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Currently we only trust desktop files that have the executable bit
set, and don't replace the displayed icon or the displayed name until
it's trusted, which prevents for running random programs by a malicious
desktop file.
However, the executable permission is preserved if the desktop file
comes from a compressed file.
To prevent this, add a metadata::trusted metadata to the file once the
user acknowledges the file as trusted. This adds metadata to the file,
which cannot be added unless it has access to the computer.
Also remove the SHEBANG "trusted" content we were putting inside the
desktop file, since that doesn't add more security since it can come
with the file itself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777991
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And fix make distcheck.
Although libnautilus-private seem self contained, it was actually
depending on the files on src/ for dnd.
Not only that, but files in libnautilus-private also were depending on
dnd files, which you can guess it's wrong.
Before the desktop split, this was working because the files were
distributed, but now was a problem since we reestructured the code, and
now nautilus being a library make distcheck stop working.
First solution was try to fix this inter dependency of files, but at
some point I realized that there was no real point on splitting some of
those files, because for example, is perfectly fine for dnd to need to
access the window functions, and it's perfectly fine for the widgets
in the private library to need to access to all dnd functions.
So seems to me the private library of nautilus is somehow an artificial
split, which provides more problems than solutions.
We needed libnautilus-private to have a private library that we could
isolate from extensions, but I don't think it worth given the problems
it provides, and also, this not so good logical split.
Right now, since with the desktop split we created a libnautilus to be
used by the desktop part of nautilus, extensions have access to all
the API of nautilus. We will think in future how this can be handled if
we want.
So for now, merge the libnautilus-private into src, and let's rethink
a better logic to split the code and the private parts of nautilus than
what we had.
Thanks a lot to Rafael Fonseca for helping in get this done.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765543
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