Debian: 2076-1: gnupg2: use-after-free


 
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Special Forums Cybersecurity Security Advisories (RSS) Debian: 2076-1: gnupg2: use-after-free
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Old 07-27-2010
Debian: 2076-1: gnupg2: use-after-free

LinuxSecurity.com: It was discovered that GnuPG 2 uses a freed pointer when verify a signature or importing a certificate with many Subject Alternate Names, potentially leading to arbitrary code execution. [More...]

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GnuPG::Revoker(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				       GnuPG::Revoker(3pm)

NAME
GnuPG::Revoker - GnuPG Key Revoker Objects SYNOPSIS
# assumes a GnuPG::PrimaryKey object in $key my $revokerfpr = $key->revokers->[0]->fingerprint(); DESCRIPTION
GnuPG::Revoker objects are generally not instantiated on their own, but rather as part of GnuPG::Key objects. They represent a statement that another key is designated to revoke certifications made by the key in question. OBJECT METHODS
new( %initialization_args ) This methods creates a new object. The optional arguments are initialization of data members. is_sensitive() Returns 0 if the revoker information can be freely distributed. If this is non-zero, the information should be treated as "sensitive". Please see http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4880#section-5.2.3.15 for more explanation. compare( $other, $deep ) Returns non-zero only when this designated revoker is identical to the other GnuPG::Revoker. If $deep is present and non-zero, the revokers' signatures will also be compared. OBJECT DATA MEMBERS
fingerprint A GnuPG::Fingerprint object indicating the fingerprint of the specified revoking key. (Note that this is *not* the fingerprint of the key whose signatures can be revoked by this revoker). algo_num The numeric identifier of the algorithm of the revoker's key. signatures A list of GnuPG::Signature objects which cryptographically bind the designated revoker to the primary key. If the material was instantiated using the *_with_sigs() functions from GnuPG::Interface, then a valid revoker designation should have a valid signature associated with it from the relevant key doing the designation (not from the revoker's key). Note that designated revoker certifications are themselves irrevocable, so there is no analogous list of revocations in a GnuPG::Revoker object. SEE ALSO
GnuPG::Interface, GnuPG::Fingerprint, GnuPG::Key, GnuPG::Signature, http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4880#section-5.2.3.15 <http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4880#section-5.2.3.15> perl v5.12.4 2010-06-07 GnuPG::Revoker(3pm)