> -----Original Message-----
> From: Patrick Schleizer
> Sent: Friday, November 21, 2014 18:01
>> Dear git developers!
>> Jeff King wrote:
> > On Sun, Nov 16, 2014 at 03:31:10PM +0000, Patrick Schleizer wrote:
> >
> >> How safe are signed git tags? Especially because git uses
> SHA-1. There
> >> is contradictory information around.
> >>
> >> So if one verifies a git tag (`git tag -v tagname`), then
> `checksout`s
> >> the tag, and checks that `git status` reports no untracked/modified
> >> files, without further manually auditing the code, how
> secure is this
> >> actually? Is it only as safe as SHA-1?
> >
> > Yes, it is only as "safe as SHA-1" in the sense that you
> have GPG-signed
> > only a SHA-1 hash. If somebody can find a collision with a
> hash you have
> > signed, they can substitute the colliding data for the data
> you signed.
The whole issue is a lot better than this makes it sound. Yes it is just a SHA1 hash, but it is a hash of a structured data format.
You have very observable parts of that well structured data providede to the hash.
The commit message, the directory contents, and lastly the files themselves.
For a collision to occur, the commit message would have to likely have garbage in the message of a large nature. To generate a colision by commited file contents is unlikely because the file contents is reduced to a hash in the directory structure, which is in turn reduced to a hash in a commit structure.
This would be noticed.
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