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README | ||
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README
Signing Tool (signtool) 3.10 Release Notes ======================================== Documentation is provided online at mozilla.org Problems or questions not covered by the online documentation can be discussed in the DevEdge Security Newsgroup. === New Features in 3.10 ======================= One new option (-X) has been added to create a Mozilla aware signed XPI archive. The option must be accompanied by the -Z option. This new option creates a JAR file with the META-INF/zigbert.rsa/dsa file as the first file in the archive instead of the default third to last. This will enable the archive to be seen as signed by products incorporating XPInstall. i.e. .xpi extensions for FireFox or Mozilla. === New Features in 1.3 ======================= The security library components have been upgraded to utilize NSS_2_7_1_RTM. This means that the maximum RSA keysize now supported should be 4096 bits. === Zigbert 0.6 Support ======================= This program was previously named Zigbert. The last version of zigbert was Zigbert 0.6. Because all the functionality of Zigbert is maintained in signtool 1.2, Zigbert is no longer supported. If you have problems using Zigbert, please upgrade to signtool 1.2. === New Features in 1.2 ======================= Certificate Generation Improvements ----------------------------------- Two new options have been added to control generation of self-signed object signing certificates with the -G option. The -s option takes the size (in bits) of the generated RSA private key. The -t option takes the name of the PKCS #11 token on which to generate the keypair and install the certificate. Both options are optional. By default, the private key is 1024 bits and is generated on the internal software token. === New Features in 1.1 ======================= File I/O -------- Signtool can now read its options from a command file specified with the -f option on the command line. The format for the file is described in the documentation. Error messages and informational output can be redirected to an output file by supplying the "--outfile" option on the command line or the "outfile=" option in the command file. New Options ----------- "--norecurse" tells Signtool not to recurse into subdirectories when signing directories or parsing HTML with the -J option. "--leavearc" tells Signtool not to delete the temporary .arc directories produced by the -J option. This can aid debugging. "--verbosity" tells Signtool how much information to display. 0 is the default. -1 suppresses most messages, except for errors. === Bug Fixes in 1.1 ==================== -J option revamped ------------------ The -J option, which parses HTML files, extracts Java and Javascript code, and stores them in signed JAR files, has been re-implemented. Several bugs have been fixed: - CODEBASE attribute is no longer ignored - CLASS and SRC attributes can be be paths ("xxx/xxx/x.class") rather than just filenames ("x.class"). - LINK tags are handled correctly - various HTML parsing bugs fixed - error messages are more informative No Password on Key Database --------------------------- If you had not yet set a Communicator password (which locks key3.db, the key database), signtool would fail with a cryptic error message whenever it attempted to verify the password. Now this condition is detected at the beginning of the program, and a more informative message is displayed. -x and -e Options ----------------- Previously, only one of each of these options could be specified on the command line. Now arbitrarily many can be specified. For example, to sign only files with .class or .js extensions, the arguments "-eclass -ejs" could both be specified. To exclude the directories "subdir1" and "subdir2" from signing, the arguments "-x subdir1 -x subdir2" could both be specified. New Features in 1.0 =================== Creation of JAR files ---------------------- The -Z option causes signtool to output a JAR file formed by storing the signed archive in ZIP format. This eliminates the need to use a separate ZIP utility. The -c option specifies the compression level of the resulting JAR file. Generation of Object-Signing Certificates and Keys -------------------------------------------------- The -G option will create a new, self-signed object-signing certificate which can be used for testing purposes. The generated certificate and associated public and private keys will be installed in the cert7.db and key3.db files in the directory specified with the -d option (unless the key is generated on an external token using the -t option). On Unix systems, if no directory is specified, the user's Netscape directory (~/.netscape) will be used. In addition, the certificate is output in X509 format to the files x509.raw and x509.cacert in the current directory. x509.cacert can be published on a web page and imported into browsers that visit that page. Extraction and Signing of JavaScript from HTML ---------------------------------------------- The -J option activates the same functionality provided by the signpages Perl script. It will parse a directory of html files, creating archives of the JavaScript called from the HTML. These archives are then signed and made into JAR files. Enhanced Smart Card Support --------------------------- Certificates that reside on smart cards are displayed when using the -L and -l options.