Block Filter: 1st byte missing

Steve Butler sbutler at fchn.com
Fri Apr 24 23:11:55 CEST 2015


Client with PGP is encrypting files that we can usually decrypt with GnuPG 1.4.16 on an Oracle Enterprise Linux (2.6.8-274.17.1.0.1.e15).

Occasionally gpg reports:  gpg: block_filter: 1st length byte missing.

Client will re-encrypt and resend.  That file always (even with different name) is not decrypted with above message.

Do a:  gpg --no-batch --verbose --verbose --list-packets [filename]

:marker packet: PGP
:pubkey enc packet: version 3, algo 16, keyid 6BA0BA0A5A2CEA48
        data: [2047 bits]
        data: [2048 bits]
gpg: public key is 5A2CEA48
gpg: using subkey 5A2CEA48 instead of primary key 1B32D54B

You need a passphrase to unlock the secret key for
user: "First Choice Health Network (FCHN) <helpdesk at fchn.com>"
gpg: using subkey 5A2CEA48 instead of primary key 1B32D54B
2048-bit ELG-E key, ID 5A2CEA48, created 2001-10-16 (main key ID 1B32D54B)

gpg: public key encrypted data: good DEK
:encrypted data packet:
        length: unknown
gpg: encrypted with 2048-bit ELG-E key, ID 5A2CEA48, created 2001-10-16
      "First Choice Health Network (FCHN) <helpdesk at fchn.com>"
gpg: CAST5 encrypted data
gpg: block_filter: 1st length byte missing
:compressed packet: algo=1
gpg: decryption okay
gpg: WARNING: message was not integrity protected

But gpg  exits with status 2.

The 'gpg: decryption okay' message is not seen unless the 2nd -verbose is listed on the command line.  Not conducive to automated processing.


Manual inspection of the file with xxd shows it starts with:          0000000:  a803 5047 50c1 c14e 03 [my pk sub key id] etc.
I believe that third packet starts at hex location 217 in this line:  0000210: 3e65 83a0 73a7 c9ec xxxxxx   I believe the c9ec means tag 9 with 4096 packet length.
That should take us to locatin 1219 in this line:                             0001210: 34ed 52dd 5afb 457a 0c06 xxxx  I think 0c is the next packet length of 12 of which the 06 is the first byte.
The file ends on the next line:                                                        0001220: 0edb ef22 ac

This all looks good to me.  Is gpg expecting another packet?  Or another length byte?

--Steve

PS  I've been using GnuPG for well over a decade and have run into this problem on occasion.  Always a re-encrypt has solved it.  With this client that is no longer the case.

Stephen M. Butler, PMP, PSM
IT Manager - Software Engineering
First Choice Health Network
Email: sbutler at fchn.com<mailto:sbutler at fchn.com>
Voice: 206-268-2309
Fax:  206-268-6173




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