Re: WoT cluster analysis tools?

2010-08-10 Thread Ingo Klöcker
On Tuesday 10 August 2010, Robin H. Johnson wrote:
 Not sure if such things exist already, but hopefully they do, and
 somebody could point me to them...
 
 To go into a little more detail, I'd like to examine the WoT as it
 exists between Gentoo developers, and try to work out a reasonable
 way to close it for resurrecting our long-dead keyring.
 
 Specifically interested in isolation of local clusters within the
 sets of keys. Two sets of keys, one of current developers only, and
 a second of all developers, past and present.
 
 Looking around, I find a few WoT graphing sites, but none of the
 tools used by said sites.

Most likely most sites use a combination of a simple script (written in 
an arbitrary scripting language) extracting the graph's edges from a 
keyring and one of the graphviz tools (probably dot) for the 
visualization of the graphs.


Regards,
Ingo


signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
___
Gnupg-users mailing list
Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users


Re: WoT cluster analysis tools?

2010-08-10 Thread Jason Harris
On Tue, Aug 10, 2010 at 04:52:12AM +, Robin H. Johnson wrote:
 Not sure if such things exist already, but hopefully they do, and
 somebody could point me to them...
 
 To go into a little more detail, I'd like to examine the WoT as it
 exists between Gentoo developers, and try to work out a reasonable way
 to close it for resurrecting our long-dead keyring.
 
 Specifically interested in isolation of local clusters within the sets of
 keys. Two sets of keys, one of current developers only, and a second of
 all developers, past and present.
 
 Looking around, I find a few WoT graphing sites, but none of the tools
 used by said sites.

I think keyanalyze does exactly what you want.  Given a keyring, it
will list the strong set, in which everyone can reach everyone else,
and isolated sets, which can be connected to the strong set with a
single connection between sets.  Any keys which aren't specifically
listed are (essentially) only self-signed and also need a connection
to/from the strong set.

-- 
Jason Harris   |  NIC:  JH329, PGP:  This _is_ PGP-signed, isn't it?
jhar...@widomaker.com _|_ web:  http://keyserver.kjsl.com/~jharris/
  Got photons?   (TM), (C) 2004


pgpSmqtNbhACm.pgp
Description: PGP signature
___
Gnupg-users mailing list
Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users


WoT cluster analysis tools?

2010-08-09 Thread Robin H. Johnson
Not sure if such things exist already, but hopefully they do, and
somebody could point me to them...

To go into a little more detail, I'd like to examine the WoT as it
exists between Gentoo developers, and try to work out a reasonable way
to close it for resurrecting our long-dead keyring.

Specifically interested in isolation of local clusters within the sets of
keys. Two sets of keys, one of current developers only, and a second of
all developers, past and present.

Looking around, I find a few WoT graphing sites, but none of the tools
used by said sites.

-- 
Robin Hugh Johnson
Gentoo Linux: Developer, Trustee  Infrastructure Lead
E-Mail : robb...@gentoo.org
GnuPG FP   : 11AC BA4F 4778 E3F6 E4ED  F38E B27B 944E 3488 4E85

___
Gnupg-users mailing list
Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users