5060c50158
...where a signed and an unsigned value are compared, and the signed value has just been proven to be non-negative here Change-Id: I20600d61a5d59d739bc1bee838c0038e4611aec2 Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/c/core/+/134875 Tested-by: Jenkins Reviewed-by: Stephan Bergmann <sbergman@redhat.com> |
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.. | ||
doc | ||
inc | ||
qa | ||
source | ||
test_docs | ||
uiconfig/ui | ||
util | ||
workben | ||
AllLangMoTarget_xsc.mk | ||
CppunitTest_qa_certext.mk | ||
CppunitTest_xmlsecurity_dialogs_test.mk | ||
CppunitTest_xmlsecurity_pdfsigning.mk | ||
CppunitTest_xmlsecurity_signing.mk | ||
Executable_pdfverify.mk | ||
IwyuFilter_xmlsecurity.yaml | ||
Library_xmlsecurity.mk | ||
Library_xsec_xmlsec.mk | ||
Makefile | ||
Module_xmlsecurity.mk | ||
README.md | ||
UIConfig_xmlsec.mk |
Stuff for Document Signing
This code provides dialogs, and infrastructure wrapping libxmlsec
and
gpgme
that implements document signing.
For signing a document, a personal key pair is used, which consists of a private key and a public key, which is added to the document in addition to the digital signature of the document, when signing it.
The document signing can be done both for the source ODF/OOXML files and the exported PDF files. It is also possible to sign existing PDF files.
To test the signed PDFs, one can use the pdfverify
in this way:
./bin/run pdfverify $PWD/xmlsecurity/qa/unit/pdfsigning/data/2good.pdf
The file parameter should be an absolute path.
This is the output of pdfverify
for 2good.pdf
:
verifying signatures
found 2 signatures
signature #0: digest match? 1
signature #0: partial? 0
signature #1: digest match? 1
signature #1: partial? 0