* Revoked keys on index.
* Check keys on import?
-* Test library?
* Better signature subpacket parsing (primary UID for example).
-* Better merging of signatures; need to decode subpackets so we can make sure
- we don't add a signature that's already on a key but has different
- subpackets.
+* Better merging of signatures; need to compare subpackets on Type 4 packets
+ and choose which we should use (how? most recent date?)
+* Honor no-modify keyserver flag ("Brian M. Carlson" <karlsson@hal-pc.org>)
* Better txt2html routine.
* Remove bithelp.h (i386 only at present & inlined).
- Build and test on non-i386.
-* Pathfinder - graphical as well? Multiple paths?
+* Pathfinder - graphical as well?
* Do pathlengths for similar email addresses to help aide keysigning.
(ie "Find me the keys furthest from mine that end ox.ac.uk'")
Suggested by Jochen Voss <voss@mathematik.uni-kl.de>.
-* Other stats. sixdegrees? with piccy? most signed? signs most?
+* Other stats. with piccy? most signed? signs most?
* DB access modules as a library to allow runtime configuration of it?
* Clean up gcc warnings (`ll' length modifier especially! Also inline & wrong
signedness for lo_read/write)
-* Webpages should be UTF-8?
+* Test library?
* autoconf
-* config file
-* Get all keys link for pathfinder? Or even just gpg command line to C&P.
-* logging framework so we can log debug/warning messages and so on. syslog?
-* Change over to PQescapeString in PostgreSQL backend once Woody releases.
-* Check freeing.
+* Full email interface support (ADD, INDEX etc)
* More comments.
-* Sort out merging (use onak + some Perl to answer incoming email. Not
- sure about keys via hkp yet though - need to send updates out).
* Look at db2 backend - is it db2's fault? (Well, deadlock in that the library
- probably is...). Is there an alternative library that would provide us with
- similar features but be more reliable? gdbm?
-* Honor no-modify keyserver flag ("Brian M. Carlson" <karlsson@hal-pc.org>)
+ probably is...). Pull some of the DB3 stuff across for completeness.