Historically, the MD5 checksums in our LFS files serve as a protection
against broken downloads, or accidentally corrupted source files.
While the sources are nowadays downloaded via HTTPS, it make sense to
beef up integrity protection for them, since transparently intercepting
TLS is believed to be feasible for more powerful actors, and the state
of the public PKI ecosystem is clearly not helping.
Therefore, this patch switches from MD5 to BLAKE2, updating all LFS
files as well as make.sh to deal with this checksum algorithm. BLAKE2 is
notably faster (and more secure) than SHA2, so the performance penalty
introduced by this patch is negligible, if noticeable at all.
In preparation of this patch, the toolchain files currently used have
been supplied with BLAKE2 checksums as well on
https://source.ipfire.org/.
Cc: Michael Tremer <michael.tremer@ipfire.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Müller <peter.mueller@ipfire.org>
Acked-by: Michael Tremer <michael.tremeripfire.org>
- Update from 2020.11.20 to 2022.02.18
- Update of rootfile not required
- Changelog
There is no changelog provided for this file.
Signed-off-by: Adolf Belka <adolf.belka@ipfire.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Müller <peter.mueller@ipfire.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Tremer <michael.tremer@ipfire.org>
- db.txt is the text file version of the wireless settings by country database
- Using db.txt means that regdbdump from crda is not required by wlanap.cgi
- This patch copies the db.txt file from the source tarball to /lib/firmware/ where
it can be read by wlanap.cgi
- This version of the patch renames the db.txt file to regulatorydb.txt
- Updated rootfile to include regulatorydb.txt
Signed-off-by: Adolf Belka <adolf.belka@ipfire.org>
Reviewed-by: Bernhard Bitsch <bbitsch@ipfire.org>
Signed-off-by: Arne Fitzenreiter <arne_f@ipfire.org>
Most of these files still used old dates and/or domain names for contact
mail addresses. This is now replaced by an up-to-date copyright line.
Just some housekeeping... :-)
Signed-off-by: Peter Müller <peter.mueller@link38.eu>
Signed-off-by: Michael Tremer <michael.tremer@ipfire.org>