Re: Git-commits mailing list feed.

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Paul Jakma wrote:
On Sun, 24 Apr 2005, David A. Wheeler wrote:
Hmm, what do you mean by "repeating what gets signed"?

Forget it, irrelevant.  I vaguely remembered some problem with
gpg's detached signatures, but it was probably either a really
early alpha version or someone was using "--clearsign" instead
of "--armor".  I just did a quick check with:
 gpg --armor --detach -o junk.sig junk.c
and it worked "as expected"; no repeat of the data.

Yes, and see my earlier posting.  It'd be easy to store signatures in
the current objects directory, of course.  The trick is to be able
to go from signed-object to the signature;
Two ways:
1. An index of sigs to signed-object.
(or more generally: objects to referring-objects)

Right.  I suggested putting it in the same directory as the objects,
so that rsync users get them "for free", but a separate directory
has its own advantages & that'd be fine too.
In fact, the more I think about it, I think it'd be cleaner
to have it separate.   You could prepend on top of the signature
(if signatures are separate from assertions) WHAT got signed so
that the index could be recreated from scratch when desired.

2. Just give people the URI of the signature, let them (or their
   tools) follow the 'parent' link to the object of interest

If you mean "the signatures aren't stored with the objects", NO.
Please don't! If the signatures are not stored in the database,
then over time they'll get lost.  It's important to me to
store the record of trust, as well as what changed, so that
ANYONE can later go back and verify that things are as they're
supposed to be, or exactly who trusted what.

I think it might be more useful just to provide a general index to lookup 'referring' objects (if git does not already - I dont think it does, but I dont know enough to know for sure).

git definitely doesn't have this currently, though you could run the
fsck tools which end up creating a lot of the info (but it's then
thrown away).

> So you could ask "which
{commit,tag,signature,tree}(s) refer(s) to this object?" - that general concept will always work.

Yes. The problem is that maintaining the index is a pain.
It's probably worth it for signatures, because the primary use
is the other direction ("who signed this?"); it's not clear that
the other direction is common for other data.

--- David A. Wheeler
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