3 # gpg signs all *.tar.* files under the release directory.
4 # Invoke from that dir, or let the script try to figure it out for you.
6 # Key used is from env var EXIM_KEY; if git config finds user.signingkey, then
7 # that is the default. You can set this per-repo with:
8 # git config --local user.signingkey SOME_IDENTIFIER
10 # If not set in git config then you _MUST_ set the env var.
12 # woe betide the poor sod who does not use a gpg agent, so has
13 # to enter their password for every file...
15 prog="$(basename "$0")"
16 warn() { printf >&2 "%s: %s\n" "$prog" "$*" ; }
18 : "${GPG_COMMAND:=gpg}"
21 # We've always expected an explicit key for signing, instead of just using the
22 # gnupg config. It make sense to honor the git config value. It makes sense
23 # to honor env. But git doesn't allow specifying multiple subkeys, it only
24 # passes one -u option.
25 # UID specs explicitly allow whitespace in several formats.
26 # We have one scalar value, we're sh, we're not going to try using an array.
28 # So if you want to sign with multiple subkeys, then set it up with multiple
29 # local-user directives in ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf & set EXIM_KEY=default in environ.
31 if repo_signing_key="$(git config user.signingkey)"; then
32 : "${EXIM_KEY:=$repo_signing_key}"
34 if [ ".${EXIM_KEY:-}" = "." ]; then
35 warn "no EXIM_KEY found, trusting local gpg config"
39 case "${EXIM_KEY:-default}" in
41 gpg_sign() { ${GPG_COMMAND} --detach-sig --armor "${1:?}" ; }
44 gpg_sign() { ${GPG_COMMAND} --local-user "${EXIM_KEY}" --detach-sig --armor "${1:?}" ; }
48 cd_to() { echo "Working in: $1"; cd "$1"; }
51 #if [ -d ../../release-process ] && [ "${PWD##*/}" = "pkgs" ]; then
52 # okay=true # we are in right dir
53 #elif [ -d release-process ]; then
54 # b="$(find . -maxdepth 1 -name 'exim-packaging-*' | sort | tail -n 1)"
55 # if [ ".$b" != "." ]; then
61 if [ -d "${1:?need a directory to look in}" ]; then
65 printf "%s: %s\n" >&2 "$(basename "$0")" "where should I be looking"
70 # Assumes no whitespace (strictly, $IFS) in filenames, which we're okay with
71 set $(find . -name '*.asc' -prune -o -type f -print | cut -c 3- | sort)