On Thu, 2004-10-28 at 17:44 -0600, Rodolfo J. Paiz wrote: > On Thu, 2004-10-28 at 23:40 +0200, Matias F�ciano wrote: > > But I am tired with this mix of authentification, quality, rawhide mean > > "don't complain", trust own unsigned rawhide rpm but don't trust own > > unsigned rpm if it's not rawhide, ... arguments. > > I think it's more of a question of attaching a different meaning to > things. You see signing the Rawhide packages as a way to know that they > were not altered on a mirror, such that you are sure of downloading the > actual code produced by Red Hat. However, Peter and Jeff see signing the > package as having the same value as your signature on a legal document: > certification of something of value. As such, Fedora releases and > updates (even beta releases) are signed, but Rawhide releases are not. > > Both points of view make sense, but they attach different meanings to > the concept of "signing" something. > > My *interpretation* of what you wanted is that you would get exactly > what you want by having people sign the metadata in the repository as > was suggested earlier. You can then be certain that whatever is in the > repo is exactly what it should be. > > Now, how do we sign repo metadata? So we (in a very much too broad sense of "we" ;-) are basically saying that we should replace a mechanism that worked well for years with another one that a) puts a burden on the people who "know what things mean", b) doesn't really solve the problem with people doing things they shouldn't do(*) and c) doesn't exist already? Great idea ;-). (*): See another mail of me in this thread why assume this. Nils -- Nils Philippsen / Red Hat / nphilipp@xxxxxxxxxx "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -- B. Franklin, 1759 PGP fingerprint: C4A8 9474 5C4C ADE3 2B8F 656D 47D8 9B65 6951 3011