On 12/29/2009 11:52 AM, Daniel Drake wrote:
Hi,
OLPC's security system uses libtomcrypt / tomsfastmath, both at the
Linux level and the firmware level.
OLPC has previously had a specific version of tomcrypt/tommath
profesionally audited for security reasons. So we obviously want to
stick with that version.
A few packages we have in Fedora currently use this frozen, audited
version - we do so by shipping duplicate copies of that source code
within the individual packages, rather than linking against the dynamic
systemwide equivalents.
As we're now looking at making another package which uses yet another
duplicate copy of this code base I'm wondering if we can do it better.
Could I add a package, named olpc-bios-crypto-devel (a subpackage of the
to-be-packaged olpc-bios-crypto), which installs the .a files for the
audited libraries somewhere on the system?
Then the individual components that rely on this library (e.g. bitfrost,
olpc-contents, olpc-bios-crypto) would have a BuildRequires dependency
on olpc-bios-crypto-devel and build against the 'systemwide' static .a
library files.
Or am I going too far against common packaging practice at this point?
Yes. You are outsmarting yourselves and not doing good to other users of
the libraries, IMO.
If all users of the library were using the same, identical shared
versions, everybody would benefit from your "auditing", maintainers
would benefit from "issues being fixed" at one place, users would
benefit from you not shipping statically linked packages.
Any alternative suggestions?
Use system-wide, shared versions only, unless there are technical
reasons for not doing so - Your rationale doesn't provide such.
Ralf
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