monkeysphere 0.39-1ubuntu1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

monkeysphere (0.39-1ubuntu1) yakkety; urgency=medium

  * Fix build with ld --as-needed.

 -- Matthias Klose <email address hidden>  Wed, 31 Aug 2016 19:42:35 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Matthias Klose
Uploaded to:
Yakkety
Original maintainer:
Jameson Graef Rollins
Architectures:
any all
Section:
net
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

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File Size SHA-256 Checksum
monkeysphere_0.39.orig.tar.gz 105.2 KiB 73331e2df361b22e1dc6445a7d2b0b2c5a124daa4d850c2ecce721579592c29f
monkeysphere_0.39-1ubuntu1.debian.tar.xz 5.8 KiB 7c886fcb0baace0a6a1461511e5c532c4e9a92ba2852874c530590fb85f77d52
monkeysphere_0.39-1ubuntu1.dsc 2.2 KiB 142e3a19d298e43cce0cc0a6cfaf48d671a906c939b5fc951c97a4b6b869c41f

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Binary packages built by this source

agent-transfer: No summary available for agent-transfer in ubuntu yakkety.

No description available for agent-transfer in ubuntu yakkety.

agent-transfer-dbgsym: debug symbols for agent-transfer
monkeysphere: leverage the OpenPGP web of trust for SSH and TLS authentication

 SSH key-based authentication is tried-and-true, but it lacks a true
 Public Key Infrastructure for key certification, revocation and
 expiration. Monkeysphere is a framework that uses the OpenPGP web of
 trust for these PKI functions. It can be used in both directions:
 for users to get validated host keys, and for hosts to authenticate
 users. Current monkeysphere SSH tools are designed to integrate
 with the OpenSSH implementation of the Secure Shell protocol.
 .
 Monkeysphere can also be used by a validation agent to validate TLS
 connections (e.g. https).