mandos 1.4.0-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

mandos (1.4.0-1) unstable; urgency=low

  * New upstream release.
  * Fix "FTBFS with binutils-gold": Added "-Xlinker --as-needed" to
    LDFLAGS in Makefile. (Closes: #632145)
  * Fix "/run transition: uses obsolete /dev/.initramfs": Try both old and
    new PID file locations. (Closes: #643554)
  * debian/source/local-options: New; contains "--single-debian-patch".
  * debian/control (Standards-Version): Upgraded to "3.9.2".
    (DM-Upload-Allowed): New; set to "yes".
  * debian/control: Changed domain from "fukt.bsnet.se" to "recompile.se".
  * debian/copyright: - '' -
  * debian/mandos-client.README.Debian: - '' -
  * debian/mandos.README.Debian: - '' -
  * debian/watch: - '' -
  * debian/control (mandos/Description): Fix language to placate lintian.

mandos (1.3.1-1) unstable; urgency=low

  * New upstream release.
  * Conflict with correct version of dropbear.
  * New version uses argparse; depend on python (<=2.7) | python-argparse.
 -- Angel Abad <email address hidden>   Sun, 09 Oct 2011 19:15:08 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Angel Abad
Uploaded to:
Precise
Original maintainer:
Mandos Maintainers
Architectures:
any all
Section:
admin
Urgency:
Low Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Precise release universe admin

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
mandos_1.4.0.orig.tar.gz 135.9 KiB 57d65b3b9f9fc63395df8f903b03af1ed6bb9841666c381f6867daf4e62414bd
mandos_1.4.0-1.debian.tar.gz 9.1 KiB bb8754e16df1cc045a85f3e36d24c94d553d034e5fadbb492c5c8273f9b0d211
mandos_1.4.0-1.dsc 1.4 KiB 1d8fc8f66f564531c3d10725a6e3be2539ab97df83409c253b0affe275f211dd

Available diffs

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

mandos: No summary available for mandos in ubuntu quantal.

No description available for mandos in ubuntu quantal.

mandos-client: do unattended reboots with an encrypted root file system

 This is the client part of the Mandos system, which allows
 computers to have encrypted root file systems and at the
 same time be capable of remote and/or unattended reboots.
 .
 The computers run a small client program in the initial RAM
 disk environment which will communicate with a server over a
 network. All network communication is encrypted using TLS.
 The clients are identified by the server using an OpenPGP
 key; each client has one unique to it. The server sends the
 clients an encrypted password. The encrypted password is
 decrypted by the clients using the same OpenPGP key, and the
 password is then used to unlock the root file system,
 whereupon the computers can continue booting normally.