While looking at pcsc-tools and pcscs-perl (only needed for the
dependency from pcscs-tools) I have found that these are not really
depended on by anything important.

This matches the statement in the request that says:
"This package provides general utilities for smartcards; it's possible that we 
do not strictly need this package for our use case."

Use case wise it contains:
- /usr/bin/ATR_analysis
  Tool to analyze the raw ATR answer from a smart card - debugging tool at best 
and
  no common use case
- /usr/bin/scriptor + /usr/bin/gscriptor
  Send scripts to a smartcard, that might be a developer or debugging feature 
but doesn't sound 
  an end user thing for the enterprise desktop you have in mind.
- /usr/bin/pcsc_scan
  This is the one end-user useful tool in this toolset showing the available 
cards that are 
  inserted. But honestly you want to integrate things in an enterprise desktop 
and there I'd
  expect a UI-thing for it and not this cmdline tool. At the same time nothing 
in gnome or 
  anywhere else related depends on it.

IMHO we should not promote packages to main we have no real use and
integration of.

If there is a good case how this plays a role in the envisioned
"Enterprise Desktop smartcard integration" then I'm more than happy to
review and process this (in that case also say why/why-not pcscd is
important - see above).

MIR Team Nack to pcsc-tools and pcscs-perl for the (currently) given
dependencies and reasoning.

** Changed in: pcsc-perl (Ubuntu)
       Status: New => Invalid

** Changed in: pcsc-tools (Ubuntu)
       Status: New => Invalid

** Changed in: pcsc-perl (Ubuntu)
     Assignee: Christian Ehrhardt  (paelzer) => (unassigned)

** Changed in: pcsc-tools (Ubuntu)
     Assignee: Christian Ehrhardt  (paelzer) => (unassigned)

** Changed in: pcsc-lite (Ubuntu)
     Assignee: Christian Ehrhardt  (paelzer) => (unassigned)

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You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Touch seeded packages, which is subscribed to pcsc-lite in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1892559

Title:
  [MIR] ccid libpam-pkcs1 libpcsc-perl opensc pcsc-tools pcsc-lite

Status in ccid package in Ubuntu:
  New
Status in opensc package in Ubuntu:
  Incomplete
Status in pam-pkcs11 package in Ubuntu:
  New
Status in pcsc-lite package in Ubuntu:
  Incomplete
Status in pcsc-perl package in Ubuntu:
  Invalid
Status in pcsc-tools package in Ubuntu:
  Invalid

Bug description:
  ==> ccid <==
  [Availability]
  ccid is in universe, and builds on all architectures.

  [Rationale]
  The desktop team and security team are interested in bringing smartcard
  authentication to enterprise desktop environments.

  [Security]
  No CVEs for ccid are listed in our database.
  Doesn't appear to bind to a socket.
  No privileged executables, but does have udev rules.
  Probably needs a security review.

  [Quality assurance]
  No test suite.
  Does require odd hardware that we'll probably need to buy.
  I don't see debconf questions.
  ccid is well maintained in Debian by upstream author.
  One open wishlist bug in BTS, harmless.

  One open bug in launchpad, not security, but looks very frustrating
  for the users. The upstream author was engaged but it never reached
  resolution.  https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ccid/+bug/1175465

  Has a debian/watch file.
  Quilt packaging.

  P: ccid source: no-dep5-copyright
  P: ccid source: package-uses-experimental-debhelper-compat-version 13

  [Dependencies]
  Minimal dependencies, in main

  [Standards compliance]
  Appears to satisfy FHS and Debian policy

  [Maintenance]
  The desktop team will subscribe to bugs, however it is expected that the
  security team will assist with security-relevant questions.

  [Background information]
  ccid provides drivers to interact with usb-connected smart card readers.

  ==> libpam-pkcs11 <==
  [Availability]
  Source package pam-pkcs11 is in universe and builds on all architectures.

  [Rationale]
  The desktop team and security team are interested in bringing smartcard
  authentication to enterprise desktop environments.

  [Security]
  No CVEs in our database.
  Doesn't appear to bind to sockets.
  No privileged executables (but is a PAM module).
  As a PAM module this will require a security review.

  [Quality assurance]
  The package does not call pam-auth-update in its postinst #1650366
  Does not ask questions during install.
  One Ubuntu bug claims very poor behaviour if a card isn't plugged in.
  No Debian bugs.
  Occasional updates in Debian by long-term maintainer.
  Does require odd hardware that we'll probably need to buy.
  Does not appear to run tests during build.
  Has scary warnings in the build logs.
  Has a debian/watch file.

  Ancient standards version; other smaller lintian messages, mostly
  documentation problems.

  Quilt packaging.

  [Dependencies]
  Depends on libcurl4, libldap-2.4-2, libpam0g, libpcsclite1, libssl1.1
  All are in main.

  [Standards compliance]
  The package does not call pam-auth-update in its postinst #1650366
  Otherwise looks to conform to FHS and Debian policies

  [Maintenance]
  The desktop team will subscribe to bugs, however it is expected that the
  security team will assist with security-relevant questions.

  [Background information]
  This PAM module can use CRLs and full-chain verification of certificates.
  It can also do LDAP, AD, and Kerberos username mapping.

  ==> libpcsc-perl <==
  [Availability]
  Source package pcsc-perl is in universe, builds for all architectures,
  plus i386

  [Rationale]
  The desktop team and security team are interested in bringing smartcard
  authentication to enterprise desktop environments.

  [Security]
  There are no cves for pcsc-perl in our database.
  No privileged executables.
  Doesn't appear to bind to sockets.
  Probably needs a security review.

  [Quality assurance]
  Library package not intended to be used directly.
  No debconf questions.
  No bugs in Debian.
  No bugs in Ubuntu.
  Does require odd hardware that we'll probably need to buy.
  Tests exist, not run during the build; probably can't run during the build.
  Includes debian/watch file.
  A handful of lintian issues
  Quilt packaging.

  [Dependencies]
  libpcsc-perl depends upon libpcsclite1, libc6, perl, perlapi-5.30.0.
  All are in main.

  [Standards compliance]
  One oddity, Card.pod is stored in 
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/perl5/5.30/Chipcard/PCSC/
  Many other perl packages have .pod files in these directory trees so maybe
  it's fine, but it seems funny all the same.

  Otherwise appears to satisfy FHS and Debian policy.

  [Maintenance]
  The desktop team will subscribe to bugs, however it is expected that the
  security team will assist with security-relevant questions.

  [Background information]
  Dependency of pcsc-tools; this library provides an API to work with smart
  cards and card readers.

  ==> opensc <==
  [Availability]
  Both opensc and opensc-pkcs11
  In universe, builds for all architectures.

  [Rationale]
  The desktop team and security team are interested in bringing smartcard
  authentication to enterprise desktop environments.

  [Security]
  26 CVEs in our database. None open in groovy.
  No privileged executables.
  Does not appear to bind to sockets.
  Probably needs a security review.

  [Quality assurance]
  Unknown configuration effort.
  No debconf questions.
  Several recent Ubuntu bugs ask for updates to newer versions for bugfixes.
  A recent Debian bug reports a FTBFS, includes a fix, and has been ignored
  for months.
  Does require odd hardware that we'll probably need to buy.
  Includes a test suite, most of which is skipped; unknown quality, looks
  like a bit more than usual smoke testing.
  Includes a debian/watch file.
  Handful of small lintian warnings.
  Quilt packaging.

  [Dependencies]
  Recommends: pcscd from universe

  [Standards compliance]
  Appears to follow FHS, Debian policy.

  [Maintenance]
  The desktop team will subscribe to bugs, however it is expected that the
  security team will assist with security-relevant questions.

  [Background information]
  Provides a pkcs#11 library for interacting with many models of smartcards.

  ==> pcsc-tools <==
  [Availability]
  Built in groovy for all architectures

  [Rationale]
  The desktop team and security team are interested in bringing smartcard
  authentication to enterprise desktop environments.

  [Security]
  No CVEs in our database for pcsc-tools.
  Doesn't appear to bind to sockets.
  No privileged executables.
  Probably needs a security review.

  [Quality assurance]
  It looks like it works out of the box.
  No debconf questions.
  One bug in Ubuntu, it doesn't make much sense.
  No bugs in Debian.
  Looks to be regularly updated in Debian.
  Does require odd hardware that we'll probably need to buy.
  Doesn't look like it includes a test suite.
  Includes a debian/watch file.
  Very short lintian --pedantic output.
  Quilt packaging.

  [Dependencies]
  Depends upon libpcsclite1, libpcsc-perl, libgtk3-perl.
  libpcsc-perl is in universe.

  [Standards compliance]
  Appears to adhere to FHS, Debian policy.

  [Maintenance]
  The desktop team will subscribe to bugs, however it is expected that the
  security team will assist with security-relevant questions.

  [Background information]
  This package provides general utilities for smartcards; it's possible that
  we do not strictly need this package for our use case.

  ==> libpcsclite1 <==
  [Availability]
  pcsc-lite is in universe, and builds on all architectures.

  [Rationale]
  The desktop team and security team are interested in bringing smartcard
  authentication to enterprise desktop environments.

  [Security]
  Five CVEs for pcsc-lite are listed in our database.
  Doesn't appear to bind to a socket.
  No executables, only a library.
  Probably needs a security review.

  [Quality assurance]
  There is a testpcsc.c file that is compiled but I don't know how to use it
  for tests.
  Does require odd hardware that we'll probably need to buy.
  I don't see debconf questions.
  pcsc-lite is well maintained in Debian by upstream author.
  There are a handful of open bugs in Debian, the author was very repsonsive
  on the hndful I inspected, it looks like some cases of misunderstood 
  capabilities, cases of conflicting requirements, etc. Nothing looked 
  concerning:
  https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?repeatmerged=no&src=pcsc-lite

  The most recent Ubuntu bugs are due to (a) 14.04 systemd problems (b) 
  errors from drivers assigned to the wrong package (c) probably due to use
  of insserv rather than plain systemd:
  https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/pcsc-lite/+bugs?orderby=-id&start=0
  Nothing looked concerning.

  Has a debian/watch file.
  Quilt packaging.

  P: pcsc-lite source: no-dep5-copyright
  P: pcsc-lite source: package-uses-experimental-debhelper-compat-version 13

  [Dependencies]
  libpcsclite1 depends upon libc6.

  [Standards compliance]
  Appears to satisfy FHS and Debian policy

  [Maintenance]
  The desktop team will subscribe to bugs, however it is expected that the
  security team will assist with security-relevant questions.

  [Background information]
  libpcsclite1 provides windows smart-card API to interact with smart card
  readers.

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