User Product,
and the conveying occurs as part of a transaction
in which the right of possession and use of the User Product
is transferred to the recipient
in perpetuity or for a fixed term
(regardless of how the transaction is characterized),
the Corresponding Source conveyed under this section must
be accompanied by the Installation Information.
But this requirement does not apply
if neither you nor any third party retains
the ability to install modified object code on the User Product
(for example, the work has been installed in ROM).
.
The requirement to provide Installation Information does not include
a requirement to continue to provide support service, warranty,
or updates for a work
that has been modified or installed by the recipient,
or for the User Product in which it has been modified or installed.
Access to a network may be denied
when the modification itself materially and adversely affects
the operation of the network
or violates the rules and protocols
for communication across the network.
.
Corresponding Source conveyed,
and Installation Information provided,
in accord with this section must be in a format
that is publicly documented
(and with an implementation available to the public
in source code form),
and must require no special password or key
for unpacking, reading or copying.
.
7. Additional Terms.
.
"Additional permissions" are terms
that supplement the terms of this License
by making exceptions from one or more of its conditions.
Additional permissions that are applicable to the entire Program
shall be treated as though they were included in this License,
to the extent that they are valid under applicable law.
If additional permissions apply only to part of the Program,
that part may be used separately under those permissions,
but the entire Program remains governed by this License
without regard to the additional permissions.
.
When you convey a copy of a covered work,
you may at your option remove any additional permissions
from that copy, or from any part of it.
(Additional permissions may be written to require their own removal
in certain cases when you modify the work.)
You may place additional permissions on material,
added by you to a covered work,
for which you have or can give appropriate copyright permission.
.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this License,
for material you add to a covered work, you may
(if authorized by the copyright holders of that material)
supplement the terms of this License with terms:
.
a) Disclaiming warranty or limiting liability
differently from the terms of sections 15 and 16 of this License; or
.
b) Requiring preservation
of specified reasonable legal notices
or author attributions in that material
or in the Appropriate Legal Notices
displayed by works containing it; or
.
c) Prohibiting misrepresentation of the origin of that material,
or requiring that modified versions of such material be marked
in reasonable ways as different from the original version; or
.
d) Limiting the use for publicity purposes
of names of licensors or authors of the material; or
.
e) Declining to grant rights under trademark law
for use of some trade names, trademarks, or service marks; or
.
f) Requiring indemnification
of licensors and authors of that material
by anyone who conveys the material (or modified versions of it)
with contractual assumptions of liability to the recipient,
for any liability that these contractual assumptions directly impose
on those licensors and authors.
.
All other non-permissive additional terms
are considered "further restrictions"
within the meaning of section 10.
If the Program as you received it, or any part of it,
contains a notice stating that it is governed by this License
along with a term that is a further restriction,
you may remove that term.
If a license document contains a further restriction
but permits relicensing or conveying under this License,
you may add to a covered work material governed
by the terms of that license document,
provided that the further restriction does not survive
such relicensing or conveying.
.
If you add ter a covered work in accord with this section,
you must place, in the relevant source files, a statement
of the additional terms that apply to those files,
or a notice indicating where to find the applicable terms.
.
Additional terms, permissive or non-permissive, may be stated
in the form of a separately written license,
or stated as exceptions;
the above requirements apply either way.
.
8. Termination.
.
You may not propagate or modify a covered work
except as expressly provided under this License.
Any attempt otherwise to propagate or modify it is void,
and will automatically terminate your rights under this License
(including any patent licenses granted
under the third paragraph of section 11).
.
However, if you cease all violation of this License,
then your license from a particular copyright holder is reinstated
(a) provisionally,
unless and until the copyright holder explicitly and finally
terminates your license,
and (b) permanently,
if the copyright holder fails to notify you of the violation
by some reasonable means prior to 60 days after the cessation.
.
Moreover, your license from a particular copyright holder
is reinstated permanently
if the copyright holder notifies you
of the violation by some reasonable means,
this is the first time you have received notice
of violation of this License (for any work)
from that copyright holder,
and you cure the violation
prior to 30 days after your receipt of the notice.
.
Termination of your rights under this section does not terminate
the licenses of parties who have received copies or rights
from you under this License.
If your rights have been terminated and not permanently reinstated,
you do not qualify to receive new licenses for the same material
under section 10.
.
9. Acceptance Not Required for Having Copies.
.
You are not required to accept this License
in order to receive or run a copy of the Program.
Ancillary propagation
of a covered work occurring solely as a consequence
of using peer-to-peer transmission to receive a copy
likewise does not require acceptance.
However, nothing other than this License grants you
permission to propagate or modify any covered work.
These actions infringe copyright
if you do not accept this License.
Therefore, by modifying or propagating a covered work,
you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so.
.
10. Automatic Licensing of Downstream Recipients.
.
Each time you convey a covered work,
the recipient automatically receives
a license from the original licensors,
to run, modify and propagate that work,
subject to this License.
You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties
with this License.
.
An "entity transaction" is a transaction transferring control
of an organization, or substantially all assets of one,
or subdividing an organization,
or merging organizations.
If propagation of a covered work results from an entity transaction,
each party to that transaction who receives a copy of the work
also receives whatever licenses to the work
the party's predecessor in interest had or could give
under the previous paragraph,
plus a right to possession of the Corresponding Source of the work
from the predecessor in interest,
if the predecessor has it or can get it with reasonable efforts.
.
You may not impose any further restrictions
on the exercise of the rights granted or affirmed under this License.
For example, you may not impose
a license fee, royalty, or other charge
for exercise of rights granted under this Licensend you may not initiate litigation
(including a cross-claim or counterclaim in a lawsuit)
alleging that any patent claim is infringed
by making, using, selling, offering for sale, or importing
the Program or any portion of it.
.
11. Patents.
.
A "contributor" is a copyright holder
who authorizes use under this License of the Program
or a work on which the Program is based.
The work thus licensed is called
the contributor's "contributor version".
.
A contributor's "essential patent claims" are all patent claims
owned or controlled by the contributor,
whether already acquired or hereafter acquired,
that would be infringed by some manner,
permitted by this License,
of making, using, or selling its contributor version,
but do not include claims
that would be infringed only as a consequence
of further modification of the contributor version.
For purposes of this definition, "control" includes the right
to grant patent sublicenses in a manner
consistent with the requirements of this License.
.
Each contributor grants you
a non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty-free patent license
under the contributor's essential patent claims,
to make, use, sell, offer for sale, import and otherwise run, modify
and propagate the contents of its contributor version.
.
In the following three paragraphs,
a "patent license" is any express agreement or commitment,
however denominated, not to enforce a patent
(such as an express permission to practice a patent
or covenant not to sue for patent infringement).
To "grant" such a patent license to a party means
to make such an agreement or commitment
not to enforce a patent against the party.
.
If you convey a covered work,
knowingly relying on a patent license,
and the Corresponding Source of the work is not available
for anyone to copy,
free of charge and under the terms of this License,
through a publicly available network server
or other readily accessible means,
then you must either
(1) cause the Corresponding Source to be so available,
or (2) arrange to deprive yourself of the benefit
of the patent license for this particular work,
or (3) arrange,
in a manner consistent with the requirements of this License,
to extend the patent license to downstream recipients.
"Knowingly relying" means
you have actual knowledge that, but for the patent license,
your conveying the covered work in a country,
or your recipient's use of the covered work in a country,
would infringe one or more identifiable patents in that country
that you have reason to believe are valid.
.
If, pursuant to or in connection
with a single transaction or arrangement,
you convey, or propagate by procuring conveyance of, a covered work,
and grant a patent license to some of the parties
receiving the covered work authorizing them
to use, propagate, modify or convey a specific copy of the covered work,
then the patent license you grant is automatically extended
to all recipients of the covered work and works based on it.
.
A patent license is "discriminatory"
if it does not include within the scope of its coverage,
prohibits the exercise of, or is conditioned on
the non-exercise of one or more of the rights
that are specifically granted under this License.
You may not convey a covered work
if you are a party to an arrangement with a third party
that is in the business of distributing software,
under which you make payment to the third party
based on the extent of your activity of conveying the work,
and under which the third party grants,
to any of the partieo would receive the covered work from you,
a discriminatory patent license
(a) in connection with copies of the covered work conveyed by you
(or copies made from those copies),
or (b) primarily for and in connection with specific products
or compilations that contain the covered work,
unless you entered into that arrangement,
or that patent license was granted,
prior to 28 March 2007.
.
Nothing in this License shall be construed as excluding or limiting
any implied license or other defenses to infringement
that may otherwise be available to you under applicable patent law.
.
12. No Surrender of Others' Freedom.
.
If conditions are imposed on you
(whether by court order, agreement or otherwise)
that contradict the conditions of this License,
they do not excuse you from the conditions of this License.
If you cannot convey a covered work
so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations
under this License and any other pertinent obligations,
then as a consequence you may not convey it at all.
For example, if you agree to terms that obligate you
to collect a royalty for further conveying from those
to whom you convey the Program,
the only way you could satisfy both those terms and this License
would be to refrain entirely from conveying the Program.
.
13. Remote Network Interaction;
Use with the GNU General Public License.
.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this License,
if you modify the Program,
your modified version must prominently offer
all users interacting with it remotely through a computer network
(if your version supports such interaction)
an opportunity to receive the Corresponding Source of your version
by providing access to the Corresponding Source
from a network server at no charge,
through some standard or customary means
of facilitating copying of software.
This Corresponding Source shall include
the Corresponding Source for any work covered
by version 3 of the GNU General Public License
that is incorporated pursuant to the following paragraph.
.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this License,
you have permission to link or combine any covered work
with a work licensed
under version 3 of the GNU General Public License
into a single combined work, and to convey the resulting work.
The terms of this License will continue to apply
to the part which is the covered work,
but the work with which it is combined will remain governed
by version 3 of the GNU General Public License.
.
14. Revised Versions of this License.
.
The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions
of the GNU Affero General Public License from time to time.
Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version,
but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns.
.
Each version is given a distinguishing version number.
If the Program specifies that a certain numbered version
of the GNU Affero General Public License
"or any later version" applies to it,
you have the option of following the terms and conditions
either of that numbered version
or of any later version
published by the Free Software Foundation.
If the Program does not specify a version number
of the GNU Affero General Public License,
you may choose any version ever
published by the Free Software Foundation.
.
If the Program specifies that a proxy can decide
which future versions
of the GNU Affero General Public License can be used,
that proxy's public statement of acceptance of a version
permanently authorizes you to choose that version for the Progr.
Later license versions may give you
additional or different permissions.
However, no additional obligations are imposed
on any author or copyright holder
as a result of your choosing to follow a later version.
.
15. Disclaimer of Warranty.
.
THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM,
TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW.
EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING
THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS"
WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY
AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM
IS WITH YOU.
SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE,
YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
.
16. Limitation of Liability.
.
IN NO EVENT
UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY
WHO MODIFIES AND/OR CONVEYS THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE,
BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES,
INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM
(INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE
OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES
OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS),
EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED
OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
.
17. Interpretation of Sections 15 and 16.
.
If the disclaimer
of warranty and limitation of liability provided above
cannot be given local legal effect according to their terms,
reviewing courts shall apply local law
that most closely approximates an absolute waiver
of all civil liability in connection with the Program,
unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies
a copy of the Program in return for a fee.
.
END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
.
How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
.
If you develop a new program,
and you want it to be of the greatest possible use to the public,
the best way to achieve this is to make it free software
which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
.
To do so, attach the following notices to the program.
It is safest to attach them to the start of each source file
to most effectively state the exclusion of warranty;
and each file should have at least the "copyright" line
and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
.
<one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
Copyright (C) <year> <name of author>
.
This program is free software:
you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License
as published by the Free Software Foundation,
either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY;
without even the implied warranty
of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
See the GNU Affero General Public License for more details.
.
You should have received
a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
along with this program.
If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
.
Also add information on how to contact you
by electronic and paper mail.
.
If your software can interact with users
remotely through a computer network,
you should also make sure that it provides
a way for users to get its source.
For example, if your program is a web application,
its interface could display a "Source"at leads users to an archive of the code.
There are many ways you could offer source,
and different solutions will be better for different programs;
see section 13 for the specific requirements.
.
You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer)
or school, if any, to sign
a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary.
For more information on this,
and how to apply and follow the GNU AGPL,
see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
License: GPL-3
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; version 3.
.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston,
MA 02110-1301, USA
.
On Debian systems the full text of the GNU General Public License can be found
in the `/usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-3' file.
Description: check_pollen needs pollinate, so this script is better suited
in package pollinate
Author: Thorsten Alteholz <debian@alteholz.de>
Index: pollen-4.21/check_pollen
===================================================================
--- pollen-4.21.orig/check_pollen 2019-02-06 19:42:04.054819853 +0100
+++ pollen-4.21/check_pollen 2019-02-06 19:42:52.346819200 +0100
@@ -1,54 +1 @@
-#!/bin/sh
-#
-# check_pollen - verify the pollen server on localhost is operating correctly
-#
-# Copyright (C) 2013 Dustin Kirkland <dustin.kirkland@gmail.com>
-#
-# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
-# it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by
-# the Free Software Foundation, version 3 of the License.
-#
-# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
-# GNU Affero General Public License for more details.
-#
-# You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
-# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
-
-
-TMPDIR=$(mktemp -d -t "pollen.XXXXXXXXXXXX")
-trap "rm -rf ${TMPDIR} 2>/dev/null || true" EXIT HUP INT QUIT TERM
-
-md5sum1=$(grep pollen /var/log/syslog /var/log/pollen/pollen.log 2>/dev/null || true | md5sum)
-pollinate -t -i -s localhost -b -d - >"$TMPDIR/out" 2>"$TMPDIR/err" && RC=0 || RC=$?
-md5sum2=$(grep pollen /var/log/syslog /var/log/pollen/pollen.log 2>/dev/null || true | md5sum)
-bytes=$(wc -c "$TMPDIR/out" | awk '{print $1}')
-bpb=$(ent -t "$TMPDIR/out" | tail -n1 | awk -F, '{print $3}' | awk -F. '{print $1}')
-mean=$(ent -t "$TMPDIR/out" | tail -n1 | awk -F, '{print $5}' | awk -F. '{print $1}')
-
-if [ "$RC" != "0" ]; then
- echo "CRITICAL - pollen server did not properly respond to the test request [$RC]"
- cat "$TMPDIR/err" 1>&2
- exit 2
-fi
-if [ "$md5sum1" = "$md5sum2" ]; then
- echo "CRITICAL - pollen server did not properly log the test request [$RC]"
- grep pollen /var/log/syslog /var/log/pollen/pollen.log 2>/dev/null || true
- exit 2
-fi
-if [ -z "$bytes" ] || [ "$bytes" -lt 64 ]; then
- echo "WARNING - pollen server did not respond with at least 64 bytes [$bytes]"
- exit 1
-fi
-if [ -z "$bpb" ] || [ "$bpb" -lt 5 ]; then
- echo "WARNING - pollen server did not respond with sufficient entropy bits per byte [$bpb]"
- exit 1
-fi
-if [ -z "$mean" ] || [ "$mean" -lt 95 ] || [ "$mean" -gt 160 ]; then
- echo "WARNING - pollen server responded with poor entropy (bad arithmetic mean [$mean])"
- exit 1
-fi
-
-echo "OK - pollen server is online and responded correctly to the test request"
-exit 0
+# This has been moved to package pollinate
check-pollen-to-pollianet.patch
# HTTP_PORT is the http port on which the pollen server should listen and respond.
# Note that these connections will not be encrypted
# Default: 80
HTTP_PORT="42080"
# HTTPS_PORT is the https port on which the pollen server should listen and respond.
# Note that these connections will be encrypted using TLS
# Default: 443
HTTPS_PORT="42443"
# DEVICE is the source of randomness for entropy read by the server,
# and the destination for received and whitened entropy.
# Default: /dev/random
# Alternative: /dev/urandom
DEVICE="/dev/random"
# BYTES is the size in bytes to transmit and receive each time, to peers
# or neighbors listening for broadcast in the pool. It is rude to set this
# very high.
# Default: 64
BYTES="64"
# In case you don't want to have the stuff created during install,
# the files below need to be obtained for example from Let's Encrypt
#
# CERT is the location of the TLS certificate
# Default: /etc/pollen/cert.pem
CERT="/etc/pollen/cert.pem"
# KEY is the location of the TLS key
# Default: /etc/pollen/key.pem
KEY="/etc/pollen/key.pem"
pollen /usr/bin/
usr.bin.pollen /etc/apparmor.d/
# Golang code expects to be statically linked and built in this way
pollen: unstripped-binary-or-object
pollen.8
#!/bin/sh
set -e
PKG="pollen"
DIR="/etc/$PKG"
mkdir -p -m 700 "$DIR"
PUB_CERT="$DIR/cert.pem"
PK="$DIR/key.pem"
CA="$DIR/ca.pem"
# Create the pollen user if necessary
if ! getent passwd $PKG >/dev/null; then
adduser --disabled-password --quiet --system --home /var/cache/pollen --ingroup daemon $PKG --shell /bin/false
fi
# Set capabilities on the pollen binary to bind to privileged ports
setcap 'cap_net_bind_service=+ep' /usr/bin/pollen
[ -e /etc/apparmor.d/local/usr.bin.pollen ] || touch /etc/apparmor.d/local/usr.bin.pollen
if [ ! -r "$PUB_CERT" ] || [ ! -r "$PK" ]; then
install -m 600 /dev/null "$PUB_CERT"
install -m 600 /dev/null "$PK"
# Auto generate self signed certs if we don't have one already in place
openssl req -new -newkey rsa:4096 -nodes -x509 -out "$PUB_CERT" -keyout "$PK" -days 3650 -subj "/C=US/ST=TX/L=Austin/CN=localhost/emailAddress=pollen@example.com"
fi
chown $PKG:root $DIR
chown $PKG:root $DIR/*
#DEBHELPER#
#! /bin/sh
set -e
PKG=pollen
if [ "$1" = "purge" ]; then
deluser --quiet --system $PKG > /dev/null || true
rm -rf /etc/pollen || true
fi
#DEBHELPER#
[Unit]
Description=Entropy as a Service
After=network.target
[Service]
User=pollen
EnvironmentFile=/etc/default/pollen
# Ensure our device exists, and is a character device
ExecStartPre=/bin/sh -c '[ -c "$DEVICE" ]'
ExecStart=/usr/bin/pollen -http-port=${HTTP_PORT} -https-port=${HTTPS_PORT} -device=${DEVICE} -bytes=${BYTES} -cert=${CERT} -key=${KEY}
Restart=on-failure
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
#!/usr/bin/make -f
%:
dh $@ --with golang
override_dh_strip:
true
override_dh_installdeb:
dh_apparmor --profile-name=usr.bin.pollen -ppollen
dh_installdeb
override_dh_installinit:
dh_installinit --name=pollen-restart
dh_installinit
3.0 (quilt)
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