deb_control_files:
- control
- md5sums
deb_fields:
Architecture: arm64
Depends: librust-anyhow-1+default-dev (>= 1.0.18-~~), librust-chrono-0.4+default-dev,
librust-crossbeam-0.8+default-dev (>= 0.8.1-~~), librust-num-cpus-1+default-dev,
librust-sequoia-cert-store-0.6-dev, librust-sequoia-openpgp-1+crypto-nettle-dev
(>= 1.20-~~), librust-thiserror-1+default-dev (>= 1.0.2-~~)
Description: |-
Explore the OpenPGP Web of Trust using Sequoia - Rust source code
The "Web of Trust" describes a network of identity assertions
("OpenPGP certifications") and signing delegations ("OpenPGP trust
signatures"), which can be used to formally validate identity
information in a cryptographic certificate.
.
In particular, this tooling allows the user to associate OpenPGP User
IDs (or simply the e-mail address part of the User ID) with some set
of OpenPGP certificates on the basis of explicit certifications made
by trusted parties.
.
The validation rules and certificate formats used in the Web of Trust
support corroborative, multiparty certification, so there is no need
to assign full trust to any single party.
.
This tooling offers a means to explore the Web of Trust by a library
in Rust, and a command-line interface capable of working with either
certificates in the filesystem or interacting with GnuPG's certificate
store and trust database.
Source code for Debianized Rust crate "sequoia-wot"
Homepage: https://sequoia-pgp.org/
Installed-Size: '2844'
Maintainer: Debian Rust Maintainers <pkg-rust-maintainers@alioth-lists.debian.net>
Multi-Arch: same
Package: librust-sequoia-wot-dev
Priority: optional
Provides: librust-sequoia-wot+default-dev (= 0.13.2-1), librust-sequoia-wot-0+default-dev
(= 0.13.2-1), librust-sequoia-wot-0-dev (= 0.13.2-1), librust-sequoia-wot-0.13+default-dev
(= 0.13.2-1), librust-sequoia-wot-0.13-dev (= 0.13.2-1), librust-sequoia-wot-0.13.2+default-dev
(= 0.13.2-1), librust-sequoia-wot-0.13.2-dev (= 0.13.2-1)
Section: rust
Source: rust-sequoia-wot
Version: 0.13.2-1
srcpkg_name: rust-sequoia-wot
srcpkg_version: 0.13.2-1