Re: Git and SHA-1 security (again)

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On Tue, Jul 19, 2016 at 7:34 PM, David Lang <david@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Tue, 19 Jul 2016, Duy Nguyen wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Jul 19, 2016 at 9:18 AM, Johannes Schindelin
>> <Johannes.Schindelin@xxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> But we can recreate SHA-1 from the same content and verify GPG, right?
>>>> I know it's super expensive, but it feels safer to not carry SHA-1
>>>> around when it's not secure anymore (I recall something about
>>>> exploiting the weakest link when you have both sha1 and sha256 in the
>>>> object content). Rehashing would be done locally and is better
>>>> controlled.
>>>
>>>
>>> You could. But how would you determine whether to recreate the commit
>>> object from a SHA-1-ified version of the commit buffer? Fall back if the
>>> original did not match the signature?
>>
>>
>> Any repo would have a cut point when they move to sha256 (or whatever
>> new hash), if we can record this somewhere (e.g. as a tag or a bunch
>> of tags, or some dummy commits to mark the heads of the repo) then we
>> only verify gpg signatures _in_ the repository before this point.
>
>
> remember that a repo doesn't have a single 'now', each branch has it's own
> head, and you can easily go back to prior points and branch off from there.
>
> Since timestamps in repos can't be trusted (different people's clocks may
> not be in sync), how would you define this cutoff point?

The set of all heads at the time the conversion happens (maybe plus
all the real tags). We can make an octopus merge commit to cover all
the heads, then it can be the reference point.
-- 
Duy
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