This is /home/wk/s/gnupg/doc/gnupg.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.13 from /home/wk/s/gnupg/doc/gnupg.texi. This is the `The GNU Privacy Guard Manual' (version 2.0.26, August 2014). Copyright (C) 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. The text of the license can be found in the section entitled "Copying". INFO-DIR-SECTION GNU Utilities START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY * gpg2: (gnupg). OpenPGP encryption and signing tool. * gpgsm: (gnupg). S/MIME encryption and signing tool. * gpg-agent: (gnupg). The secret key daemon. END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY  File: gnupg.info, Node: Top, Next: Installation, Up: (dir) Using the GNU Privacy Guard *************************** This is the `The GNU Privacy Guard Manual' (version 2.0.26, August 2014). Copyright (C) 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. The text of the license can be found in the section entitled "Copying". This manual documents how to use the GNU Privacy Guard system as well as the administration and the architecture. * Menu: * Installation:: A short installation guide. * Invoking GPG-AGENT:: How to launch the secret key daemon. * Invoking GPG:: Using the OpenPGP protocol. * Invoking GPGSM:: Using the S/MIME protocol. * Invoking SCDAEMON:: How to handle Smartcards. * Specify a User ID:: How to Specify a User Id. * Helper Tools:: Description of small helper tools * Howtos:: How to do certain things. * System Notes:: Notes pertaining to certain OSes. * Debugging:: How to solve problems * Copying:: GNU General Public License says how you can copy and share GnuPG * Contributors:: People who have contributed to GnuPG. * Glossary:: Short description of terms used. * Option Index:: Index to command line options. * Index:: Index of concepts and symbol names.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Installation, Next: Invoking GPG-AGENT, Prev: Top, Up: Top 1 A short installation guide. ***************************** Unfortunately the installation guide has not been finished in time. Instead of delaying the release of GnuPG 2.0 even further, I decided to release without that guide. The chapter on gpg-agent and gpgsm do include brief information on how to set up the whole thing. Please watch the GnuPG website for updates of the documentation. In the meantime you may search the GnuPG mailing list archives or ask on the gnupg-users mailing listsfor advise on how to solve problems or how to get that whole thing up and running. ** Building the software Building the software is decribed in the file `INSTALL'. Given that you are already reading this documentation we can only give some extra hints To comply with the rules on GNU systems you should have build time configured `dirmngr' using: ./configure --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var This is to make sure that system wide configuration files are searched in the directory `/etc/gnupg' and variable data below `/var'; the default would be to also install them below `/usr/local' where the binaries get installed. If you selected to use the `--prefix=/' you obviously don't need those option as they are the default then. ** Explain how to setup a root CA key as trusted Such questions may also help to write a proper installation guide. [to be written] XXX Tell how to setup the system, install certificates, how dirmngr relates to GnuPG etc. ** Explain how to setup a root CA key as trusted X.509 is based on a hierarchical key infrastructure. At the root of the tree a trusted anchor (root certificate) is required. There are usually no other means of verifying whether this root certificate is trustworthy than looking it up in a list. GnuPG uses a file (`trustlist.txt') to keep track of all root certificates it knows about. There are 3 ways to get certificates into this list: * Use the list which comes with GnuPG. However this list only contains a few root certificates. Most installations will need more. * Let `gpgsm' ask you whether you want to insert a new root certificate. To enable this feature you need to set the option `allow-mark-trusted' into `gpg-agent.conf'. In general it is not a good idea to do it this way. Checking whether a root certificate is really trustworthy requires decisions, which casual users are not up to. Thus, by default this option is not enabled. * Manually maintain the list of trusted root certificates. For a multi user installation this can be done once for all users on a machine. Specific changes on a per-user base are also possible. XXX decribe how to maintain trustlist.txt and /etc/gnupg/trustlist.txt. ** How to get the ssh support running XXX How to use the ssh support. 1.1 Installation Overview ========================= XXXX  File: gnupg.info, Node: Invoking GPG-AGENT, Next: Invoking GPG, Prev: Installation, Up: Top 2 Invoking GPG-AGENT ******************** `gpg-agent' is a daemon to manage secret (private) keys independently from any protocol. It is used as a backend for `gpg' and `gpgsm' as well as for a couple of other utilities. The usual way to run the agent is from the `~/.xsession' file: eval $(gpg-agent --daemon) If you don't use an X server, you can also put this into your regular startup file `~/.profile' or `.bash_profile'. It is best not to run multiple instance of the `gpg-agent', so you should make sure that only one is running: `gpg-agent' uses an environment variable to inform clients about the communication parameters. You can write the content of this environment variable to a file so that you can test for a running agent. Here is an example using Bourne shell syntax: gpg-agent --daemon --enable-ssh-support \ --write-env-file "${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info" This code should only be run once per user session to initially fire up the agent. In the example the optional support for the included Secure Shell agent is enabled and the information about the agent is written to a file in the HOME directory. Note that by running gpg-agent without arguments you may test whether an agent is already running; however such a test may lead to a race condition, thus it is not suggested. The second script needs to be run for each interactive session: if [ -f "${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info" ]; then . "${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info" export GPG_AGENT_INFO export SSH_AUTH_SOCK fi It reads the data out of the file and exports the variables. If you don't use Secure Shell, you don't need the last two export statements. You should always add the following lines to your `.bashrc' or whatever initialization file is used for all shell invocations: GPG_TTY=$(tty) export GPG_TTY It is important that this environment variable always reflects the output of the `tty' command. For W32 systems this option is not required. Please make sure that a proper pinentry program has been installed under the default filename (which is system dependant) or use the option `pinentry-program' to specify the full name of that program. It is often useful to install a symbolic link from the actual used pinentry (e.g. `/usr/bin/pinentry-gtk') to the expected one (e.g. `/usr/bin/pinentry'). *Note Option Index::,for an index to `GPG-AGENT''s commands and options. * Menu: * Agent Commands:: List of all commands. * Agent Options:: List of all options. * Agent Configuration:: Configuration files. * Agent Signals:: Use of some signals. * Agent Examples:: Some usage examples. * Agent Protocol:: The protocol the agent uses.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent Commands, Next: Agent Options, Up: Invoking GPG-AGENT 2.1 Commands ============ Commands are not distinguished from options except for the fact that only one command is allowed. `--version' Print the program version and licensing information. Note that you cannot abbreviate this command. `--help' `-h' Print a usage message summarizing the most useful command-line options. Note that you cannot abbreviate this command. `--dump-options' Print a list of all available options and commands. Note that you cannot abbreviate this command. `--server' Run in server mode and wait for commands on the `stdin'. The default mode is to create a socket and listen for commands there. `--daemon [COMMAND LINE]' Start the gpg-agent as a daemon; that is, detach it from the console and run it in the background. Because `gpg-agent' prints out important information required for further use, a common way of invoking gpg-agent is: `eval $(gpg-agent --daemon)' to setup the environment variables. The option `--write-env-file' is another way commonly used to do this. Yet another way is creating a new process as a child of gpg-agent: `gpg-agent --daemon /bin/sh'. This way you get a new shell with the environment setup properly; if you exit from this shell, gpg-agent terminates as well.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent Options, Next: Agent Configuration, Prev: Agent Commands, Up: Invoking GPG-AGENT 2.2 Option Summary ================== `--options FILE' Reads configuration from FILE instead of from the default per-user configuration file. The default configuration file is named `gpg-agent.conf' and expected in the `.gnupg' directory directly below the home directory of the user. `--homedir DIR' Set the name of the home directory to DIR. If this option is not used, the home directory defaults to `~/.gnupg'. It is only recognized when given on the command line. It also overrides any home directory stated through the environment variable `GNUPGHOME' or (on W32 systems) by means of the Registry entry HKCU\SOFTWARE\GNU\GNUPG:HOMEDIR. `-v' `--verbose' Outputs additional information while running. You can increase the verbosity by giving several verbose commands to `gpgsm', such as `-vv'. `-q' `--quiet' Try to be as quiet as possible. `--batch' Don't invoke a pinentry or do any other thing requiring human interaction. `--faked-system-time EPOCH' This option is only useful for testing; it sets the system time back or forth to EPOCH which is the number of seconds elapsed since the year 1970. `--debug-level LEVEL' Select the debug level for investigating problems. LEVEL may be a numeric value or a keyword: `none' No debugging at all. A value of less than 1 may be used instead of the keyword. `basic' Some basic debug messages. A value between 1 and 2 may be used instead of the keyword. `advanced' More verbose debug messages. A value between 3 and 5 may be used instead of the keyword. `expert' Even more detailed messages. A value between 6 and 8 may be used instead of the keyword. `guru' All of the debug messages you can get. A value greater than 8 may be used instead of the keyword. The creation of hash tracing files is only enabled if the keyword is used. How these messages are mapped to the actual debugging flags is not specified and may change with newer releases of this program. They are however carefully selected to best aid in debugging. `--debug FLAGS' This option is only useful for debugging and the behaviour may change at any time without notice. FLAGS are bit encoded and may be given in usual C-Syntax. The currently defined bits are: `0 (1)' X.509 or OpenPGP protocol related data `1 (2)' values of big number integers `2 (4)' low level crypto operations `5 (32)' memory allocation `6 (64)' caching `7 (128)' show memory statistics. `9 (512)' write hashed data to files named `dbgmd-000*' `10 (1024)' trace Assuan protocol `12 (4096)' bypass all certificate validation `--debug-all' Same as `--debug=0xffffffff' `--debug-wait N' When running in server mode, wait N seconds before entering the actual processing loop and print the pid. This gives time to attach a debugger. `--no-detach' Don't detach the process from the console. This is mainly useful for debugging. `-s' `--sh' `-c' `--csh' Format the info output in daemon mode for use with the standard Bourne shell or the C-shell respectively. The default is to guess it based on the environment variable `SHELL' which is correct in almost all cases. `--write-env-file FILE' Often it is required to connect to the agent from a process not being an inferior of `gpg-agent' and thus the environment variable with the socket name is not available. To help setting up those variables in other sessions, this option may be used to write the information into FILE. If FILE is not specified the default name `${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info' will be used. The format is suitable to be evaluated by a Bourne shell like in this simple example: eval $(cat FILE) eval $(cut -d= -f 1 < FILE | xargs echo export) `--no-grab' Tell the pinentry not to grab the keyboard and mouse. This option should in general not be used to avoid X-sniffing attacks. `--log-file FILE' Append all logging output to FILE. This is very helpful in seeing what the agent actually does. If neither a log file nor a log file descriptor has been set on a Windows platform, the Registry entry `HKCU\Software\GNU\GnuPG:DefaultLogFile', if set, is used to specify the logging output. `--allow-mark-trusted' Allow clients to mark keys as trusted, i.e. put them into the `trustlist.txt' file. This is by default not allowed to make it harder for users to inadvertently accept Root-CA keys. `--ignore-cache-for-signing' This option will let `gpg-agent' bypass the passphrase cache for all signing operation. Note that there is also a per-session option to control this behaviour but this command line option takes precedence. `--default-cache-ttl N' Set the time a cache entry is valid to N seconds. The default is 600 seconds. `--default-cache-ttl-ssh N' Set the time a cache entry used for SSH keys is valid to N seconds. The default is 1800 seconds. `--max-cache-ttl N' Set the maximum time a cache entry is valid to N seconds. After this time a cache entry will be expired even if it has been accessed recently or has been set using `gpg-preset-passphrase'. The default is 2 hours (7200 seconds). `--max-cache-ttl-ssh N' Set the maximum time a cache entry used for SSH keys is valid to N seconds. After this time a cache entry will be expired even if it has been accessed recently or has been set using `gpg-preset-passphrase'. The default is 2 hours (7200 seconds). `--enforce-passphrase-constraints' Enforce the passphrase constraints by not allowing the user to bypass them using the "Take it anyway" button. `--min-passphrase-len N' Set the minimal length of a passphrase. When entering a new passphrase shorter than this value a warning will be displayed. Defaults to 8. `--min-passphrase-nonalpha N' Set the minimal number of digits or special characters required in a passphrase. When entering a new passphrase with less than this number of digits or special characters a warning will be displayed. Defaults to 1. `--check-passphrase-pattern FILE' Check the passphrase against the pattern given in FILE. When entering a new passphrase matching one of these pattern a warning will be displayed. FILE should be an absolute filename. The default is not to use any pattern file. Security note: It is known that checking a passphrase against a list of pattern or even against a complete dictionary is not very effective to enforce good passphrases. Users will soon figure up ways to bypass such a policy. A better policy is to educate users on good security behavior and optionally to run a passphrase cracker regularly on all users passphrases to catch the very simple ones. `--max-passphrase-days N' Ask the user to change the passphrase if N days have passed since the last change. With `--enforce-passphrase-constraints' set the user may not bypass this check. `--enable-passphrase-history' This option does nothing yet. `--pinentry-program FILENAME' Use program FILENAME as the PIN entry. The default is installation dependent. `--pinentry-touch-file FILENAME' By default the filename of the socket gpg-agent is listening for requests is passed to Pinentry, so that it can touch that file before exiting (it does this only in curses mode). This option changes the file passed to Pinentry to FILENAME. The special name `/dev/null' may be used to completely disable this feature. Note that Pinentry will not create that file, it will only change the modification and access time. `--scdaemon-program FILENAME' Use program FILENAME as the Smartcard daemon. The default is installation dependent and can be shown with the `gpgconf' command. `--disable-scdaemon' Do not make use of the scdaemon tool. This option has the effect of disabling the ability to do smartcard operations. Note, that enabling this option at runtime does not kill an already forked scdaemon. `--use-standard-socket' `--no-use-standard-socket' By enabling this option `gpg-agent' will listen on the socket named `S.gpg-agent', located in the home directory, and not create a random socket below a temporary directory. Tools connecting to `gpg-agent' should first try to connect to the socket given in environment variable GPG_AGENT_INFO and then fall back to this socket. This option may not be used if the home directory is mounted on a remote file system which does not support special files like fifos or sockets. Note, that `--use-standard-socket' is the default on Windows systems. The default may be changed at build time. It is possible to test at runtime whether the agent has been configured for use with the standard socket by issuing the command `gpg-agent --use-standard-socket-p' which returns success if the standard socket option has been enabled. `--display STRING' `--ttyname STRING' `--ttytype STRING' `--lc-ctype STRING' `--lc-messages STRING' `--xauthority STRING' These options are used with the server mode to pass localization information. `--keep-tty' `--keep-display' Ignore requests to change the current `tty' or X window system's `DISPLAY' variable respectively. This is useful to lock the pinentry to pop up at the `tty' or display you started the agent. `--enable-ssh-support' Enable the OpenSSH Agent protocol. In this mode of operation, the agent does not only implement the gpg-agent protocol, but also the agent protocol used by OpenSSH (through a separate socket). Consequently, it should be possible to use the gpg-agent as a drop-in replacement for the well known ssh-agent. SSH Keys, which are to be used through the agent, need to be added to the gpg-agent initially through the ssh-add utility. When a key is added, ssh-add will ask for the password of the provided key file and send the unprotected key material to the agent; this causes the gpg-agent to ask for a passphrase, which is to be used for encrypting the newly received key and storing it in a gpg-agent specific directory. Once a key has been added to the gpg-agent this way, the gpg-agent will be ready to use the key. Note: in case the gpg-agent receives a signature request, the user might need to be prompted for a passphrase, which is necessary for decrypting the stored key. Since the ssh-agent protocol does not contain a mechanism for telling the agent on which display/terminal it is running, gpg-agent's ssh-support will use the TTY or X display where gpg-agent has been started. To switch this display to the current one, the following command may be used: gpg-connect-agent updatestartuptty /bye Although all GnuPG components try to start the gpg-agent as needed, this is not possible for the ssh support because ssh does not know about it. Thus if no GnuPG tool which accesses the agent has been run, there is no guarantee that ssh is abale to use gpg-agent for authentication. To fix this you may start gpg-agent if needed using this simple command: gpg-connect-agent /bye Adding the `--verbose' shows the progress of starting the agent. All the long options may also be given in the configuration file after stripping off the two leading dashes.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent Configuration, Next: Agent Signals, Prev: Agent Options, Up: Invoking GPG-AGENT 2.3 Configuration ================= There are a few configuration files needed for the operation of the agent. By default they may all be found in the current home directory (*note option --homedir::). `gpg-agent.conf' This is the standard configuration file read by `gpg-agent' on startup. It may contain any valid long option; the leading two dashes may not be entered and the option may not be abbreviated. This file is also read after a `SIGHUP' however only a few options will actually have an effect. This default name may be changed on the command line (*note option --options::). You should backup this file. `trustlist.txt' This is the list of trusted keys. You should backup this file. Comment lines, indicated by a leading hash mark, as well as empty lines are ignored. To mark a key as trusted you need to enter its fingerprint followed by a space and a capital letter `S'. Colons may optionally be used to separate the bytes of a fingerprint; this allows to cut and paste the fingerprint from a key listing output. If the line is prefixed with a `!' the key is explicitly marked as not trusted. Here is an example where two keys are marked as ultimately trusted and one as not trusted: # CN=Wurzel ZS 3,O=Intevation GmbH,C=DE A6935DD34EF3087973C706FC311AA2CCF733765B S # CN=PCA-1-Verwaltung-02/O=PKI-1-Verwaltung/C=DE DC:BD:69:25:48:BD:BB:7E:31:6E:BB:80:D3:00:80:35:D4:F8:A6:CD S # CN=Root-CA/O=Schlapphuete/L=Pullach/C=DE !14:56:98:D3:FE:9C:CA:5A:31:6E:BC:81:D3:11:4E:00:90:A3:44:C2 S Before entering a key into this file, you need to ensure its authenticity. How to do this depends on your organisation; your administrator might have already entered those keys which are deemed trustworthy enough into this file. Places where to look for the fingerprint of a root certificate are letters received from the CA or the website of the CA (after making 100% sure that this is indeed the website of that CA). You may want to consider allowing interactive updates of this file by using the *Note option --allow-mark-trusted::. This is however not as secure as maintaining this file manually. It is even advisable to change the permissions to read-only so that this file can't be changed inadvertently. As a special feature a line `include-default' will include a global list of trusted certificates (e.g. `/etc/gnupg/trustlist.txt'). This global list is also used if the local list is not available. It is possible to add further flags after the `S' for use by the caller: `relax' Relax checking of some root certificate requirements. As of now this flag allows the use of root certificates with a missing basicConstraints attribute (despite that it is a MUST for CA certificates) and disables CRL checking for the root certificate. `cm' If validation of a certificate finally issued by a CA with this flag set fails, try again using the chain validation model. `sshcontrol' This file is used when support for the secure shell agent protocol has been enabled (*note option --enable-ssh-support::). Only keys present in this file are used in the SSH protocol. You should backup this file. The `ssh-add' tool may be used to add new entries to this file; you may also add them manually. Comment lines, indicated by a leading hash mark, as well as empty lines are ignored. An entry starts with optional whitespace, followed by the keygrip of the key given as 40 hex digits, optionally followed by the caching TTL in seconds and another optional field for arbitrary flags. A non-zero TTL overrides the global default as set by `--default-cache-ttl-ssh'. The only flag support is `confirm'. If this flag is found for a key, each use of the key will pop up a pinentry to confirm the use of that key. The flag is automatically set if a new key was loaded into `gpg-agent' using the option `-c' of the `ssh-add' command. The keygrip may be prefixed with a `!' to disable an entry entry. The following example lists exactly one key. Note that keys available through a OpenPGP smartcard in the active smartcard reader are implicitly added to this list; i.e. there is no need to list them. # Key added on: 2011-07-20 20:38:46 # Fingerprint: 5e:8d:c4:ad:e7:af:6e:27:8a:d6:13:e4:79:ad:0b:81 34B62F25E277CF13D3C6BCEBFD3F85D08F0A864B 0 confirm `private-keys-v1.d/' This is the directory where gpg-agent stores the private keys. Each key is stored in a file with the name made up of the keygrip and the suffix `key'. You should backup all files in this directory and take great care to keep this backup closed away. Note that on larger installations, it is useful to put predefined files into the directory `/etc/skel/.gnupg/' so that newly created users start up with a working configuration. For existing users the a small helper script is provided to create these files (*note addgnupghome::).  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent Signals, Next: Agent Examples, Prev: Agent Configuration, Up: Invoking GPG-AGENT 2.4 Use of some signals. ======================== A running `gpg-agent' may be controlled by signals, i.e. using the `kill' command to send a signal to the process. Here is a list of supported signals: `SIGHUP' This signal flushes all cached passphrases and if the program has been started with a configuration file, the configuration file is read again. Only certain options are honored: `quiet', `verbose', `debug', `debug-all', `debug-level', `no-grab', `pinentry-program', `default-cache-ttl', `max-cache-ttl', `ignore-cache-for-signing', `allow-mark-trusted', `disable-scdaemon', and `disable-check-own-socket'. `scdaemon-program' is also supported but due to the current implementation, which calls the scdaemon only once, it is not of much use unless you manually kill the scdaemon. `SIGTERM' Shuts down the process but waits until all current requests are fulfilled. If the process has received 3 of these signals and requests are still pending, a shutdown is forced. `SIGINT' Shuts down the process immediately. `SIGUSR1' Dump internal information to the log file. `SIGUSR2' This signal is used for internal purposes.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent Examples, Next: Agent Protocol, Prev: Agent Signals, Up: Invoking GPG-AGENT 2.5 Examples ============ The usual way to invoke `gpg-agent' is $ eval $(gpg-agent --daemon) An alternative way is by replacing `ssh-agent' with `gpg-agent'. If for example `ssh-agent' is started as part of the Xsession initialization, you may simply replace `ssh-agent' by a script like: #!/bin/sh exec /usr/local/bin/gpg-agent --enable-ssh-support --daemon \ --write-env-file ${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info "$@" and add something like (for Bourne shells) if [ -f "${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info" ]; then . "${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info" export GPG_AGENT_INFO export SSH_AUTH_SOCK fi to your shell initialization file (e.g. `~/.bashrc').  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent Protocol, Prev: Agent Examples, Up: Invoking GPG-AGENT 2.6 Agent's Assuan Protocol =========================== Note: this section does only document the protocol, which is used by GnuPG components; it does not deal with the ssh-agent protocol. The `gpg-agent' should be started by the login shell and set an environment variable to tell clients about the socket to be used. Clients should deny to access an agent with a socket name which does not match its own configuration. An application may choose to start an instance of the gpgagent if it does not figure that any has been started; it should not do this if a gpgagent is running but not usable. Because `gpg-agent' can only be used in background mode, no special command line option is required to activate the use of the protocol. To identify a key we use a thing called keygrip which is the SHA-1 hash of an canonical encoded S-Expression of the public key as used in Libgcrypt. For the purpose of this interface the keygrip is given as a hex string. The advantage of using this and not the hash of a certificate is that it will be possible to use the same keypair for different protocols, thereby saving space on the token used to keep the secret keys. * Menu: * Agent PKDECRYPT:: Decrypting a session key * Agent PKSIGN:: Signing a Hash * Agent GENKEY:: Generating a Key * Agent IMPORT:: Importing a Secret Key * Agent EXPORT:: Exporting a Secret Key * Agent ISTRUSTED:: Importing a Root Certificate * Agent GET_PASSPHRASE:: Ask for a passphrase * Agent CLEAR_PASSPHRASE:: Expire a cached passphrase * Agent GET_CONFIRMATION:: Ask for confirmation * Agent HAVEKEY:: Check whether a key is available * Agent LEARN:: Register a smartcard * Agent PASSWD:: Change a Passphrase * Agent UPDATESTARTUPTTY:: Change the Standard Display * Agent GETEVENTCOUNTER:: Get the Event Counters * Agent GETINFO:: Return information about the process * Agent OPTION:: Set options for the session  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent PKDECRYPT, Next: Agent PKSIGN, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.1 Decrypting a session key ------------------------------ The client asks the server to decrypt a session key. The encrypted session key should have all information needed to select the appropriate secret key or to delegate it to a smartcard. SETKEY Tell the server about the key to be used for decryption. If this is not used, `gpg-agent' may try to figure out the key by trying to decrypt the message with each key available. PKDECRYPT The agent checks whether this command is allowed and then does an INQUIRY to get the ciphertext the client should then send the cipher text. S: INQUIRE CIPHERTEXT C: D (xxxxxx C: D xxxx) C: END Please note that the server may send status info lines while reading the data lines from the client. The data send is a SPKI like S-Exp with this structure: (enc-val ( ( ) ... ( ))) Where algo is a string with the name of the algorithm; see the libgcrypt documentation for a list of valid algorithms. The number and names of the parameters depend on the algorithm. The agent does return an error if there is an inconsistency. If the decryption was successful the decrypted data is returned by means of "D" lines. Here is an example session: C: PKDECRYPT S: INQUIRE CIPHERTEXT C: D (enc-val elg (a 349324324) C: D (b 3F444677CA))) C: END S: # session key follows S: S PADDING 0 S: D (value 1234567890ABCDEF0) S: OK descryption successful The “PADDING” status line is only send if gpg-agent can tell what kind of padding is used. As of now only the value 0 is used to indicate that the padding has been removed.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent PKSIGN, Next: Agent GENKEY, Prev: Agent PKDECRYPT, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.2 Signing a Hash -------------------- The client ask the agent to sign a given hash value. A default key will be chosen if no key has been set. To set a key a client first uses: SIGKEY This can be used multiple times to create multiple signature, the list of keys is reset with the next PKSIGN command or a RESET. The server test whether the key is a valid key to sign something and responds with okay. SETHASH --hash=| The client can use this command to tell the server about the data (which usually is a hash) to be signed. is the decimal encoded hash algorithm number as used by Libgcrypt. Either or -hash= must be given. Valid names for are: `sha1' `sha256' `rmd160' `md5' `tls-md5sha1' The actual signing is done using PKSIGN Options are not yet defined, but my later be used to choose among different algorithms. The agent does then some checks, asks for the passphrase and as a result the server returns the signature as an SPKI like S-expression in "D" lines: (sig-val ( ( ) ... ( ))) The operation is affected by the option OPTION use-cache-for-signing=0|1 The default of `1' uses the cache. Setting this option to `0' will lead `gpg-agent' to ignore the passphrase cache. Note, that there is also a global command line option for `gpg-agent' to globally disable the caching. Here is an example session: C: SIGKEY S: OK key available C: SIGKEY S: OK key available C: PKSIGN S: # I did ask the user whether he really wants to sign S: # I did ask the user for the passphrase S: INQUIRE HASHVAL C: D ABCDEF012345678901234 C: END S: # signature follows S: D (sig-val rsa (s 45435453654612121212)) S: OK  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent GENKEY, Next: Agent IMPORT, Prev: Agent PKSIGN, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.3 Generating a Key ---------------------- This is used to create a new keypair and store the secret key inside the active PSE -- which is in most cases a Soft-PSE. An not yet defined option allows to choose the storage location. To get the secret key out of the PSE, a special export tool has to be used. GENKEY Invokes the key generation process and the server will then inquire on the generation parameters, like: S: INQUIRE KEYPARM C: D (genkey (rsa (nbits 1024))) C: END The format of the key parameters which depends on the algorithm is of the form: (genkey (algo (parameter_name_1 ....) .... (parameter_name_n ....))) If everything succeeds, the server returns the *public key* in a SPKI like S-Expression like this: (public-key (rsa (n ) (e ))) Here is an example session: C: GENKEY S: INQUIRE KEYPARM C: D (genkey (rsa (nbits 1024))) C: END S: D (public-key S: D (rsa (n 326487324683264) (e 10001))) S OK key created  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent IMPORT, Next: Agent EXPORT, Prev: Agent GENKEY, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.4 Importing a Secret Key ---------------------------- This operation is not yet supported by GpgAgent. Specialized tools are to be used for this. There is no actual need because we can expect that secret keys created by a 3rd party are stored on a smartcard. If we have generated the key ourself, we do not need to import it.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent EXPORT, Next: Agent ISTRUSTED, Prev: Agent IMPORT, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.5 Export a Secret Key ------------------------- Not implemented. Should be done by an extra tool.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent ISTRUSTED, Next: Agent GET_PASSPHRASE, Prev: Agent EXPORT, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.6 Importing a Root Certificate ---------------------------------- Actually we do not import a Root Cert but provide a way to validate any piece of data by storing its Hash along with a description and an identifier in the PSE. Here is the interface description: ISTRUSTED Check whether the OpenPGP primary key or the X.509 certificate with the given fingerprint is an ultimately trusted key or a trusted Root CA certificate. The fingerprint should be given as a hexstring (without any blanks or colons or whatever in between) and may be left padded with 00 in case of an MD5 fingerprint. GPGAgent will answer with: OK The key is in the table of trusted keys. ERR 304 (Not Trusted) The key is not in this table. Gpg needs the entire list of trusted keys to maintain the web of trust; the following command is therefore quite helpful: LISTTRUSTED GpgAgent returns a list of trusted keys line by line: S: D 000000001234454556565656677878AF2F1ECCFF P S: D 340387563485634856435645634856438576457A P S: D FEDC6532453745367FD83474357495743757435D S S: OK The first item on a line is the hexified fingerprint where MD5 fingerprints are `00' padded to the left and the second item is a flag to indicate the type of key (so that gpg is able to only take care of PGP keys). P = OpenPGP, S = S/MIME. A client should ignore the rest of the line, so that we can extend the format in the future. Finally a client should be able to mark a key as trusted: MARKTRUSTED FINGERPRINT "P"|"S" The server will then pop up a window to ask the user whether she really trusts this key. For this it will probably ask for a text to be displayed like this: S: INQUIRE TRUSTDESC C: D Do you trust the key with the fingerprint @FPR@ C: D bla fasel blurb. C: END S: OK Known sequences with the pattern @foo@ are replaced according to this table: `@FPR16@' Format the fingerprint according to gpg rules for a v3 keys. `@FPR20@' Format the fingerprint according to gpg rules for a v4 keys. `@FPR@' Choose an appropriate format to format the fingerprint. `@@' Replaced by a single `@'  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent GET_PASSPHRASE, Next: Agent CLEAR_PASSPHRASE, Prev: Agent ISTRUSTED, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.7 Ask for a passphrase -------------------------- This function is usually used to ask for a passphrase to be used for conventional encryption, but may also be used by programs which need special handling of passphrases. This command uses a syntax which helps clients to use the agent with minimum effort. GET_PASSPHRASE [--data] [--check] [--no-ask] [--repeat[=N]] [--qualitybar] CACHE_ID [ERROR_MESSAGE PROMPT DESCRIPTION] CACHE_ID is expected to be a string used to identify a cached passphrase. Use a `X' to bypass the cache. With no other arguments the agent returns a cached passphrase or an error. By convention either the hexified fingerprint of the key shall be used for CACHE_ID or an arbitrary string prefixed with the name of the calling application and a colon: Like `gpg:somestring'. ERROR_MESSAGE is either a single `X' for no error message or a string to be shown as an error message like (e.g. "invalid passphrase"). Blanks must be percent escaped or replaced by `+''. PROMPT is either a single `X' for a default prompt or the text to be shown as the prompt. Blanks must be percent escaped or replaced by `+'. DESCRIPTION is a text shown above the entry field. Blanks must be percent escaped or replaced by `+'. The agent either returns with an error or with a OK followed by the hex encoded passphrase. Note that the length of the strings is implicitly limited by the maximum length of a command. If the option `--data' is used, the passphrase is not returned on the OK line but by regular data lines; this is the preferred method. If the option `--check' is used, the standard passphrase constraints checks are applied. A check is not done if the passphrase has been found in the cache. If the option `--no-ask' is used and the passphrase is not in the cache the user will not be asked to enter a passphrase but the error code `GPG_ERR_NO_DATA' is returned. If the option `--qualitybar' is used and a minimum passphrase length has been configured, a visual indication of the entered passphrase quality is shown. CLEAR_PASSPHRASE CACHE_ID may be used to invalidate the cache entry for a passphrase. The function returns with OK even when there is no cached passphrase.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent CLEAR_PASSPHRASE, Next: Agent GET_CONFIRMATION, Prev: Agent GET_PASSPHRASE, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.8 Remove a cached passphrase -------------------------------- Use this command to remove a cached passphrase. CLEAR_PASSPHRASE  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent GET_CONFIRMATION, Next: Agent HAVEKEY, Prev: Agent CLEAR_PASSPHRASE, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.9 Ask for confirmation -------------------------- This command may be used to ask for a simple confirmation by presenting a text and 2 buttons: Okay and Cancel. GET_CONFIRMATION DESCRIPTION DESCRIPTIONis displayed along with a Okay and Cancel button. Blanks must be percent escaped or replaced by `+'. A `X' may be used to display confirmation dialog with a default text. The agent either returns with an error or with a OK. Note, that the length of DESCRIPTION is implicitly limited by the maximum length of a command.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent HAVEKEY, Next: Agent LEARN, Prev: Agent GET_CONFIRMATION, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.10 Check whether a key is available --------------------------------------- This can be used to see whether a secret key is available. It does not return any information on whether the key is somehow protected. HAVEKEY KEYGRIPS The agent answers either with OK or `No_Secret_Key' (208). The caller may want to check for other error codes as well. More than one keygrip may be given. In this case the command returns success if at least one of the keygrips corresponds to an available secret key.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent LEARN, Next: Agent PASSWD, Prev: Agent HAVEKEY, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.11 Register a smartcard --------------------------- LEARN [--send] This command is used to register a smartcard. With the -send option given the certificates are send back.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent PASSWD, Next: Agent UPDATESTARTUPTTY, Prev: Agent LEARN, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.12 Change a Passphrase -------------------------- PASSWD KEYGRIP This command is used to interactively change the passphrase of the key identified by the hex string KEYGRIP.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent UPDATESTARTUPTTY, Next: Agent GETEVENTCOUNTER, Prev: Agent PASSWD, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.13 Change the standard display ---------------------------------- UPDATESTARTUPTTY Set the startup TTY and X-DISPLAY variables to the values of this session. This command is useful to direct future pinentry invocations to another screen. It is only required because there is no way in the ssh-agent protocol to convey this information.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent GETEVENTCOUNTER, Next: Agent GETINFO, Prev: Agent UPDATESTARTUPTTY, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.14 Get the Event Counters ----------------------------- GETEVENTCOUNTER This function return one status line with the current values of the event counters. The event counters are useful to avoid polling by delaying a poll until something has changed. The values are decimal numbers in the range `0' to `UINT_MAX' and wrapping around to 0. The actual values should not be relied upon; they shall only be used to detect a change. The currently defined counters are are: `ANY' Incremented with any change of any of the other counters. `KEY' Incremented for added or removed private keys. `CARD' Incremented for changes of the card readers stati.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent GETINFO, Next: Agent OPTION, Prev: Agent GETEVENTCOUNTER, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.15 Return information about the process ------------------------------------------- This is a multipurpose function to return a variety of information. GETINFO WHAT The value of WHAT specifies the kind of information returned: `version' Return the version of the program. `pid' Return the process id of the process. `socket_name' Return the name of the socket used to connect the agent. `ssh_socket_name' Return the name of the socket used for SSH connections. If SSH support has not been enabled the error `GPG_ERR_NO_DATA' will be returned.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Agent OPTION, Prev: Agent GETINFO, Up: Agent Protocol 2.6.16 Set options for the session ---------------------------------- Here is a list of session options which are not yet described with other commands. The general syntax for an Assuan option is: OPTION KEY=VALUE Supported KEYs are: `agent-awareness' This may be used to tell gpg-agent of which gpg-agent version the client is aware of. gpg-agent uses this information to enable features which might break older clients. `putenv' Change the session's environment to be used for the Pinentry. Valid values are: `NAME' Delete envvar NAME `NAME=' Set envvar NAME to the empty string `NAME=VALUE' Set envvar NAME to the string VALUE. `use-cache-for-signing' See Assuan command `PKSIGN'. `allow-pinentry-notify' This does not need any value. It is used to enable the PINENTRY_LAUNCHED inquiry.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Invoking GPG, Next: Invoking GPGSM, Prev: Invoking GPG-AGENT, Up: Top 3 Invoking GPG ************** `gpg2' is the OpenPGP part of the GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG). It is a tool to provide digital encryption and signing services using the OpenPGP standard. `gpg2' features complete key management and all bells and whistles you can expect from a decent OpenPGP implementation. In contrast to the standalone version `gpg', which is more suited for server and embedded platforms, this version is commonly installed under the name `gpg2' and more targeted to the desktop as it requires several other modules to be installed. The standalone version will be kept maintained and it is possible to install both versions on the same system. If you need to use different configuration files, you should make use of something like `gpg.conf-2' instead of just `gpg.conf'. Documentation for the old standard `gpg' is available as a man page and at *note GnuPG 1: (gpg)Top. *Note Option Index::, for an index to `gpg2''s commands and options. * Menu: * GPG Commands:: List of all commands. * GPG Options:: List of all options. * GPG Configuration:: Configuration files. * GPG Examples:: Some usage examples. Developer information: * Unattended Usage of GPG:: Using `gpg' from other programs.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPG Commands, Next: GPG Options, Up: Invoking GPG 3.1 Commands ============ Commands are not distinguished from options except for the fact that only one command is allowed. `gpg2' may be run with no commands, in which case it will perform a reasonable action depending on the type of file it is given as input (an encrypted message is decrypted, a signature is verified, a file containing keys is listed). Please remember that option as well as command parsing stops as soon as a non-option is encountered, you can explicitly stop parsing by using the special option `--'. * Menu: * General GPG Commands:: Commands not specific to the functionality. * Operational GPG Commands:: Commands to select the type of operation. * OpenPGP Key Management:: How to manage your keys.  File: gnupg.info, Node: General GPG Commands, Next: Operational GPG Commands, Up: GPG Commands 3.1.1 Commands not specific to the function ------------------------------------------- `--version' Print the program version and licensing information. Note that you cannot abbreviate this command. `--help' `-h' Print a usage message summarizing the most useful command line options. Note that you cannot abbreviate this command. `--warranty' Print warranty information. `--dump-options' Print a list of all available options and commands. Note that you cannot abbreviate this command.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Operational GPG Commands, Next: OpenPGP Key Management, Prev: General GPG Commands, Up: GPG Commands 3.1.2 Commands to select the type of operation ---------------------------------------------- `--sign' `-s' Make a signature. This command may be combined with `--encrypt' (for a signed and encrypted message), `--symmetric' (for a signed and symmetrically encrypted message), or `--encrypt' and `--symmetric' together (for a signed message that may be decrypted via a secret key or a passphrase). The key to be used for signing is chosen by default or can be set with the `--local-user' and `--default-key' options. `--clearsign' Make a clear text signature. The content in a clear text signature is readable without any special software. OpenPGP software is only needed to verify the signature. Clear text signatures may modify end-of-line whitespace for platform independence and are not intended to be reversible. The key to be used for signing is chosen by default or can be set with the `--local-user' and `--default-key' options. `--detach-sign' `-b' Make a detached signature. `--encrypt' `-e' Encrypt data. This option may be combined with `--sign' (for a signed and encrypted message), `--symmetric' (for a message that may be decrypted via a secret key or a passphrase), or `--sign' and `--symmetric' together (for a signed message that may be decrypted via a secret key or a passphrase). `--symmetric' `-c' Encrypt with a symmetric cipher using a passphrase. The default symmetric cipher used is CAST5, but may be chosen with the `--cipher-algo' option. This option may be combined with `--sign' (for a signed and symmetrically encrypted message), `--encrypt' (for a message that may be decrypted via a secret key or a passphrase), or `--sign' and `--encrypt' together (for a signed message that may be decrypted via a secret key or a passphrase). `--store' Store only (make a simple RFC1991 literal data packet). `--decrypt' `-d' Decrypt the file given on the command line (or STDIN if no file is specified) and write it to STDOUT (or the file specified with `--output'). If the decrypted file is signed, the signature is also verified. This command differs from the default operation, as it never writes to the filename which is included in the file and it rejects files which don't begin with an encrypted message. `--verify' Assume that the first argument is a signed file or a detached signature and verify it without generating any output. With no arguments, the signature packet is read from STDIN. If only a sigfile is given, it may be a complete signature or a detached signature, in which case the signed stuff is expected in a file without the ".sig" or ".asc" extension. With more than 1 argument, the first should be a detached signature and the remaining files are the signed stuff. To read the signed stuff from STDIN, use `-' as the second filename. For security reasons a detached signature cannot read the signed material from STDIN without denoting it in the above way. Note: When verifying a cleartext signature, `gpg' verifies only what makes up the cleartext signed data and not any extra data outside of the cleartext signature or header lines following directly the dash marker line. The option `--output' may be used to write out the actual signed data; but there are other pitfalls with this format as well. It is suggested to avoid cleartext signatures in favor of detached signatures. `--multifile' This modifies certain other commands to accept multiple files for processing on the command line or read from STDIN with each filename on a separate line. This allows for many files to be processed at once. `--multifile' may currently be used along with `--verify', `--encrypt', and `--decrypt'. Note that `--multifile --verify' may not be used with detached signatures. `--verify-files' Identical to `--multifile --verify'. `--encrypt-files' Identical to `--multifile --encrypt'. `--decrypt-files' Identical to `--multifile --decrypt'. `--list-keys' `-k' `--list-public-keys' List all keys from the public keyrings, or just the keys given on the command line. Avoid using the output of this command in scripts or other programs as it is likely to change as GnuPG changes. See `--with-colons' for a machine-parseable key listing command that is appropriate for use in scripts and other programs. `--list-secret-keys' `-K' List all keys from the secret keyrings, or just the ones given on the command line. A `#' after the letters `sec' means that the secret key is not usable (for example, if it was created via `--export-secret-subkeys'). `--list-sigs' Same as `--list-keys', but the signatures are listed too. This command has the same effect as using `--list-keys' with `--with-sig-list'. For each signature listed, there are several flags in between the "sig" tag and keyid. These flags give additional information about each signature. From left to right, they are the numbers 1-3 for certificate check level (see `--ask-cert-level'), "L" for a local or non-exportable signature (see `--lsign-key'), "R" for a nonRevocable signature (see the `--edit-key' command "nrsign"), "P" for a signature that contains a policy URL (see `--cert-policy-url'), "N" for a signature that contains a notation (see `--cert-notation'), "X" for an eXpired signature (see `--ask-cert-expire'), and the numbers 1-9 or "T" for 10 and above to indicate trust signature levels (see the `--edit-key' command "tsign"). `--check-sigs' Same as `--list-sigs', but the signatures are verified. Note that for performance reasons the revocation status of a signing key is not shown. This command has the same effect as using `--list-keys' with `--with-sig-check'. The status of the verification is indicated by a flag directly following the "sig" tag (and thus before the flags described above for `--list-sigs'). A "!" indicates that the signature has been successfully verified, a "-" denotes a bad signature and a "%" is used if an error occurred while checking the signature (e.g. a non supported algorithm). `--locate-keys' Locate the keys given as arguments. This command basically uses the same algorithm as used when locating keys for encryption or signing and may thus be used to see what keys `gpg2' might use. In particular external methods as defined by `--auto-key-locate' may be used to locate a key. Only public keys are listed. `--fingerprint' List all keys (or the specified ones) along with their fingerprints. This is the same output as `--list-keys' but with the additional output of a line with the fingerprint. May also be combined with `--list-sigs' or `--check-sigs'. If this command is given twice, the fingerprints of all secondary keys are listed too. `--list-packets' List only the sequence of packets. This is mainly useful for debugging. `--card-edit' Present a menu to work with a smartcard. The subcommand "help" provides an overview on available commands. For a detailed description, please see the Card HOWTO at http://www.gnupg.org/documentation/howtos.html#GnuPG-cardHOWTO . `--card-status' Show the content of the smart card. `--change-pin' Present a menu to allow changing the PIN of a smartcard. This functionality is also available as the subcommand "passwd" with the `--card-edit' command. `--delete-key `name'' Remove key from the public keyring. In batch mode either `--yes' is required or the key must be specified by fingerprint. This is a safeguard against accidental deletion of multiple keys. `--delete-secret-key `name'' Remove key from the secret keyring. In batch mode the key must be specified by fingerprint. `--delete-secret-and-public-key `name'' Same as `--delete-key', but if a secret key exists, it will be removed first. In batch mode the key must be specified by fingerprint. `--export' Either export all keys from all keyrings (default keyrings and those registered via option `--keyring'), or if at least one name is given, those of the given name. The exported keys are written to STDOUT or to the file given with option `--output'. Use together with `--armor' to mail those keys. `--send-keys `key IDs'' Similar to `--export' but sends the keys to a keyserver. Fingerprints may be used instead of key IDs. Option `--keyserver' must be used to give the name of this keyserver. Don't send your complete keyring to a keyserver -- select only those keys which are new or changed by you. If no key IDs are given, `gpg' does nothing. `--export-secret-keys' `--export-secret-subkeys' Same as `--export', but exports the secret keys instead. The exported keys are written to STDOUT or to the file given with option `--output'. This command is often used along with the option `--armor' to allow easy printing of the key for paper backup; however the external tool `paperkey' does a better job for creating backups on paper. Note that exporting a secret key can be a security risk if the exported keys are send over an insecure channel. The second form of the command has the special property to render the secret part of the primary key useless; this is a GNU extension to OpenPGP and other implementations can not be expected to successfully import such a key. Its intended use is to generated a full key with an additional signing subkey on a dedicated machine and then using this command to export the key without the primary key to the main machine. See the option `--simple-sk-checksum' if you want to import an exported secret key into ancient OpenPGP implementations. `--import' `--fast-import' Import/merge keys. This adds the given keys to the keyring. The fast version is currently just a synonym. There are a few other options which control how this command works. Most notable here is the `--import-options merge-only' option which does not insert new keys but does only the merging of new signatures, user-IDs and subkeys. `--recv-keys `key IDs'' Import the keys with the given key IDs from a keyserver. Option `--keyserver' must be used to give the name of this keyserver. `--refresh-keys' Request updates from a keyserver for keys that already exist on the local keyring. This is useful for updating a key with the latest signatures, user IDs, etc. Calling this with no arguments will refresh the entire keyring. Option `--keyserver' must be used to give the name of the keyserver for all keys that do not have preferred keyservers set (see `--keyserver-options honor-keyserver-url'). `--search-keys `names'' Search the keyserver for the given names. Multiple names given here will be joined together to create the search string for the keyserver. Option `--keyserver' must be used to give the name of this keyserver. Keyservers that support different search methods allow using the syntax specified in "How to specify a user ID" below. Note that different keyserver types support different search methods. Currently only LDAP supports them all. `--fetch-keys `URIs'' Retrieve keys located at the specified URIs. Note that different installations of GnuPG may support different protocols (HTTP, FTP, LDAP, etc.) `--update-trustdb' Do trust database maintenance. This command iterates over all keys and builds the Web of Trust. This is an interactive command because it may have to ask for the "ownertrust" values for keys. The user has to give an estimation of how far she trusts the owner of the displayed key to correctly certify (sign) other keys. GnuPG only asks for the ownertrust value if it has not yet been assigned to a key. Using the `--edit-key' menu, the assigned value can be changed at any time. `--check-trustdb' Do trust database maintenance without user interaction. From time to time the trust database must be updated so that expired keys or signatures and the resulting changes in the Web of Trust can be tracked. Normally, GnuPG will calculate when this is required and do it automatically unless `--no-auto-check-trustdb' is set. This command can be used to force a trust database check at any time. The processing is identical to that of `--update-trustdb' but it skips keys with a not yet defined "ownertrust". For use with cron jobs, this command can be used together with `--batch' in which case the trust database check is done only if a check is needed. To force a run even in batch mode add the option `--yes'. `--export-ownertrust' Send the ownertrust values to STDOUT. This is useful for backup purposes as these values are the only ones which can't be re-created from a corrupted trustdb. Example: gpg2 --export-ownertrust > otrust.txt `--import-ownertrust' Update the trustdb with the ownertrust values stored in `files' (or STDIN if not given); existing values will be overwritten. In case of a severely damaged trustdb and if you have a recent backup of the ownertrust values (e.g. in the file `otrust.txt', you may re-create the trustdb using these commands: cd ~/.gnupg rm trustdb.gpg gpg2 --import-ownertrust < otrust.txt `--rebuild-keydb-caches' When updating from version 1.0.6 to 1.0.7 this command should be used to create signature caches in the keyring. It might be handy in other situations too. `--print-md `algo'' `--print-mds' Print message digest of algorithm ALGO for all given files or STDIN. With the second form (or a deprecated "*" as algo) digests for all available algorithms are printed. `--gen-random `0|1|2' `count'' Emit COUNT random bytes of the given quality level 0, 1 or 2. If COUNT is not given or zero, an endless sequence of random bytes will be emitted. If used with `--armor' the output will be base64 encoded. PLEASE, don't use this command unless you know what you are doing; it may remove precious entropy from the system! `--gen-prime `mode' `bits'' Use the source, Luke :-). The output format is still subject to change. `--enarmor' `--dearmor' Pack or unpack an arbitrary input into/from an OpenPGP ASCII armor. This is a GnuPG extension to OpenPGP and in general not very useful.  File: gnupg.info, Node: OpenPGP Key Management, Prev: Operational GPG Commands, Up: GPG Commands 3.1.3 How to manage your keys ----------------------------- This section explains the main commands for key management `--gen-key' Generate a new key pair. This command is normally only used interactively. There is an experimental feature which allows you to create keys in batch mode. See the file `doc/DETAILS' in the source distribution on how to use this. `--gen-revoke `name'' Generate a revocation certificate for the complete key. To revoke a subkey or a signature, use the `--edit' command. `--desig-revoke `name'' Generate a designated revocation certificate for a key. This allows a user (with the permission of the keyholder) to revoke someone else's key. `--edit-key' Present a menu which enables you to do most of the key management related tasks. It expects the specification of a key on the command line. uid `n' Toggle selection of user ID or photographic user ID with index `n'. Use `*' to select all and `0' to deselect all. key `n' Toggle selection of subkey with index `n'. Use `*' to select all and `0' to deselect all. sign Make a signature on key of user `name' If the key is not yet signed by the default user (or the users given with -u), the program displays the information of the key again, together with its fingerprint and asks whether it should be signed. This question is repeated for all users specified with -u. lsign Same as "sign" but the signature is marked as non-exportable and will therefore never be used by others. This may be used to make keys valid only in the local environment. nrsign Same as "sign" but the signature is marked as non-revocable and can therefore never be revoked. tsign Make a trust signature. This is a signature that combines the notions of certification (like a regular signature), and trust (like the "trust" command). It is generally only useful in distinct communities or groups. Note that "l" (for local / non-exportable), "nr" (for non-revocable, and "t" (for trust) may be freely mixed and prefixed to "sign" to create a signature of any type desired. delsig Delete a signature. Note that it is not possible to retract a signature, once it has been send to the public (i.e. to a keyserver). In that case you better use `revsig'. revsig Revoke a signature. For every signature which has been generated by one of the secret keys, GnuPG asks whether a revocation certificate should be generated. check Check the signatures on all selected user IDs. adduid Create an additional user ID. addphoto Create a photographic user ID. This will prompt for a JPEG file that will be embedded into the user ID. Note that a very large JPEG will make for a very large key. Also note that some programs will display your JPEG unchanged (GnuPG), and some programs will scale it to fit in a dialog box (PGP). showphoto Display the selected photographic user ID. deluid Delete a user ID or photographic user ID. Note that it is not possible to retract a user id, once it has been send to the public (i.e. to a keyserver). In that case you better use `revuid'. revuid Revoke a user ID or photographic user ID. primary Flag the current user id as the primary one, removes the primary user id flag from all other user ids and sets the timestamp of all affected self-signatures one second ahead. Note that setting a photo user ID as primary makes it primary over other photo user IDs, and setting a regular user ID as primary makes it primary over other regular user IDs. keyserver Set a preferred keyserver for the specified user ID(s). This allows other users to know where you prefer they get your key from. See `--keyserver-options honor-keyserver-url' for more on how this works. Setting a value of "none" removes an existing preferred keyserver. notation Set a name=value notation for the specified user ID(s). See `--cert-notation' for more on how this works. Setting a value of "none" removes all notations, setting a notation prefixed with a minus sign (-) removes that notation, and setting a notation name (without the =value) prefixed with a minus sign removes all notations with that name. pref List preferences from the selected user ID. This shows the actual preferences, without including any implied preferences. showpref More verbose preferences listing for the selected user ID. This shows the preferences in effect by including the implied preferences of 3DES (cipher), SHA-1 (digest), and Uncompressed (compression) if they are not already included in the preference list. In addition, the preferred keyserver and signature notations (if any) are shown. setpref `string' Set the list of user ID preferences to `string' for all (or just the selected) user IDs. Calling setpref with no arguments sets the preference list to the default (either built-in or set via `--default-preference-list'), and calling setpref with "none" as the argument sets an empty preference list. Use `gpg2 --version' to get a list of available algorithms. Note that while you can change the preferences on an attribute user ID (aka "photo ID"), GnuPG does not select keys via attribute user IDs so these preferences will not be used by GnuPG. When setting preferences, you should list the algorithms in the order which you'd like to see them used by someone else when encrypting a message to your key. If you don't include 3DES, it will be automatically added at the end. Note that there are many factors that go into choosing an algorithm (for example, your key may not be the only recipient), and so the remote OpenPGP application being used to send to you may or may not follow your exact chosen order for a given message. It will, however, only choose an algorithm that is present on the preference list of every recipient key. See also the INTEROPERABILITY WITH OTHER OPENPGP PROGRAMS section below. addkey Add a subkey to this key. addcardkey Generate a subkey on a card and add it to this key. keytocard Transfer the selected secret subkey (or the primary key if no subkey has been selected) to a smartcard. The secret key in the keyring will be replaced by a stub if the key could be stored successfully on the card and you use the save command later. Only certain key types may be transferred to the card. A sub menu allows you to select on what card to store the key. Note that it is not possible to get that key back from the card - if the card gets broken your secret key will be lost unless you have a backup somewhere. bkuptocard `file' Restore the given file to a card. This command may be used to restore a backup key (as generated during card initialization) to a new card. In almost all cases this will be the encryption key. You should use this command only with the corresponding public key and make sure that the file given as argument is indeed the backup to restore. You should then select 2 to restore as encryption key. You will first be asked to enter the passphrase of the backup key and then for the Admin PIN of the card. delkey Remove a subkey (secondart key). Note that it is not possible to retract a subkey, once it has been send to the public (i.e. to a keyserver). In that case you better use `revkey'. revkey Revoke a subkey. expire Change the key or subkey expiration time. If a subkey is selected, the expiration time of this subkey will be changed. With no selection, the key expiration of the primary key is changed. trust Change the owner trust value for the key. This updates the trust-db immediately and no save is required. disable enable Disable or enable an entire key. A disabled key can not normally be used for encryption. addrevoker Add a designated revoker to the key. This takes one optional argument: "sensitive". If a designated revoker is marked as sensitive, it will not be exported by default (see export-options). passwd Change the passphrase of the secret key. toggle Toggle between public and secret key listing. clean Compact (by removing all signatures except the selfsig) any user ID that is no longer usable (e.g. revoked, or expired). Then, remove any signatures that are not usable by the trust calculations. Specifically, this removes any signature that does not validate, any signature that is superseded by a later signature, revoked signatures, and signatures issued by keys that are not present on the keyring. minimize Make the key as small as possible. This removes all signatures from each user ID except for the most recent self-signature. cross-certify Add cross-certification signatures to signing subkeys that may not currently have them. Cross-certification signatures protect against a subtle attack against signing subkeys. See `--require-cross-certification'. All new keys generated have this signature by default, so this option is only useful to bring older keys up to date. save Save all changes to the key rings and quit. quit Quit the program without updating the key rings. The listing shows you the key with its secondary keys and all user ids. The primary user id is indicated by a dot, and selected keys or user ids are indicated by an asterisk. The trust value is displayed with the primary key: the first is the assigned owner trust and the second is the calculated trust value. Letters are used for the values: - No ownertrust assigned / not yet calculated. e Trust calculation has failed; probably due to an expired key. q Not enough information for calculation. n Never trust this key. m Marginally trusted. f Fully trusted. u Ultimately trusted. `--sign-key `name'' Signs a public key with your secret key. This is a shortcut version of the subcommand "sign" from `--edit'. `--lsign-key `name'' Signs a public key with your secret key but marks it as non-exportable. This is a shortcut version of the subcommand "lsign" from `--edit-key'. `--passwd USER_ID' Change the passphrase of the secret key belonging to the certificate specified as USER_ID. This is a shortcut for the sub-command `passwd' of the edit key menu.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPG Options, Next: GPG Configuration, Prev: GPG Commands, Up: Invoking GPG 3.2 Option Summary ================== `gpg2' features a bunch of options to control the exact behaviour and to change the default configuration. * Menu: * GPG Configuration Options:: How to change the configuration. * GPG Key related Options:: Key related options. * GPG Input and Output:: Input and Output. * OpenPGP Options:: OpenPGP protocol specific options. * Compliance Options:: Compliance options. * GPG Esoteric Options:: Doing things one usually don't want to do. * Deprecated Options:: Deprecated options. Long options can be put in an options file (default "~/.gnupg/gpg.conf"). Short option names will not work - for example, "armor" is a valid option for the options file, while "a" is not. Do not write the 2 dashes, but simply the name of the option and any required arguments. Lines with a hash ('#') as the first non-white-space character are ignored. Commands may be put in this file too, but that is not generally useful as the command will execute automatically with every execution of gpg. Please remember that option parsing stops as soon as a non-option is encountered, you can explicitly stop parsing by using the special option `--'.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPG Configuration Options, Next: GPG Key related Options, Up: GPG Options 3.2.1 How to change the configuration ------------------------------------- These options are used to change the configuration and are usually found in the option file. `--default-key NAME' Use NAME as the default key to sign with. If this option is not used, the default key is the first key found in the secret keyring. Note that `-u' or `--local-user' overrides this option. `--default-recipient NAME' Use NAME as default recipient if option `--recipient' is not used and don't ask if this is a valid one. NAME must be non-empty. `--default-recipient-self' Use the default key as default recipient if option `--recipient' is not used and don't ask if this is a valid one. The default key is the first one from the secret keyring or the one set with `--default-key'. `--no-default-recipient' Reset `--default-recipient' and `--default-recipient-self'. `-v, --verbose' Give more information during processing. If used twice, the input data is listed in detail. `--no-verbose' Reset verbose level to 0. `-q, --quiet' Try to be as quiet as possible. `--batch' `--no-batch' Use batch mode. Never ask, do not allow interactive commands. `--no-batch' disables this option. Note that even with a filename given on the command line, gpg might still need to read from STDIN (in particular if gpg figures that the input is a detached signature and no data file has been specified). Thus if you do not want to feed data via STDIN, you should connect STDIN to `/dev/null'. `--no-tty' Make sure that the TTY (terminal) is never used for any output. This option is needed in some cases because GnuPG sometimes prints warnings to the TTY even if `--batch' is used. `--yes' Assume "yes" on most questions. `--no' Assume "no" on most questions. `--list-options `parameters'' This is a space or comma delimited string that gives options used when listing keys and signatures (that is, `--list-keys', `--list-sigs', `--list-public-keys', `--list-secret-keys', and the `--edit-key' functions). Options can be prepended with a `no-' (after the two dashes) to give the opposite meaning. The options are: show-photos Causes `--list-keys', `--list-sigs', `--list-public-keys', and `--list-secret-keys' to display any photo IDs attached to the key. Defaults to no. See also `--photo-viewer'. Does not work with `--with-colons': see `--attribute-fd' for the appropriate way to get photo data for scripts and other frontends. show-policy-urls Show policy URLs in the `--list-sigs' or `--check-sigs' listings. Defaults to no. show-notations show-std-notations show-user-notations Show all, IETF standard, or user-defined signature notations in the `--list-sigs' or `--check-sigs' listings. Defaults to no. show-keyserver-urls Show any preferred keyserver URL in the `--list-sigs' or `--check-sigs' listings. Defaults to no. show-uid-validity Display the calculated validity of user IDs during key listings. Defaults to no. show-unusable-uids Show revoked and expired user IDs in key listings. Defaults to no. show-unusable-subkeys Show revoked and expired subkeys in key listings. Defaults to no. show-keyring Display the keyring name at the head of key listings to show which keyring a given key resides on. Defaults to no. show-sig-expire Show signature expiration dates (if any) during `--list-sigs' or `--check-sigs' listings. Defaults to no. show-sig-subpackets Include signature subpackets in the key listing. This option can take an optional argument list of the subpackets to list. If no argument is passed, list all subpackets. Defaults to no. This option is only meaningful when using `--with-colons' along with `--list-sigs' or `--check-sigs'. `--verify-options `parameters'' This is a space or comma delimited string that gives options used when verifying signatures. Options can be prepended with a `no-' to give the opposite meaning. The options are: show-photos Display any photo IDs present on the key that issued the signature. Defaults to no. See also `--photo-viewer'. show-policy-urls Show policy URLs in the signature being verified. Defaults to no. show-notations show-std-notations show-user-notations Show all, IETF standard, or user-defined signature notations in the signature being verified. Defaults to IETF standard. show-keyserver-urls Show any preferred keyserver URL in the signature being verified. Defaults to no. show-uid-validity Display the calculated validity of the user IDs on the key that issued the signature. Defaults to no. show-unusable-uids Show revoked and expired user IDs during signature verification. Defaults to no. show-primary-uid-only Show only the primary user ID during signature verification. That is all the AKA lines as well as photo Ids are not shown with the signature verification status. pka-lookups Enable PKA lookups to verify sender addresses. Note that PKA is based on DNS, and so enabling this option may disclose information on when and what signatures are verified or to whom data is encrypted. This is similar to the "web bug" described for the auto-key-retrieve feature. pka-trust-increase Raise the trust in a signature to full if the signature passes PKA validation. This option is only meaningful if pka-lookups is set. `--enable-dsa2' `--disable-dsa2' Enable hash truncation for all DSA keys even for old DSA Keys up to 1024 bit. This is also the default with `--openpgp'. Note that older versions of GnuPG also required this flag to allow the generation of DSA larger than 1024 bit. `--photo-viewer `string'' This is the command line that should be run to view a photo ID. "%i" will be expanded to a filename containing the photo. "%I" does the same, except the file will not be deleted once the viewer exits. Other flags are "%k" for the key ID, "%K" for the long key ID, "%f" for the key fingerprint, "%t" for the extension of the image type (e.g. "jpg"), "%T" for the MIME type of the image (e.g. "image/jpeg"), "%v" for the single-character calculated validity of the image being viewed (e.g. "f"), "%V" for the calculated validity as a string (e.g. "full"), "%U" for a base32 encoded hash of the user ID, and "%%" for an actual percent sign. If neither %i or %I are present, then the photo will be supplied to the viewer on standard input. The default viewer is "xloadimage -fork -quiet -title 'KeyID 0x%k' STDIN". Note that if your image viewer program is not secure, then executing it from GnuPG does not make it secure. `--exec-path `string'' Sets a list of directories to search for photo viewers and keyserver helpers. If not provided, keyserver helpers use the compiled-in default directory, and photo viewers use the $PATH environment variable. Note, that on W32 system this value is ignored when searching for keyserver helpers. `--keyring `file'' Add `file' to the current list of keyrings. If `file' begins with a tilde and a slash, these are replaced by the $HOME directory. If the filename does not contain a slash, it is assumed to be in the GnuPG home directory ("~/.gnupg" if `--homedir' or $GNUPGHOME is not used). Note that this adds a keyring to the current list. If the intent is to use the specified keyring alone, use `--keyring' along with `--no-default-keyring'. `--secret-keyring `file'' Same as `--keyring' but for the secret keyrings. `--primary-keyring `file'' Designate `file' as the primary public keyring. This means that newly imported keys (via `--import' or keyserver `--recv-from') will go to this keyring. `--trustdb-name `file'' Use `file' instead of the default trustdb. If `file' begins with a tilde and a slash, these are replaced by the $HOME directory. If the filename does not contain a slash, it is assumed to be in the GnuPG home directory (`~/.gnupg' if `--homedir' or $GNUPGHOME is not used). `--homedir DIR' Set the name of the home directory to DIR. If this option is not used, the home directory defaults to `~/.gnupg'. It is only recognized when given on the command line. It also overrides any home directory stated through the environment variable `GNUPGHOME' or (on W32 systems) by means of the Registry entry HKCU\SOFTWARE\GNU\GNUPG:HOMEDIR. `--display-charset `name'' Set the name of the native character set. This is used to convert some informational strings like user IDs to the proper UTF-8 encoding. Note that this has nothing to do with the character set of data to be encrypted or signed; GnuPG does not recode user-supplied data. If this option is not used, the default character set is determined from the current locale. A verbosity level of 3 shows the chosen set. Valid values for `name' are: iso-8859-1 This is the Latin 1 set. iso-8859-2 The Latin 2 set. iso-8859-15 This is currently an alias for the Latin 1 set. koi8-r The usual Russian set (rfc1489). utf-8 Bypass all translations and assume that the OS uses native UTF-8 encoding. `--utf8-strings' `--no-utf8-strings' Assume that command line arguments are given as UTF8 strings. The default (`--no-utf8-strings') is to assume that arguments are encoded in the character set as specified by `--display-charset'. These options affect all following arguments. Both options may be used multiple times. `--options `file'' Read options from `file' and do not try to read them from the default options file in the homedir (see `--homedir'). This option is ignored if used in an options file. `--no-options' Shortcut for `--options /dev/null'. This option is detected before an attempt to open an option file. Using this option will also prevent the creation of a `~/.gnupg' homedir. `-z `n'' `--compress-level `n'' `--bzip2-compress-level `n'' Set compression level to `n' for the ZIP and ZLIB compression algorithms. The default is to use the default compression level of zlib (normally 6). `--bzip2-compress-level' sets the compression level for the BZIP2 compression algorithm (defaulting to 6 as well). This is a different option from `--compress-level' since BZIP2 uses a significant amount of memory for each additional compression level. `-z' sets both. A value of 0 for `n' disables compression. `--bzip2-decompress-lowmem' Use a different decompression method for BZIP2 compressed files. This alternate method uses a bit more than half the memory, but also runs at half the speed. This is useful under extreme low memory circumstances when the file was originally compressed at a high `--bzip2-compress-level'. `--mangle-dos-filenames' `--no-mangle-dos-filenames' Older version of Windows cannot handle filenames with more than one dot. `--mangle-dos-filenames' causes GnuPG to replace (rather than add to) the extension of an output filename to avoid this problem. This option is off by default and has no effect on non-Windows platforms. `--ask-cert-level' `--no-ask-cert-level' When making a key signature, prompt for a certification level. If this option is not specified, the certification level used is set via `--default-cert-level'. See `--default-cert-level' for information on the specific levels and how they are used. `--no-ask-cert-level' disables this option. This option defaults to no. `--default-cert-level `n'' The default to use for the check level when signing a key. 0 means you make no particular claim as to how carefully you verified the key. 1 means you believe the key is owned by the person who claims to own it but you could not, or did not verify the key at all. This is useful for a "persona" verification, where you sign the key of a pseudonymous user. 2 means you did casual verification of the key. For example, this could mean that you verified the key fingerprint and checked the user ID on the key against a photo ID. 3 means you did extensive verification of the key. For example, this could mean that you verified the key fingerprint with the owner of the key in person, and that you checked, by means of a hard to forge document with a photo ID (such as a passport) that the name of the key owner matches the name in the user ID on the key, and finally that you verified (by exchange of email) that the email address on the key belongs to the key owner. Note that the examples given above for levels 2 and 3 are just that: examples. In the end, it is up to you to decide just what "casual" and "extensive" mean to you. This option defaults to 0 (no particular claim). `--min-cert-level' When building the trust database, treat any signatures with a certification level below this as invalid. Defaults to 2, which disregards level 1 signatures. Note that level 0 "no particular claim" signatures are always accepted. `--trusted-key `long key ID'' Assume that the specified key (which must be given as a full 8 byte key ID) is as trustworthy as one of your own secret keys. This option is useful if you don't want to keep your secret keys (or one of them) online but still want to be able to check the validity of a given recipient's or signator's key. `--trust-model `pgp|classic|direct|always|auto'' Set what trust model GnuPG should follow. The models are: pgp This is the Web of Trust combined with trust signatures as used in PGP 5.x and later. This is the default trust model when creating a new trust database. classic This is the standard Web of Trust as used in PGP 2.x and earlier. direct Key validity is set directly by the user and not calculated via the Web of Trust. always Skip key validation and assume that used keys are always fully trusted. You generally won't use this unless you are using some external validation scheme. This option also suppresses the "[uncertain]" tag printed with signature checks when there is no evidence that the user ID is bound to the key. Note that this trust model still does not allow the use of expired, revoked, or disabled keys. auto Select the trust model depending on whatever the internal trust database says. This is the default model if such a database already exists. `--auto-key-locate `parameters'' `--no-auto-key-locate' GnuPG can automatically locate and retrieve keys as needed using this option. This happens when encrypting to an email address (in the "user@example.com" form), and there are no user@example.com keys on the local keyring. This option takes any number of the following mechanisms, in the order they are to be tried: cert Locate a key using DNS CERT, as specified in rfc4398. pka Locate a key using DNS PKA. ldap Using DNS Service Discovery, check the domain in question for any LDAP keyservers to use. If this fails, attempt to locate the key using the PGP Universal method of checking `ldap://keys.(thedomain)'. keyserver Locate a key using whatever keyserver is defined using the `--keyserver' option. keyserver-URL In addition, a keyserver URL as used in the `--keyserver' option may be used here to query that particular keyserver. local Locate the key using the local keyrings. This mechanism allows to select the order a local key lookup is done. Thus using `--auto-key-locate local' is identical to `--no-auto-key-locate'. nodefault This flag disables the standard local key lookup, done before any of the mechanisms defined by the `--auto-key-locate' are tried. The position of this mechanism in the list does not matter. It is not required if `local' is also used. clear Clear all defined mechanisms. This is useful to override mechanisms given in a config file. `--keyid-format `short|0xshort|long|0xlong'' Select how to display key IDs. "short" is the traditional 8-character key ID. "long" is the more accurate (but less convenient) 16-character key ID. Add an "0x" to either to include an "0x" at the beginning of the key ID, as in 0x99242560. Note that this option is ignored if the option -with-colons is used. `--keyserver `name'' Use `name' as your keyserver. This is the server that `--recv-keys', `--send-keys', and `--search-keys' will communicate with to receive keys from, send keys to, and search for keys on. The format of the `name' is a URI: `scheme:[//]keyservername[:port]' The scheme is the type of keyserver: "hkp" for the HTTP (or compatible) keyservers, "ldap" for the LDAP keyservers, or "mailto" for the Graff email keyserver. Note that your particular installation of GnuPG may have other keyserver types available as well. Keyserver schemes are case-insensitive. After the keyserver name, optional keyserver configuration options may be provided. These are the same as the global `--keyserver-options' from below, but apply only to this particular keyserver. Most keyservers synchronize with each other, so there is generally no need to send keys to more than one server. The keyserver `hkp://keys.gnupg.net' uses round robin DNS to give a different keyserver each time you use it. `--keyserver-options `name=value1 '' This is a space or comma delimited string that gives options for the keyserver. Options can be prefixed with a `no-' to give the opposite meaning. Valid import-options or export-options may be used here as well to apply to importing (`--recv-key') or exporting (`--send-key') a key from a keyserver. While not all options are available for all keyserver types, some common options are: include-revoked When searching for a key with `--search-keys', include keys that are marked on the keyserver as revoked. Note that not all keyservers differentiate between revoked and unrevoked keys, and for such keyservers this option is meaningless. Note also that most keyservers do not have cryptographic verification of key revocations, and so turning this option off may result in skipping keys that are incorrectly marked as revoked. include-disabled When searching for a key with `--search-keys', include keys that are marked on the keyserver as disabled. Note that this option is not used with HKP keyservers. auto-key-retrieve This option enables the automatic retrieving of keys from a keyserver when verifying signatures made by keys that are not on the local keyring. Note that this option makes a "web bug" like behavior possible. Keyserver operators can see which keys you request, so by sending you a message signed by a brand new key (which you naturally will not have on your local keyring), the operator can tell both your IP address and the time when you verified the signature. honor-keyserver-url When using `--refresh-keys', if the key in question has a preferred keyserver URL, then use that preferred keyserver to refresh the key from. In addition, if auto-key-retrieve is set, and the signature being verified has a preferred keyserver URL, then use that preferred keyserver to fetch the key from. Defaults to yes. honor-pka-record If auto-key-retrieve is set, and the signature being verified has a PKA record, then use the PKA information to fetch the key. Defaults to yes. include-subkeys When receiving a key, include subkeys as potential targets. Note that this option is not used with HKP keyservers, as they do not support retrieving keys by subkey id. use-temp-files On most Unix-like platforms, GnuPG communicates with the keyserver helper program via pipes, which is the most efficient method. This option forces GnuPG to use temporary files to communicate. On some platforms (such as Win32 and RISC OS), this option is always enabled. keep-temp-files If using `use-temp-files', do not delete the temp files after using them. This option is useful to learn the keyserver communication protocol by reading the temporary files. verbose Tell the keyserver helper program to be more verbose. This option can be repeated multiple times to increase the verbosity level. timeout Tell the keyserver helper program how long (in seconds) to try and perform a keyserver action before giving up. Note that performing multiple actions at the same time uses this timeout value per action. For example, when retrieving multiple keys via `--recv-keys', the timeout applies separately to each key retrieval, and not to the `--recv-keys' command as a whole. Defaults to 30 seconds. http-proxy=`value' Set the proxy to use for HTTP and HKP keyservers. This overrides the "http_proxy" environment variable, if any. max-cert-size When retrieving a key via DNS CERT, only accept keys up to this size. Defaults to 16384 bytes. debug Turn on debug output in the keyserver helper program. Note that the details of debug output depends on which keyserver helper program is being used, and in turn, on any libraries that the keyserver helper program uses internally (libcurl, openldap, etc). check-cert Enable certificate checking if the keyserver presents one (for hkps or ldaps). Defaults to on. ca-cert-file Provide a certificate store to override the system default. Only necessary if check-cert is enabled, and the keyserver is using a certificate that is not present in a system default certificate list. Note that depending on the SSL library that the keyserver helper is built with, this may actually be a directory or a file. `--completes-needed `n'' Number of completely trusted users to introduce a new key signer (defaults to 1). `--marginals-needed `n'' Number of marginally trusted users to introduce a new key signer (defaults to 3) `--max-cert-depth `n'' Maximum depth of a certification chain (default is 5). `--simple-sk-checksum' Secret keys are integrity protected by using a SHA-1 checksum. This method is part of the upcoming enhanced OpenPGP specification but GnuPG already uses it as a countermeasure against certain attacks. Old applications don't understand this new format, so this option may be used to switch back to the old behaviour. Using this option bears a security risk. Note that using this option only takes effect when the secret key is encrypted - the simplest way to make this happen is to change the passphrase on the key (even changing it to the same value is acceptable). `--no-sig-cache' Do not cache the verification status of key signatures. Caching gives a much better performance in key listings. However, if you suspect that your public keyring is not save against write modifications, you can use this option to disable the caching. It probably does not make sense to disable it because all kind of damage can be done if someone else has write access to your public keyring. `--no-sig-create-check' GnuPG normally verifies each signature right after creation to protect against bugs and hardware malfunctions which could leak out bits from the secret key. This extra verification needs some time (about 115% for DSA keys), and so this option can be used to disable it. However, due to the fact that the signature creation needs manual interaction, this performance penalty does not matter in most settings. `--auto-check-trustdb' `--no-auto-check-trustdb' If GnuPG feels that its information about the Web of Trust has to be updated, it automatically runs the `--check-trustdb' command internally. This may be a time consuming process. `--no-auto-check-trustdb' disables this option. `--use-agent' `--no-use-agent' This is dummy option. `gpg2' always requires the agent. `--gpg-agent-info' This is dummy option. It has no effect when used with `gpg2'. `--agent-program FILE' Specify an agent program to be used for secret key operations. The default value is the `/usr/bin/gpg-agent'. This is only used as a fallback when the environment variable `GPG_AGENT_INFO' is not set or a running agent cannot be connected. `--lock-once' Lock the databases the first time a lock is requested and do not release the lock until the process terminates. `--lock-multiple' Release the locks every time a lock is no longer needed. Use this to override a previous `--lock-once' from a config file. `--lock-never' Disable locking entirely. This option should be used only in very special environments, where it can be assured that only one process is accessing those files. A bootable floppy with a stand-alone encryption system will probably use this. Improper usage of this option may lead to data and key corruption. `--exit-on-status-write-error' This option will cause write errors on the status FD to immediately terminate the process. That should in fact be the default but it never worked this way and thus we need an option to enable this, so that the change won't break applications which close their end of a status fd connected pipe too early. Using this option along with `--enable-progress-filter' may be used to cleanly cancel long running gpg operations. `--limit-card-insert-tries `n'' With `n' greater than 0 the number of prompts asking to insert a smartcard gets limited to N-1. Thus with a value of 1 gpg won't at all ask to insert a card if none has been inserted at startup. This option is useful in the configuration file in case an application does not know about the smartcard support and waits ad infinitum for an inserted card. `--no-random-seed-file' GnuPG uses a file to store its internal random pool over invocations. This makes random generation faster; however sometimes write operations are not desired. This option can be used to achieve that with the cost of slower random generation. `--no-greeting' Suppress the initial copyright message. `--no-secmem-warning' Suppress the warning about "using insecure memory". `--no-permission-warning' Suppress the warning about unsafe file and home directory (`--homedir') permissions. Note that the permission checks that GnuPG performs are not intended to be authoritative, but rather they simply warn about certain common permission problems. Do not assume that the lack of a warning means that your system is secure. Note that the warning for unsafe `--homedir' permissions cannot be suppressed in the gpg.conf file, as this would allow an attacker to place an unsafe gpg.conf file in place, and use this file to suppress warnings about itself. The `--homedir' permissions warning may only be suppressed on the command line. `--no-mdc-warning' Suppress the warning about missing MDC integrity protection. `--require-secmem' `--no-require-secmem' Refuse to run if GnuPG cannot get secure memory. Defaults to no (i.e. run, but give a warning). `--require-cross-certification' `--no-require-cross-certification' When verifying a signature made from a subkey, ensure that the cross certification "back signature" on the subkey is present and valid. This protects against a subtle attack against subkeys that can sign. Defaults to `--require-cross-certification' for `gpg2'. `--expert' `--no-expert' Allow the user to do certain nonsensical or "silly" things like signing an expired or revoked key, or certain potentially incompatible things like generating unusual key types. This also disables certain warning messages about potentially incompatible actions. As the name implies, this option is for experts only. If you don't fully understand the implications of what it allows you to do, leave this off. `--no-expert' disables this option.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPG Key related Options, Next: GPG Input and Output, Prev: GPG Configuration Options, Up: GPG Options 3.2.2 Key related options ------------------------- `--recipient NAME' `-r' Encrypt for user id NAME. If this option or `--hidden-recipient' is not specified, GnuPG asks for the user-id unless `--default-recipient' is given. `--hidden-recipient NAME' `-R' Encrypt for user ID NAME, but hide the key ID of this user's key. This option helps to hide the receiver of the message and is a limited countermeasure against traffic analysis. If this option or `--recipient' is not specified, GnuPG asks for the user ID unless `--default-recipient' is given. `--encrypt-to `name'' Same as `--recipient' but this one is intended for use in the options file and may be used with your own user-id as an "encrypt-to-self". These keys are only used when there are other recipients given either by use of `--recipient' or by the asked user id. No trust checking is performed for these user ids and even disabled keys can be used. `--hidden-encrypt-to `name'' Same as `--hidden-recipient' but this one is intended for use in the options file and may be used with your own user-id as a hidden "encrypt-to-self". These keys are only used when there are other recipients given either by use of `--recipient' or by the asked user id. No trust checking is performed for these user ids and even disabled keys can be used. `--no-encrypt-to' Disable the use of all `--encrypt-to' and `--hidden-encrypt-to' keys. `--group `name=value1 '' Sets up a named group, which is similar to aliases in email programs. Any time the group name is a recipient (`-r' or `--recipient'), it will be expanded to the values specified. Multiple groups with the same name are automatically merged into a single group. The values are `key IDs' or fingerprints, but any key description is accepted. Note that a value with spaces in it will be treated as two different values. Note also there is only one level of expansion -- you cannot make an group that points to another group. When used from the command line, it may be necessary to quote the argument to this option to prevent the shell from treating it as multiple arguments. `--ungroup `name'' Remove a given entry from the `--group' list. `--no-groups' Remove all entries from the `--group' list. `--local-user NAME' `-u' Use NAME as the key to sign with. Note that this option overrides `--default-key'. `--try-all-secrets' Don't look at the key ID as stored in the message but try all secret keys in turn to find the right decryption key. This option forces the behaviour as used by anonymous recipients (created by using `--throw-keyids' or `--hidden-recipient') and might come handy in case where an encrypted message contains a bogus key ID. `--skip-hidden-recipients' `--no-skip-hidden-recipients' During decryption skip all anonymous recipients. This option helps in the case that people use the hidden recipients feature to hide there own encrypt-to key from others. If oneself has many secret keys this may lead to a major annoyance because all keys are tried in turn to decrypt soemthing which was not really intended for it. The drawback of this option is that it is currently not possible to decrypt a message which includes real anonymous recipients.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPG Input and Output, Next: OpenPGP Options, Prev: GPG Key related Options, Up: GPG Options 3.2.3 Input and Output ---------------------- `--armor' `-a' Create ASCII armored output. The default is to create the binary OpenPGP format. `--no-armor' Assume the input data is not in ASCII armored format. `--output FILE' `-o FILE' Write output to FILE. `--max-output `n'' This option sets a limit on the number of bytes that will be generated when processing a file. Since OpenPGP supports various levels of compression, it is possible that the plaintext of a given message may be significantly larger than the original OpenPGP message. While GnuPG works properly with such messages, there is often a desire to set a maximum file size that will be generated before processing is forced to stop by the OS limits. Defaults to 0, which means "no limit". `--import-options `parameters'' This is a space or comma delimited string that gives options for importing keys. Options can be prepended with a `no-' to give the opposite meaning. The options are: import-local-sigs Allow importing key signatures marked as "local". This is not generally useful unless a shared keyring scheme is being used. Defaults to no. repair-pks-subkey-bug During import, attempt to repair the damage caused by the PKS keyserver bug (pre version 0.9.6) that mangles keys with multiple subkeys. Note that this cannot completely repair the damaged key as some crucial data is removed by the keyserver, but it does at least give you back one subkey. Defaults to no for regular `--import' and to yes for keyserver `--recv-keys'. merge-only During import, allow key updates to existing keys, but do not allow any new keys to be imported. Defaults to no. import-clean After import, compact (remove all signatures except the self-signature) any user IDs from the new key that are not usable. Then, remove any signatures from the new key that are not usable. This includes signatures that were issued by keys that are not present on the keyring. This option is the same as running the `--edit-key' command "clean" after import. Defaults to no. import-minimal Import the smallest key possible. This removes all signatures except the most recent self-signature on each user ID. This option is the same as running the `--edit-key' command "minimize" after import. Defaults to no. `--export-options `parameters'' This is a space or comma delimited string that gives options for exporting keys. Options can be prepended with a `no-' to give the opposite meaning. The options are: export-local-sigs Allow exporting key signatures marked as "local". This is not generally useful unless a shared keyring scheme is being used. Defaults to no. export-attributes Include attribute user IDs (photo IDs) while exporting. This is useful to export keys if they are going to be used by an OpenPGP program that does not accept attribute user IDs. Defaults to yes. export-sensitive-revkeys Include designated revoker information that was marked as "sensitive". Defaults to no. export-reset-subkey-passwd When using the `--export-secret-subkeys' command, this option resets the passphrases for all exported subkeys to empty. This is useful when the exported subkey is to be used on an unattended machine where a passphrase doesn't necessarily make sense. Defaults to no. export-clean Compact (remove all signatures from) user IDs on the key being exported if the user IDs are not usable. Also, do not export any signatures that are not usable. This includes signatures that were issued by keys that are not present on the keyring. This option is the same as running the `--edit-key' command "clean" before export except that the local copy of the key is not modified. Defaults to no. export-minimal Export the smallest key possible. This removes all signatures except the most recent self-signature on each user ID. This option is the same as running the `--edit-key' command "minimize" before export except that the local copy of the key is not modified. Defaults to no. `--with-colons' Print key listings delimited by colons. Note that the output will be encoded in UTF-8 regardless of any `--display-charset' setting. This format is useful when GnuPG is called from scripts and other programs as it is easily machine parsed. The details of this format are documented in the file `doc/DETAILS', which is included in the GnuPG source distribution. `--fixed-list-mode' Do not merge primary user ID and primary key in `--with-colon' listing mode and print all timestamps as seconds since 1970-01-01. Since GnuPG 2.0.10, this mode is always used and thus this option is obsolete; it does not harm to use it though. `--with-fingerprint' Same as the command `--fingerprint' but changes only the format of the output and may be used together with another command.  File: gnupg.info, Node: OpenPGP Options, Next: Compliance Options, Prev: GPG Input and Output, Up: GPG Options 3.2.4 OpenPGP protocol specific options. ---------------------------------------- `-t, --textmode' `--no-textmode' Treat input files as text and store them in the OpenPGP canonical text form with standard "CRLF" line endings. This also sets the necessary flags to inform the recipient that the encrypted or signed data is text and may need its line endings converted back to whatever the local system uses. This option is useful when communicating between two platforms that have different line ending conventions (UNIX-like to Mac, Mac to Windows, etc). `--no-textmode' disables this option, and is the default. `--force-v3-sigs' `--no-force-v3-sigs' OpenPGP states that an implementation should generate v4 signatures but PGP versions 5 through 7 only recognize v4 signatures on key material. This option forces v3 signatures for signatures on data. Note that this option implies `--no-ask-sig-expire', and unsets `--sig-policy-url', `--sig-notation', and `--sig-keyserver-url', as these features cannot be used with v3 signatures. `--no-force-v3-sigs' disables this option. Defaults to no. `--force-v4-certs' `--no-force-v4-certs' Always use v4 key signatures even on v3 keys. This option also changes the default hash algorithm for v3 RSA keys from MD5 to SHA-1. `--no-force-v4-certs' disables this option. `--force-mdc' Force the use of encryption with a modification detection code. This is always used with the newer ciphers (those with a blocksize greater than 64 bits), or if all of the recipient keys indicate MDC support in their feature flags. `--disable-mdc' Disable the use of the modification detection code. Note that by using this option, the encrypted message becomes vulnerable to a message modification attack. `--personal-cipher-preferences `string'' Set the list of personal cipher preferences to `string'. Use `gpg2 --version' to get a list of available algorithms, and use `none' to set no preference at all. This allows the user to safely override the algorithm chosen by the recipient key preferences, as GPG will only select an algorithm that is usable by all recipients. The most highly ranked cipher in this list is also used for the `--symmetric' encryption command. `--personal-digest-preferences `string'' Set the list of personal digest preferences to `string'. Use `gpg2 --version' to get a list of available algorithms, and use `none' to set no preference at all. This allows the user to safely override the algorithm chosen by the recipient key preferences, as GPG will only select an algorithm that is usable by all recipients. The most highly ranked digest algorithm in this list is also used when signing without encryption (e.g. `--clearsign' or `--sign'). `--personal-compress-preferences `string'' Set the list of personal compression preferences to `string'. Use `gpg2 --version' to get a list of available algorithms, and use `none' to set no preference at all. This allows the user to safely override the algorithm chosen by the recipient key preferences, as GPG will only select an algorithm that is usable by all recipients. The most highly ranked compression algorithm in this list is also used when there are no recipient keys to consider (e.g. `--symmetric'). `--s2k-cipher-algo `name'' Use `name' as the cipher algorithm used to protect secret keys. The default cipher is CAST5. This cipher is also used for conventional encryption if `--personal-cipher-preferences' and `--cipher-algo' is not given. `--s2k-digest-algo `name'' Use `name' as the digest algorithm used to mangle the passphrases. The default algorithm is SHA-1. `--s2k-mode `n'' Selects how passphrases are mangled. If `n' is 0 a plain passphrase (which is not recommended) will be used, a 1 adds a salt to the passphrase and a 3 (the default) iterates the whole process a number of times (see -s2k-count). Unless `--rfc1991' is used, this mode is also used for conventional encryption. `--s2k-count `n'' Specify how many times the passphrase mangling is repeated. This value may range between 1024 and 65011712 inclusive. The default is inquired from gpg-agent. Note that not all values in the 1024-65011712 range are legal and if an illegal value is selected, GnuPG will round up to the nearest legal value. This option is only meaningful if `--s2k-mode' is 3.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Compliance Options, Next: GPG Esoteric Options, Prev: OpenPGP Options, Up: GPG Options 3.2.5 Compliance options ------------------------ These options control what GnuPG is compliant to. Only one of these options may be active at a time. Note that the default setting of this is nearly always the correct one. See the INTEROPERABILITY WITH OTHER OPENPGP PROGRAMS section below before using one of these options. `--gnupg' Use standard GnuPG behavior. This is essentially OpenPGP behavior (see `--openpgp'), but with some additional workarounds for common compatibility problems in different versions of PGP. This is the default option, so it is not generally needed, but it may be useful to override a different compliance option in the gpg.conf file. `--openpgp' Reset all packet, cipher and digest options to strict OpenPGP behavior. Use this option to reset all previous options like `--s2k-*', `--cipher-algo', `--digest-algo' and `--compress-algo' to OpenPGP compliant values. All PGP workarounds are disabled. `--rfc4880' Reset all packet, cipher and digest options to strict RFC-4880 behavior. Note that this is currently the same thing as `--openpgp'. `--rfc2440' Reset all packet, cipher and digest options to strict RFC-2440 behavior. `--rfc1991' Try to be more RFC-1991 (PGP 2.x) compliant. `--pgp2' Set up all options to be as PGP 2.x compliant as possible, and warn if an action is taken (e.g. encrypting to a non-RSA key) that will create a message that PGP 2.x will not be able to handle. Note that `PGP 2.x' here means `MIT PGP 2.6.2'. There are other versions of PGP 2.x available, but the MIT release is a good common baseline. This option implies `--rfc1991 --disable-mdc --no-force-v4-certs --escape-from-lines --force-v3-sigs --allow-weak-digest-algos --cipher-algo IDEA --digest-algo MD5 --compress-algo ZIP'. It also disables `--textmode' when encrypting. `--pgp6' Set up all options to be as PGP 6 compliant as possible. This restricts you to the ciphers IDEA (if the IDEA plugin is installed), 3DES, and CAST5, the hashes MD5, SHA1 and RIPEMD160, and the compression algorithms none and ZIP. This also disables -throw-keyids, and making signatures with signing subkeys as PGP 6 does not understand signatures made by signing subkeys. This option implies `--disable-mdc --escape-from-lines --force-v3-sigs'. `--pgp7' Set up all options to be as PGP 7 compliant as possible. This is identical to `--pgp6' except that MDCs are not disabled, and the list of allowable ciphers is expanded to add AES128, AES192, AES256, and TWOFISH. `--pgp8' Set up all options to be as PGP 8 compliant as possible. PGP 8 is a lot closer to the OpenPGP standard than previous versions of PGP, so all this does is disable `--throw-keyids' and set `--escape-from-lines'. All algorithms are allowed except for the SHA224, SHA384, and SHA512 digests.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPG Esoteric Options, Next: Deprecated Options, Prev: Compliance Options, Up: GPG Options 3.2.6 Doing things one usually doesn't want to do. -------------------------------------------------- `-n' `--dry-run' Don't make any changes (this is not completely implemented). `--list-only' Changes the behaviour of some commands. This is like `--dry-run' but different in some cases. The semantic of this command may be extended in the future. Currently it only skips the actual decryption pass and therefore enables a fast listing of the encryption keys. `-i' `--interactive' Prompt before overwriting any files. `--debug-level LEVEL' Select the debug level for investigating problems. LEVEL may be a numeric value or by a keyword: `none' No debugging at all. A value of less than 1 may be used instead of the keyword. `basic' Some basic debug messages. A value between 1 and 2 may be used instead of the keyword. `advanced' More verbose debug messages. A value between 3 and 5 may be used instead of the keyword. `expert' Even more detailed messages. A value between 6 and 8 may be used instead of the keyword. `guru' All of the debug messages you can get. A value greater than 8 may be used instead of the keyword. The creation of hash tracing files is only enabled if the keyword is used. How these messages are mapped to the actual debugging flags is not specified and may change with newer releases of this program. They are however carefully selected to best aid in debugging. `--debug FLAGS' Set debugging flags. All flags are or-ed and FLAGS may be given in C syntax (e.g. 0x0042). `--debug-all' Set all useful debugging flags. `--faked-system-time EPOCH' This option is only useful for testing; it sets the system time back or forth to EPOCH which is the number of seconds elapsed since the year 1970. Alternatively EPOCH may be given as a full ISO time string (e.g. "20070924T154812"). `--enable-progress-filter' Enable certain PROGRESS status outputs. This option allows frontends to display a progress indicator while gpg is processing larger files. There is a slight performance overhead using it. `--status-fd `n'' Write special status strings to the file descriptor `n'. See the file DETAILS in the documentation for a listing of them. `--status-file `file'' Same as `--status-fd', except the status data is written to file `file'. `--logger-fd `n'' Write log output to file descriptor `n' and not to STDERR. `--log-file `file'' `--logger-file `file'' Same as `--logger-fd', except the logger data is written to file `file'. Note that `--log-file' is only implemented for GnuPG-2. `--attribute-fd `n'' Write attribute subpackets to the file descriptor `n'. This is most useful for use with `--status-fd', since the status messages are needed to separate out the various subpackets from the stream delivered to the file descriptor. `--attribute-file `file'' Same as `--attribute-fd', except the attribute data is written to file `file'. `--comment `string'' `--no-comments' Use `string' as a comment string in clear text signatures and ASCII armored messages or keys (see `--armor'). The default behavior is not to use a comment string. `--comment' may be repeated multiple times to get multiple comment strings. `--no-comments' removes all comments. It is a good idea to keep the length of a single comment below 60 characters to avoid problems with mail programs wrapping such lines. Note that comment lines, like all other header lines, are not protected by the signature. `--emit-version' `--no-emit-version' Force inclusion of the version string in ASCII armored output. If given once only the name of the program and the major number is emitted (default), given twice the minor is also emitted, given triple the micro is added, and given quad an operating system identification is also emitted. `--no-emit-version' disables the version line. `--sig-notation `name=value'' `--cert-notation `name=value'' `-N, --set-notation `name=value'' Put the name value pair into the signature as notation data. `name' must consist only of printable characters or spaces, and must contain a '@' character in the form keyname@domain.example.com (substituting the appropriate keyname and domain name, of course). This is to help prevent pollution of the IETF reserved notation namespace. The `--expert' flag overrides the '@' check. `value' may be any printable string; it will be encoded in UTF8, so you should check that your `--display-charset' is set correctly. If you prefix `name' with an exclamation mark (!), the notation data will be flagged as critical (rfc4880:5.2.3.16). `--sig-notation' sets a notation for data signatures. `--cert-notation' sets a notation for key signatures (certifications). `--set-notation' sets both. There are special codes that may be used in notation names. "%k" will be expanded into the key ID of the key being signed, "%K" into the long key ID of the key being signed, "%f" into the fingerprint of the key being signed, "%s" into the key ID of the key making the signature, "%S" into the long key ID of the key making the signature, "%g" into the fingerprint of the key making the signature (which might be a subkey), "%p" into the fingerprint of the primary key of the key making the signature, "%c" into the signature count from the OpenPGP smartcard, and "%%" results in a single "%". %k, %K, and %f are only meaningful when making a key signature (certification), and %c is only meaningful when using the OpenPGP smartcard. `--sig-policy-url `string'' `--cert-policy-url `string'' `--set-policy-url `string'' Use `string' as a Policy URL for signatures (rfc4880:5.2.3.20). If you prefix it with an exclamation mark (!), the policy URL packet will be flagged as critical. `--sig-policy-url' sets a policy url for data signatures. `--cert-policy-url' sets a policy url for key signatures (certifications). `--set-policy-url' sets both. The same %-expandos used for notation data are available here as well. `--sig-keyserver-url `string'' Use `string' as a preferred keyserver URL for data signatures. If you prefix it with an exclamation mark (!), the keyserver URL packet will be flagged as critical. The same %-expandos used for notation data are available here as well. `--set-filename `string'' Use `string' as the filename which is stored inside messages. This overrides the default, which is to use the actual filename of the file being encrypted. `--for-your-eyes-only' `--no-for-your-eyes-only' Set the `for your eyes only' flag in the message. This causes GnuPG to refuse to save the file unless the `--output' option is given, and PGP to use a "secure viewer" with a claimed Tempest-resistant font to display the message. This option overrides `--set-filename'. `--no-for-your-eyes-only' disables this option. `--use-embedded-filename' `--no-use-embedded-filename' Try to create a file with a name as embedded in the data. This can be a dangerous option as it allows to overwrite files. Defaults to no. `--cipher-algo `name'' Use `name' as cipher algorithm. Running the program with the command `--version' yields a list of supported algorithms. If this is not used the cipher algorithm is selected from the preferences stored with the key. In general, you do not want to use this option as it allows you to violate the OpenPGP standard. `--personal-cipher-preferences' is the safe way to accomplish the same thing. `--digest-algo `name'' Use `name' as the message digest algorithm. Running the program with the command `--version' yields a list of supported algorithms. In general, you do not want to use this option as it allows you to violate the OpenPGP standard. `--personal-digest-preferences' is the safe way to accomplish the same thing. `--compress-algo `name'' Use compression algorithm `name'. "zlib" is RFC-1950 ZLIB compression. "zip" is RFC-1951 ZIP compression which is used by PGP. "bzip2" is a more modern compression scheme that can compress some things better than zip or zlib, but at the cost of more memory used during compression and decompression. "uncompressed" or "none" disables compression. If this option is not used, the default behavior is to examine the recipient key preferences to see which algorithms the recipient supports. If all else fails, ZIP is used for maximum compatibility. ZLIB may give better compression results than ZIP, as the compression window size is not limited to 8k. BZIP2 may give even better compression results than that, but will use a significantly larger amount of memory while compressing and decompressing. This may be significant in low memory situations. Note, however, that PGP (all versions) only supports ZIP compression. Using any algorithm other than ZIP or "none" will make the message unreadable with PGP. In general, you do not want to use this option as it allows you to violate the OpenPGP standard. `--personal-compress-preferences' is the safe way to accomplish the same thing. `--cert-digest-algo `name'' Use `name' as the message digest algorithm used when signing a key. Running the program with the command `--version' yields a list of supported algorithms. Be aware that if you choose an algorithm that GnuPG supports but other OpenPGP implementations do not, then some users will not be able to use the key signatures you make, or quite possibly your entire key. `--disable-cipher-algo `name'' Never allow the use of `name' as cipher algorithm. The given name will not be checked so that a later loaded algorithm will still get disabled. `--disable-pubkey-algo `name'' Never allow the use of `name' as public key algorithm. The given name will not be checked so that a later loaded algorithm will still get disabled. `--throw-keyids' `--no-throw-keyids' Do not put the recipient key IDs into encrypted messages. This helps to hide the receivers of the message and is a limited countermeasure against traffic analysis.(1) On the receiving side, it may slow down the decryption process because all available secret keys must be tried. `--no-throw-keyids' disables this option. This option is essentially the same as using `--hidden-recipient' for all recipients. `--not-dash-escaped' This option changes the behavior of cleartext signatures so that they can be used for patch files. You should not send such an armored file via email because all spaces and line endings are hashed too. You can not use this option for data which has 5 dashes at the beginning of a line, patch files don't have this. A special armor header line tells GnuPG about this cleartext signature option. `--escape-from-lines' `--no-escape-from-lines' Because some mailers change lines starting with "From " to ">From " it is good to handle such lines in a special way when creating cleartext signatures to prevent the mail system from breaking the signature. Note that all other PGP versions do it this way too. Enabled by default. `--no-escape-from-lines' disables this option. `--passphrase-repeat `n'' Specify how many times `gpg2' will request a new passphrase be repeated. This is useful for helping memorize a passphrase. Defaults to 1 repetition. `--passphrase-fd `n'' Read the passphrase from file descriptor `n'. Only the first line will be read from file descriptor `n'. If you use 0 for `n', the passphrase will be read from STDIN. This can only be used if only one passphrase is supplied. Note that this passphrase is only used if the option `--batch' has also been given. This is different from `gpg'. `--passphrase-file `file'' Read the passphrase from file `file'. Only the first line will be read from file `file'. This can only be used if only one passphrase is supplied. Obviously, a passphrase stored in a file is of questionable security if other users can read this file. Don't use this option if you can avoid it. Note that this passphrase is only used if the option `--batch' has also been given. This is different from `gpg'. `--passphrase `string'' Use `string' as the passphrase. This can only be used if only one passphrase is supplied. Obviously, this is of very questionable security on a multi-user system. Don't use this option if you can avoid it. Note that this passphrase is only used if the option `--batch' has also been given. This is different from `gpg'. `--command-fd `n'' This is a replacement for the deprecated shared-memory IPC mode. If this option is enabled, user input on questions is not expected from the TTY but from the given file descriptor. It should be used together with `--status-fd'. See the file doc/DETAILS in the source distribution for details on how to use it. `--command-file `file'' Same as `--command-fd', except the commands are read out of file `file' `--allow-non-selfsigned-uid' `--no-allow-non-selfsigned-uid' Allow the import and use of keys with user IDs which are not self-signed. This is not recommended, as a non self-signed user ID is trivial to forge. `--no-allow-non-selfsigned-uid' disables. `--allow-freeform-uid' Disable all checks on the form of the user ID while generating a new one. This option should only be used in very special environments as it does not ensure the de-facto standard format of user IDs. `--ignore-time-conflict' GnuPG normally checks that the timestamps associated with keys and signatures have plausible values. However, sometimes a signature seems to be older than the key due to clock problems. This option makes these checks just a warning. See also `--ignore-valid-from' for timestamp issues on subkeys. `--ignore-valid-from' GnuPG normally does not select and use subkeys created in the future. This option allows the use of such keys and thus exhibits the pre-1.0.7 behaviour. You should not use this option unless there is some clock problem. See also `--ignore-time-conflict' for timestamp issues with signatures. `--ignore-crc-error' The ASCII armor used by OpenPGP is protected by a CRC checksum against transmission errors. Occasionally the CRC gets mangled somewhere on the transmission channel but the actual content (which is protected by the OpenPGP protocol anyway) is still okay. This option allows GnuPG to ignore CRC errors. `--ignore-mdc-error' This option changes a MDC integrity protection failure into a warning. This can be useful if a message is partially corrupt, but it is necessary to get as much data as possible out of the corrupt message. However, be aware that a MDC protection failure may also mean that the message was tampered with intentionally by an attacker. `--allow-weak-digest-algos' Signatures made with the broken MD5 algorithm are normally rejected with an "invalid digest algorithm" message. This option allows the verification of signatures made with such weak algorithms. `--no-default-keyring' Do not add the default keyrings to the list of keyrings. Note that GnuPG will not operate without any keyrings, so if you use this option and do not provide alternate keyrings via `--keyring' or `--secret-keyring', then GnuPG will still use the default public or secret keyrings. `--skip-verify' Skip the signature verification step. This may be used to make the decryption faster if the signature verification is not needed. `--with-key-data' Print key listings delimited by colons (like `--with-colons') and print the public key data. `--fast-list-mode' Changes the output of the list commands to work faster; this is achieved by leaving some parts empty. Some applications don't need the user ID and the trust information given in the listings. By using this options they can get a faster listing. The exact behaviour of this option may change in future versions. If you are missing some information, don't use this option. `--no-literal' This is not for normal use. Use the source to see for what it might be useful. `--set-filesize' This is not for normal use. Use the source to see for what it might be useful. `--show-session-key' Display the session key used for one message. See `--override-session-key' for the counterpart of this option. We think that Key Escrow is a Bad Thing; however the user should have the freedom to decide whether to go to prison or to reveal the content of one specific message without compromising all messages ever encrypted for one secret key. DON'T USE IT UNLESS YOU ARE REALLY FORCED TO DO SO. `--override-session-key `string'' Don't use the public key but the session key `string'. The format of this string is the same as the one printed by `--show-session-key'. This option is normally not used but comes handy in case someone forces you to reveal the content of an encrypted message; using this option you can do this without handing out the secret key. `--ask-sig-expire' `--no-ask-sig-expire' When making a data signature, prompt for an expiration time. If this option is not specified, the expiration time set via `--default-sig-expire' is used. `--no-ask-sig-expire' disables this option. `--default-sig-expire' The default expiration time to use for signature expiration. Valid values are "0" for no expiration, a number followed by the letter d (for days), w (for weeks), m (for months), or y (for years) (for example "2m" for two months, or "5y" for five years), or an absolute date in the form YYYY-MM-DD. Defaults to "0". `--ask-cert-expire' `--no-ask-cert-expire' When making a key signature, prompt for an expiration time. If this option is not specified, the expiration time set via `--default-cert-expire' is used. `--no-ask-cert-expire' disables this option. `--default-cert-expire' The default expiration time to use for key signature expiration. Valid values are "0" for no expiration, a number followed by the letter d (for days), w (for weeks), m (for months), or y (for years) (for example "2m" for two months, or "5y" for five years), or an absolute date in the form YYYY-MM-DD. Defaults to "0". `--allow-secret-key-import' This is an obsolete option and is not used anywhere. `--allow-multiple-messages' `--no-allow-multiple-messages' Allow processing of multiple OpenPGP messages contained in a single file or stream. Some programs that call GPG are not prepared to deal with multiple messages being processed together, so this option defaults to no. Note that versions of GPG prior to 1.4.7 always allowed multiple messages. Warning: Do not use this option unless you need it as a temporary workaround! `--enable-special-filenames' This options enables a mode in which filenames of the form `-&n', where n is a non-negative decimal number, refer to the file descriptor n and not to a file with that name. `--no-expensive-trust-checks' Experimental use only. `--preserve-permissions' Don't change the permissions of a secret keyring back to user read/write only. Use this option only if you really know what you are doing. `--default-preference-list `string'' Set the list of default preferences to `string'. This preference list is used for new keys and becomes the default for "setpref" in the edit menu. `--default-keyserver-url `name'' Set the default keyserver URL to `name'. This keyserver will be used as the keyserver URL when writing a new self-signature on a key, which includes key generation and changing preferences. `--list-config' Display various internal configuration parameters of GnuPG. This option is intended for external programs that call GnuPG to perform tasks, and is thus not generally useful. See the file `doc/DETAILS' in the source distribution for the details of which configuration items may be listed. `--list-config' is only usable with `--with-colons' set. `--gpgconf-list' This command is similar to `--list-config' but in general only internally used by the `gpgconf' tool. `--gpgconf-test' This is more or less dummy action. However it parses the configuration file and returns with failure if the configuration file would prevent `gpg' from startup. Thus it may be used to run a syntax check on the configuration file. ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) Using a little social engineering anyone who is able to decrypt the message can check whether one of the other recipients is the one he suspects.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Deprecated Options, Prev: GPG Esoteric Options, Up: GPG Options 3.2.7 Deprecated options ------------------------ `--show-photos' `--no-show-photos' Causes `--list-keys', `--list-sigs', `--list-public-keys', `--list-secret-keys', and verifying a signature to also display the photo ID attached to the key, if any. See also `--photo-viewer'. These options are deprecated. Use `--list-options [no-]show-photos' and/or `--verify-options [no-]show-photos' instead. `--show-keyring' Display the keyring name at the head of key listings to show which keyring a given key resides on. This option is deprecated: use `--list-options [no-]show-keyring' instead. `--always-trust' Identical to `--trust-model always'. This option is deprecated. `--show-notation' `--no-show-notation' Show signature notations in the `--list-sigs' or `--check-sigs' listings as well as when verifying a signature with a notation in it. These options are deprecated. Use `--list-options [no-]show-notation' and/or `--verify-options [no-]show-notation' instead. `--show-policy-url' `--no-show-policy-url' Show policy URLs in the `--list-sigs' or `--check-sigs' listings as well as when verifying a signature with a policy URL in it. These options are deprecated. Use `--list-options [no-]show-policy-url' and/or `--verify-options [no-]show-policy-url' instead.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPG Configuration, Next: GPG Examples, Prev: GPG Options, Up: Invoking GPG 3.3 Configuration files ======================= There are a few configuration files to control certain aspects of `gpg2''s operation. Unless noted, they are expected in the current home directory (*note option --homedir::). `gpg.conf' This is the standard configuration file read by `gpg2' on startup. It may contain any valid long option; the leading two dashes may not be entered and the option may not be abbreviated. This default name may be changed on the command line (*note gpg-option --options::). You should backup this file. Note that on larger installations, it is useful to put predefined files into the directory `/etc/skel/.gnupg/' so that newly created users start up with a working configuration. For existing users the a small helper script is provided to create these files (*note addgnupghome::). For internal purposes `gpg2' creates and maintains a few other files; They all live in in the current home directory (*note option --homedir::). Only the `gpg2' may modify these files. `~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg' The public keyring. You should backup this file. `~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg.lock' The lock file for the public keyring. `~/.gnupg/secring.gpg' The secret keyring. You should backup this file. `~/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg' The trust database. There is no need to backup this file; it is better to backup the ownertrust values (*note option --export-ownertrust::). `~/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg.lock' The lock file for the trust database. `~/.gnupg/random_seed' A file used to preserve the state of the internal random pool. `~/.gnupg/secring.gpg.lock' The lock file for the secret keyring. `/usr[/local]/share/gnupg/options.skel' The skeleton options file. `/usr[/local]/lib/gnupg/' Default location for extensions. Operation is further controlled by a few environment variables: HOME Used to locate the default home directory. GNUPGHOME If set directory used instead of "~/.gnupg". GPG_AGENT_INFO Used to locate the gpg-agent. The value consists of 3 colon delimited fields: The first is the path to the Unix Domain Socket, the second the PID of the gpg-agent and the protocol version which should be set to 1. When starting the gpg-agent as described in its documentation, this variable is set to the correct value. The option `--gpg-agent-info' can be used to override it. PINENTRY_USER_DATA This value is passed via gpg-agent to pinentry. It is useful to convey extra information to a custom pinentry. COLUMNS LINES Used to size some displays to the full size of the screen. LANGUAGE Apart from its use by GNU, it is used in the W32 version to override the language selection done through the Registry. If used and set to a valid and available language name (LANGID), the file with the translation is loaded from `GPGDIR/gnupg.nls/LANGID.mo'. Here GPGDIR is the directory out of which the gpg binary has been loaded. If it can't be loaded the Registry is tried and as last resort the native Windows locale system is used.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPG Examples, Next: Unattended Usage of GPG, Prev: GPG Configuration, Up: Invoking GPG 3.4 Examples ============ gpg -se -r `Bob' `file' sign and encrypt for user Bob gpg -clearsign `file' make a clear text signature gpg -sb `file' make a detached signature gpg -u 0x12345678 -sb `file' make a detached signature with the key 0x12345678 gpg -list-keys `user_ID' show keys gpg -fingerprint `user_ID' show fingerprint gpg -verify `pgpfile' gpg -verify `sigfile' Verify the signature of the file but do not output the data. The second form is used for detached signatures, where `sigfile' is the detached signature (either ASCII armored or binary) and are the signed data; if this is not given, the name of the file holding the signed data is constructed by cutting off the extension (".asc" or ".sig") of `sigfile' or by asking the user for the filename. RETURN VALUE ************ The program returns 0 if everything was fine, 1 if at least a signature was bad, and other error codes for fatal errors. WARNINGS ******** Use a *good* password for your user account and a *good* passphrase to protect your secret key. This passphrase is the weakest part of the whole system. Programs to do dictionary attacks on your secret keyring are very easy to write and so you should protect your "~/.gnupg/" directory very well. Keep in mind that, if this program is used over a network (telnet), it is *very* easy to spy out your passphrase! If you are going to verify detached signatures, make sure that the program knows about it; either give both filenames on the command line or use `-' to specify STDIN. INTEROPERABILITY WITH OTHER OPENPGP PROGRAMS ******************************************** GnuPG tries to be a very flexible implementation of the OpenPGP standard. In particular, GnuPG implements many of the optional parts of the standard, such as the SHA-512 hash, and the ZLIB and BZIP2 compression algorithms. It is important to be aware that not all OpenPGP programs implement these optional algorithms and that by forcing their use via the `--cipher-algo', `--digest-algo', `--cert-digest-algo', or `--compress-algo' options in GnuPG, it is possible to create a perfectly valid OpenPGP message, but one that cannot be read by the intended recipient. There are dozens of variations of OpenPGP programs available, and each supports a slightly different subset of these optional algorithms. For example, until recently, no (unhacked) version of PGP supported the BLOWFISH cipher algorithm. A message using BLOWFISH simply could not be read by a PGP user. By default, GnuPG uses the standard OpenPGP preferences system that will always do the right thing and create messages that are usable by all recipients, regardless of which OpenPGP program they use. Only override this safe default if you really know what you are doing. If you absolutely must override the safe default, or if the preferences on a given key are invalid for some reason, you are far better off using the `--pgp6', `--pgp7', or `--pgp8' options. These options are safe as they do not force any particular algorithms in violation of OpenPGP, but rather reduce the available algorithms to a "PGP-safe" list. BUGS **** On older systems this program should be installed as setuid(root). This is necessary to lock memory pages. Locking memory pages prevents the operating system from writing memory pages (which may contain passphrases or other sensitive material) to disk. If you get no warning message about insecure memory your operating system supports locking without being root. The program drops root privileges as soon as locked memory is allocated. Note also that some systems (especially laptops) have the ability to "suspend to disk" (also known as "safe sleep" or "hibernate"). This writes all memory to disk before going into a low power or even powered off mode. Unless measures are taken in the operating system to protect the saved memory, passphrases or other sensitive material may be recoverable from it later. Before you report a bug you should first search the mailing list archives for similar problems and second check whether such a bug has already been reported to our bug tracker at http://bugs.gnupg.org .  File: gnupg.info, Node: Unattended Usage of GPG, Prev: GPG Examples, Up: Invoking GPG 3.5 Unattended Usage ==================== `gpg' is often used as a backend engine by other software. To help with this a machine interface has been defined to have an unambiguous way to do this. The options `--status-fd' and `--batch' are almost always required for this. * Menu: * Unattended GPG key generation:: Unattended key generation  File: gnupg.info, Node: Unattended GPG key generation, Up: Unattended Usage of GPG 3.5.1 Unattended key generation ------------------------------- The command `--gen-key' may be used along with the option `--batch' for unattended key generation. The parameters are either read from stdin or given as a file on the command line. The format of the parameter file is as follows: * Text only, line length is limited to about 1000 characters. * UTF-8 encoding must be used to specify non-ASCII characters. * Empty lines are ignored. * Leading and trailing while space is ignored. * A hash sign as the first non white space character indicates a comment line. * Control statements are indicated by a leading percent sign, the arguments are separated by white space from the keyword. * Parameters are specified by a keyword, followed by a colon. Arguments are separated by white space. * The first parameter must be `Key-Type'; control statements may be placed anywhere. * The order of the parameters does not matter except for `Key-Type' which must be the first parameter. The parameters are only used for the generated keyblock (primary and subkeys); parameters from previous sets are not used. Some syntactically checks may be performed. * Key generation takes place when either the end of the parameter file is reached, the next `Key-Type' parameter is encountered or at the control statement `%commit' is encountered. Control statements: %echo TEXT Print TEXT as diagnostic. %dry-run Suppress actual key generation (useful for syntax checking). %commit Perform the key generation. Note that an implicit commit is done at the next Key-Type parameter. %pubring FILENAME %secring FILENAME Do not write the key to the default or commandline given keyring but to FILENAME. This must be given before the first commit to take place, duplicate specification of the same filename is ignored, the last filename before a commit is used. The filename is used until a new filename is used (at commit points) and all keys are written to that file. If a new filename is given, this file is created (and overwrites an existing one). For GnuPG versions prior to 2.1, both control statements must be given. For GnuPG 2.1 and later `%secring' is a no-op. %ask-passphrase %no-ask-passphrase Enable (or disable) a mode where the command `passphrase' is ignored and instead the usual passphrase dialog is used. This does not make sense for batch key generation; however the unattended key generation feature is also used by GUIs and this feature relinquishes the GUI from implementing its own passphrase entry code. These are global control statements and affect all future key genrations. %no-protection Since GnuPG version 2.1 it is not anymore possible to specify a passphrase for unattended key generation. The passphrase command is simply ignored and `%ask-passpharse' is thus implicitly enabled. Using this option allows the creation of keys without any passphrase protection. This option is mainly intended for regression tests. %transient-key If given the keys are created using a faster and a somewhat less secure random number generator. This option may be used for keys which are only used for a short time and do not require full cryptographic strength. It takes only effect if used together with the control statement `%no-protection'. General Parameters: Key-Type: ALGO Starts a new parameter block by giving the type of the primary key. The algorithm must be capable of signing. This is a required parameter. ALGO may either be an OpenPGP algorithm number or a string with the algorithm name. The special value `default' may be used for ALGO to create the default key type; in this case a `Key-Usage' shall not be given and `default' also be used for `Subkey-Type'. Key-Length: NBITS The requested length of the generated key in bits. The default is returned by running the command `gpg2 --gpgconf-list'. Key-Grip: HEXSTRING This is optional and used to generate a CSR or certificate for an already existing key. Key-Length will be ignored when given. Key-Usage: USAGE-LIST Space or comma delimited list of key usages. Allowed values are `encrypt', `sign', and `auth'. This is used to generate the key flags. Please make sure that the algorithm is capable of this usage. Note that OpenPGP requires that all primary keys are capable of certification, so no matter what usage is given here, the `cert' flag will be on. If no `Key-Usage' is specified and the `Key-Type' is not `default', all allowed usages for that particular algorithm are used; if it is not given but `default' is used the usage will be `sign'. Subkey-Type: ALGO This generates a secondary key (subkey). Currently only one subkey can be handled. See also `Key-Type' above. Subkey-Length: NBITS Length of the secondary key (subkey) in bits. The default is returned by running the command `gpg2 --gpgconf-list'". Subkey-Usage: USAGE-LIST Key usage lists for a subkey; similar to `Key-Usage'. Passphrase: STRING If you want to specify a passphrase for the secret key, enter it here. Default is not to use any passphrase. Name-Real: NAME Name-Comment: COMMENT Name-Email: EMAIL The three parts of a user name. Remember to use UTF-8 encoding here. If you don't give any of them, no user ID is created. Expire-Date: ISO-DATE|(NUMBER[d|w|m|y]) Set the expiration date for the key (and the subkey). It may either be entered in ISO date format (e.g. "20000815T145012") or as number of days, weeks, month or years after the creation date. The special notation "seconds=N" is also allowed to specify a number of seconds since creation. Without a letter days are assumed. Note that there is no check done on the overflow of the type used by OpenPGP for timestamps. Thus you better make sure that the given value make sense. Although OpenPGP works with time intervals, GnuPG uses an absolute value internally and thus the last year we can represent is 2105. Ceation-Date: ISO-DATE Set the creation date of the key as stored in the key information and which is also part of the fingerprint calculation. Either a date like "1986-04-26" or a full timestamp like "19860426T042640" may be used. The time is considered to be UTC. The special notation "seconds=N" may be used to directly specify a the number of seconds since Epoch (Unix time). If it is not given the current time is used. Preferences: STRING Set the cipher, hash, and compression preference values for this key. This expects the same type of string as the sub-command `setpref' in the `--edit-key' menu. Revoker: ALGO:FPR [sensitive] Add a designated revoker to the generated key. Algo is the public key algorithm of the designated revoker (i.e. RSA=1, DSA=17, etc.) FPR is the fingerprint of the designated revoker. The optional `sensitive' flag marks the designated revoker as sensitive information. Only v4 keys may be designated revokers. Keyserver: STRING This is an optional parameter that specifies the preferred keyserver URL for the key. Handle: STRING This is an optional parameter only used with the status lines KEY_CREATED and KEY_NOT_CREATED. STRING may be up to 100 characters and should not contain spaces. It is useful for batch key generation to associate a key parameter block with a status line. Here is an example on how to create a key: $ cat >foo < ssb 1024g/8F70E2C0 2000-03-09 If you want to create a key with the default algorithms you would use these parameters: %echo Generating a default key Key-Type: default Subkey-Type: default Name-Real: Joe Tester Name-Comment: with stupid passphrase Name-Email: joe@foo.bar Expire-Date: 0 Passphrase: abc %pubring foo.pub %secring foo.sec # Do a commit here, so that we can later print "done" :-) %commit %echo done  File: gnupg.info, Node: Invoking GPGSM, Next: Invoking SCDAEMON, Prev: Invoking GPG, Up: Top 4 Invoking GPGSM **************** `gpgsm' is a tool similar to `gpg' to provide digital encryption and signing services on X.509 certificates and the CMS protocol. It is mainly used as a backend for S/MIME mail processing. `gpgsm' includes a full featured certificate management and complies with all rules defined for the German Sphinx project. *Note Option Index::, for an index to `GPGSM''s commands and options. * Menu: * GPGSM Commands:: List of all commands. * GPGSM Options:: List of all options. * GPGSM Configuration:: Configuration files. * GPGSM Examples:: Some usage examples. Developer information: * Unattended Usage:: Using `gpgsm' from other programs. * GPGSM Protocol:: The protocol the server mode uses.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM Commands, Next: GPGSM Options, Up: Invoking GPGSM 4.1 Commands ============ Commands are not distinguished from options except for the fact that only one command is allowed. * Menu: * General GPGSM Commands:: Commands not specific to the functionality. * Operational GPGSM Commands:: Commands to select the type of operation. * Certificate Management:: How to manage certificates.  File: gnupg.info, Node: General GPGSM Commands, Next: Operational GPGSM Commands, Up: GPGSM Commands 4.1.1 Commands not specific to the function ------------------------------------------- `--version' Print the program version and licensing information. Note that you cannot abbreviate this command. `--help, -h' Print a usage message summarizing the most useful command-line options. Note that you cannot abbreviate this command. `--warranty' Print warranty information. Note that you cannot abbreviate this command. `--dump-options' Print a list of all available options and commands. Note that you cannot abbreviate this command.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Operational GPGSM Commands, Next: Certificate Management, Prev: General GPGSM Commands, Up: GPGSM Commands 4.1.2 Commands to select the type of operation ---------------------------------------------- `--encrypt' Perform an encryption. The keys the data is encrypted too must be set using the option `--recipient'. `--decrypt' Perform a decryption; the type of input is automatically determined. It may either be in binary form or PEM encoded; automatic determination of base-64 encoding is not done. `--sign' Create a digital signature. The key used is either the fist one found in the keybox or those set with the `--local-user' option. `--verify' Check a signature file for validity. Depending on the arguments a detached signature may also be checked. `--server' Run in server mode and wait for commands on the `stdin'. `--call-dirmngr COMMAND [ARGS]' Behave as a Dirmngr client issuing the request COMMAND with the optional list of ARGS. The output of the Dirmngr is printed stdout. Please note that file names given as arguments should have an absolute file name (i.e. commencing with `/' because they are passed verbatim to the Dirmngr and the working directory of the Dirmngr might not be the same as the one of this client. Currently it is not possible to pass data via stdin to the Dirmngr. COMMAND should not contain spaces. This is command is required for certain maintaining tasks of the dirmngr where a dirmngr must be able to call back to `gpgsm'. See the Dirmngr manual for details. `--call-protect-tool ARGUMENTS' Certain maintenance operations are done by an external program call `gpg-protect-tool'; this is usually not installed in a directory listed in the PATH variable. This command provides a simple wrapper to access this tool. ARGUMENTS are passed verbatim to this command; use `--help' to get a list of supported operations.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Certificate Management, Prev: Operational GPGSM Commands, Up: GPGSM Commands 4.1.3 How to manage the certificates and keys --------------------------------------------- `--gen-key' -This command allows the creation of a certificate signing request. It -is commonly used along with the `--output' option to save the -created CSR into a file. If used with the `--batch' a parameter -file is used to create the CSR. `--list-keys' `-k' List all available certificates stored in the local key database. Note that the displayed data might be reformatted for better human readability and illegal characters are replaced by safe substitutes. `--list-secret-keys' `-K' List all available certificates for which a corresponding a secret key is available. `--list-external-keys PATTERN' List certificates matching PATTERN using an external server. This utilizes the `dirmngr' service. `--list-chain' Same as `--list-keys' but also prints all keys making up the chain. `--dump-cert' `--dump-keys' List all available certificates stored in the local key database using a format useful mainly for debugging. `--dump-chain' Same as `--dump-keys' but also prints all keys making up the chain. `--dump-secret-keys' List all available certificates for which a corresponding a secret key is available using a format useful mainly for debugging. `--dump-external-keys PATTERN' List certificates matching PATTERN using an external server. This utilizes the `dirmngr' service. It uses a format useful mainly for debugging. `--keydb-clear-some-cert-flags' This is a debugging aid to reset certain flags in the key database which are used to cache certain certificate stati. It is especially useful if a bad CRL or a weird running OCSP responder did accidentally revoke certificate. There is no security issue with this command because `gpgsm' always make sure that the validity of a certificate is checked right before it is used. `--delete-keys PATTERN' Delete the keys matching PATTERN. Note that there is no command to delete the secret part of the key directly. In case you need to do this, you should run the command `gpgsm --dump-secret-keys KEYID' before you delete the key, copy the string of hex-digits in the "keygrip" line and delete the file consisting of these hex-digits and the suffix `.key' from the `private-keys-v1.d' directory below our GnuPG home directory (usually `~/.gnupg'). `--export [PATTERN]' Export all certificates stored in the Keybox or those specified by the optional PATTERN. Those pattern consist of a list of user ids (*note how-to-specify-a-user-id::). When used along with the `--armor' option a few informational lines are prepended before each block. There is one limitation: As there is no commonly agreed upon way to pack more than one certificate into an ASN.1 structure, the binary export (i.e. without using `armor') works only for the export of one certificate. Thus it is required to specify a PATTERN which yields exactly one certificate. Ephemeral certificate are only exported if all PATTERN are given as fingerprints or keygrips. `--export-secret-key-p12 KEY-ID' Export the private key and the certificate identified by KEY-ID in a PKCS#12 format. When used with the `--armor' option a few informational lines are prepended to the output. Note, that the PKCS#12 format is not very secure and this command is only provided if there is no other way to exchange the private key. (*note option --p12-charset::) `--import [FILES]' Import the certificates from the PEM or binary encoded files as well as from signed-only messages. This command may also be used to import a secret key from a PKCS#12 file. `--learn-card' Read information about the private keys from the smartcard and import the certificates from there. This command utilizes the `gpg-agent' and in turn the `scdaemon'. `--passwd USER_ID' Change the passphrase of the private key belonging to the certificate specified as USER_ID. Note, that changing the passphrase/PIN of a smartcard is not yet supported.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM Options, Next: GPGSM Configuration, Prev: GPGSM Commands, Up: Invoking GPGSM 4.2 Option Summary ================== `GPGSM' features a bunch of options to control the exact behaviour and to change the default configuration. * Menu: * Configuration Options:: How to change the configuration. * Certificate Options:: Certificate related options. * Input and Output:: Input and Output. * CMS Options:: How to change how the CMS is created. * Esoteric Options:: Doing things one usually do not want to do.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Configuration Options, Next: Certificate Options, Up: GPGSM Options 4.2.1 How to change the configuration ------------------------------------- These options are used to change the configuration and are usually found in the option file. `--options FILE' Reads configuration from FILE instead of from the default per-user configuration file. The default configuration file is named `gpgsm.conf' and expected in the `.gnupg' directory directly below the home directory of the user. `--homedir DIR' Set the name of the home directory to DIR. If this option is not used, the home directory defaults to `~/.gnupg'. It is only recognized when given on the command line. It also overrides any home directory stated through the environment variable `GNUPGHOME' or (on W32 systems) by means of the Registry entry HKCU\SOFTWARE\GNU\GNUPG:HOMEDIR. `-v' `--verbose' Outputs additional information while running. You can increase the verbosity by giving several verbose commands to `gpgsm', such as `-vv'. `--policy-file FILENAME' Change the default name of the policy file to FILENAME. `--agent-program FILE' Specify an agent program to be used for secret key operations. The default value is the `/usr/local/bin/gpg-agent'. This is only used as a fallback when the environment variable `GPG_AGENT_INFO' is not set or a running agent cannot be connected. `--dirmngr-program FILE' Specify a dirmngr program to be used for CRL checks. The default value is `/usr/sbin/dirmngr'. This is only used as a fallback when the environment variable `DIRMNGR_INFO' is not set or a running dirmngr cannot be connected. `--prefer-system-dirmngr' If a system wide `dirmngr' is running in daemon mode, first try to connect to this one. Fallback to a pipe based server if this does not work. Under Windows this option is ignored because the system dirmngr is always used. `--disable-dirmngr' Entirely disable the use of the Dirmngr. `--no-secmem-warning' Do not print a warning when the so called "secure memory" cannot be used. `--log-file FILE' When running in server mode, append all logging output to FILE.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Certificate Options, Next: Input and Output, Prev: Configuration Options, Up: GPGSM Options 4.2.2 Certificate related options --------------------------------- `--enable-policy-checks' `--disable-policy-checks' By default policy checks are enabled. These options may be used to change it. `--enable-crl-checks' `--disable-crl-checks' By default the CRL checks are enabled and the DirMngr is used to check for revoked certificates. The disable option is most useful with an off-line network connection to suppress this check. `--enable-trusted-cert-crl-check' `--disable-trusted-cert-crl-check' By default the CRL for trusted root certificates are checked like for any other certificates. This allows a CA to revoke its own certificates voluntary without the need of putting all ever issued certificates into a CRL. The disable option may be used to switch this extra check off. Due to the caching done by the Dirmngr, there will not be any noticeable performance gain. Note, that this also disables possible OCSP checks for trusted root certificates. A more specific way of disabling this check is by adding the "relax" keyword to the root CA line of the `trustlist.txt' `--force-crl-refresh' Tell the dirmngr to reload the CRL for each request. For better performance, the dirmngr will actually optimize this by suppressing the loading for short time intervals (e.g. 30 minutes). This option is useful to make sure that a fresh CRL is available for certificates hold in the keybox. The suggested way of doing this is by using it along with the option `--with-validation' for a key listing command. This option should not be used in a configuration file. `--enable-ocsp' `--disable-ocsp' By default OCSP checks are disabled. The enable option may be used to enable OCSP checks via Dirmngr. If CRL checks are also enabled, CRLs will be used as a fallback if for some reason an OCSP request will not succeed. Note, that you have to allow OCSP requests in Dirmngr's configuration too (option `--allow-ocsp') and configure Dirmngr properly. If you do not do so you will get the error code `Not supported'. `--auto-issuer-key-retrieve' If a required certificate is missing while validating the chain of certificates, try to load that certificate from an external location. This usually means that Dirmngr is employed to search for the certificate. Note that this option makes a "web bug" like behavior possible. LDAP server operators can see which keys you request, so by sending you a message signed by a brand new key (which you naturally will not have on your local keybox), the operator can tell both your IP address and the time when you verified the signature. `--validation-model NAME' This option changes the default validation model. The only possible values are "shell" (which is the default), "chain" which forces the use of the chain model and "steed" for a new simplified model. The chain model is also used if an option in the `trustlist.txt' or an attribute of the certificate requests it. However the standard model (shell) is in that case always tried first. `--ignore-cert-extension OID' Add OID to the list of ignored certificate extensions. The OID is expected to be in dotted decimal form, like `2.5.29.3'. This option may be used more than once. Critical flagged certificate extensions matching one of the OIDs in the list are treated as if they are actually handled and thus the certificate will not be rejected due to an unknown critical extension. Use this option with care because extensions are usually flagged as critical for a reason.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Input and Output, Next: CMS Options, Prev: Certificate Options, Up: GPGSM Options 4.2.3 Input and Output ---------------------- `--armor' `-a' Create PEM encoded output. Default is binary output. `--base64' Create Base-64 encoded output; i.e. PEM without the header lines. `--assume-armor' Assume the input data is PEM encoded. Default is to autodetect the encoding but this is may fail. `--assume-base64' Assume the input data is plain base-64 encoded. `--assume-binary' Assume the input data is binary encoded. `--p12-charset NAME' `gpgsm' uses the UTF-8 encoding when encoding passphrases for PKCS#12 files. This option may be used to force the passphrase to be encoded in the specified encoding NAME. This is useful if the application used to import the key uses a different encoding and thus will not be able to import a file generated by `gpgsm'. Commonly used values for NAME are `Latin1' and `CP850'. Note that `gpgsm' itself automagically imports any file with a passphrase encoded to the most commonly used encodings. `--default-key USER_ID' Use USER_ID as the standard key for signing. This key is used if no other key has been defined as a signing key. Note, that the first `--local-users' option also sets this key if it has not yet been set; however `--default-key' always overrides this. `--local-user USER_ID' `-u USER_ID' Set the user(s) to be used for signing. The default is the first secret key found in the database. `--recipient NAME' `-r' Encrypt to the user id NAME. There are several ways a user id may be given (*note how-to-specify-a-user-id::). `--output FILE' `-o FILE' Write output to FILE. The default is to write it to stdout. `--with-key-data' Displays extra information with the `--list-keys' commands. Especially a line tagged `grp' is printed which tells you the keygrip of a key. This string is for example used as the file name of the secret key. `--with-validation' When doing a key listing, do a full validation check for each key and print the result. This is usually a slow operation because it requires a CRL lookup and other operations. When used along with -import, a validation of the certificate to import is done and only imported if it succeeds the test. Note that this does not affect an already available certificate in the DB. This option is therefore useful to simply verify a certificate. `--with-md5-fingerprint' For standard key listings, also print the MD5 fingerprint of the certificate. `--with-keygrip' Include the keygrip in standard key listings. Note that the keygrip is always listed in -with-colons mode.  File: gnupg.info, Node: CMS Options, Next: Esoteric Options, Prev: Input and Output, Up: GPGSM Options 4.2.4 How to change how the CMS is created. ------------------------------------------- `--include-certs N' Using N of -2 includes all certificate except for the root cert, -1 includes all certs, 0 does not include any certs, 1 includes only the signers cert and all other positive values include up to N certificates starting with the signer cert. The default is -2. `--cipher-algo OID' Use the cipher algorithm with the ASN.1 object identifier OID for encryption. For convenience the strings `3DES', `AES' and `AES256' may be used instead of their OIDs. The default is `3DES' (1.2.840.113549.3.7). `--digest-algo `name'' Use `name' as the message digest algorithm. Usually this algorithm is deduced from the respective signing certificate. This option forces the use of the given algorithm and may lead to severe interoperability problems.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Esoteric Options, Prev: CMS Options, Up: GPGSM Options 4.2.5 Doing things one usually do not want to do. ------------------------------------------------- `--extra-digest-algo NAME' Sometimes signatures are broken in that they announce a different digest algorithm than actually used. `gpgsm' uses a one-pass data processing model and thus needs to rely on the announced digest algorithms to properly hash the data. As a workaround this option may be used to tell gpg to also hash the data using the algorithm NAME; this slows processing down a little bit but allows to verify such broken signatures. If `gpgsm' prints an error like "digest algo 8 has not been enabled" you may want to try this option, with `SHA256' for NAME. `--faked-system-time EPOCH' This option is only useful for testing; it sets the system time back or forth to EPOCH which is the number of seconds elapsed since the year 1970. Alternatively EPOCH may be given as a full ISO time string (e.g. "20070924T154812"). `--with-ephemeral-keys' Include ephemeral flagged keys in the output of key listings. Note that they are included anyway if the key specification for a listing is given as fingerprint or keygrip. `--debug-level LEVEL' Select the debug level for investigating problems. LEVEL may be a numeric value or by a keyword: `none' No debugging at all. A value of less than 1 may be used instead of the keyword. `basic' Some basic debug messages. A value between 1 and 2 may be used instead of the keyword. `advanced' More verbose debug messages. A value between 3 and 5 may be used instead of the keyword. `expert' Even more detailed messages. A value between 6 and 8 may be used instead of the keyword. `guru' All of the debug messages you can get. A value greater than 8 may be used instead of the keyword. The creation of hash tracing files is only enabled if the keyword is used. How these messages are mapped to the actual debugging flags is not specified and may change with newer releases of this program. They are however carefully selected to best aid in debugging. `--debug FLAGS' This option is only useful for debugging and the behaviour may change at any time without notice; using `--debug-levels' is the preferred method to select the debug verbosity. FLAGS are bit encoded and may be given in usual C-Syntax. The currently defined bits are: `0 (1)' X.509 or OpenPGP protocol related data `1 (2)' values of big number integers `2 (4)' low level crypto operations `5 (32)' memory allocation `6 (64)' caching `7 (128)' show memory statistics. `9 (512)' write hashed data to files named `dbgmd-000*' `10 (1024)' trace Assuan protocol Note, that all flags set using this option may get overridden by `--debug-level'. `--debug-all' Same as `--debug=0xffffffff' `--debug-allow-core-dump' Usually `gpgsm' tries to avoid dumping core by well written code and by disabling core dumps for security reasons. However, bugs are pretty durable beasts and to squash them it is sometimes useful to have a core dump. This option enables core dumps unless the Bad Thing happened before the option parsing. `--debug-no-chain-validation' This is actually not a debugging option but only useful as such. It lets `gpgsm' bypass all certificate chain validation checks. `--debug-ignore-expiration' This is actually not a debugging option but only useful as such. It lets `gpgsm' ignore all notAfter dates, this is used by the regression tests. `--fixed-passphrase STRING' Supply the passphrase STRING to the gpg-protect-tool. This option is only useful for the regression tests included with this package and may be revised or removed at any time without notice. `--no-common-certs-import' Suppress the import of common certificates on keybox creation. All the long options may also be given in the configuration file after stripping off the two leading dashes.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM Configuration, Next: GPGSM Examples, Prev: GPGSM Options, Up: Invoking GPGSM 4.3 Configuration files ======================= There are a few configuration files to control certain aspects of `gpgsm''s operation. Unless noted, they are expected in the current home directory (*note option --homedir::). `gpgsm.conf' This is the standard configuration file read by `gpgsm' on startup. It may contain any valid long option; the leading two dashes may not be entered and the option may not be abbreviated. This default name may be changed on the command line (*note gpgsm-option --options::). You should backup this file. `policies.txt' This is a list of allowed CA policies. This file should list the object identifiers of the policies line by line. Empty lines and lines starting with a hash mark are ignored. Policies missing in this file and not marked as critical in the certificate will print only a warning; certificates with policies marked as critical and not listed in this file will fail the signature verification. You should backup this file. For example, to allow only the policy 2.289.9.9, the file should look like this: # Allowed policies 2.289.9.9 `qualified.txt' This is the list of root certificates used for qualified certificates. They are defined as certificates capable of creating legally binding signatures in the same way as handwritten signatures are. Comments start with a hash mark and empty lines are ignored. Lines do have a length limit but this is not a serious limitation as the format of the entries is fixed and checked by gpgsm: A non-comment line starts with optional whitespace, followed by exactly 40 hex character, white space and a lowercased 2 letter country code. Additional data delimited with by a white space is current ignored but might late be used for other purposes. Note that even if a certificate is listed in this file, this does not mean that the certificate is trusted; in general the certificates listed in this file need to be listed also in `trustlist.txt'. This is a global file an installed in the data directory (e.g. `/usr/share/gnupg/qualified.txt'). GnuPG installs a suitable file with root certificates as used in Germany. As new Root-CA certificates may be issued over time, these entries may need to be updated; new distributions of this software should come with an updated list but it is still the responsibility of the Administrator to check that this list is correct. Everytime `gpgsm' uses a certificate for signing or verification this file will be consulted to check whether the certificate under question has ultimately been issued by one of these CAs. If this is the case the user will be informed that the verified signature represents a legally binding ("qualified") signature. When creating a signature using such a certificate an extra prompt will be issued to let the user confirm that such a legally binding signature shall really be created. Because this software has not yet been approved for use with such certificates, appropriate notices will be shown to indicate this fact. `help.txt' This is plain text file with a few help entries used with `pinentry' as well as a large list of help items for `gpg' and `gpgsm'. The standard file has English help texts; to install localized versions use filenames like `help.LL.txt' with LL denoting the locale. GnuPG comes with a set of predefined help files in the data directory (e.g. `/usr/share/gnupg/help.de.txt') and allows overriding of any help item by help files stored in the system configuration directory (e.g. `/etc/gnupg/help.de.txt'). For a reference of the help file's syntax, please see the installed `help.txt' file. `com-certs.pem' This file is a collection of common certificates used to populated a newly created `pubring.kbx'. An administrator may replace this file with a custom one. The format is a concatenation of PEM encoded X.509 certificates. This global file is installed in the data directory (e.g. `/usr/share/gnupg/com-certs.pem'). Note that on larger installations, it is useful to put predefined files into the directory `/etc/skel/.gnupg/' so that newly created users start up with a working configuration. For existing users a small helper script is provided to create these files (*note addgnupghome::). For internal purposes gpgsm creates and maintains a few other files; they all live in in the current home directory (*note option --homedir::). Only `gpgsm' may modify these files. `pubring.kbx' This a database file storing the certificates as well as meta information. For debugging purposes the tool `kbxutil' may be used to show the internal structure of this file. You should backup this file. `random_seed' This content of this file is used to maintain the internal state of the random number generator across invocations. The same file is used by other programs of this software too. `S.gpg-agent' If this file exists and the environment variable `GPG_AGENT_INFO' is not set, `gpgsm' will first try to connect to this socket for accessing `gpg-agent' before starting a new `gpg-agent' instance. Under Windows this socket (which in reality be a plain file describing a regular TCP listening port) is the standard way of connecting the `gpg-agent'.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM Examples, Next: Unattended Usage, Prev: GPGSM Configuration, Up: Invoking GPGSM 4.4 Examples ============ $ gpgsm -er goo@bar.net ciphertext  File: gnupg.info, Node: Unattended Usage, Next: GPGSM Protocol, Prev: GPGSM Examples, Up: Invoking GPGSM 4.5 Unattended Usage ==================== `gpgsm' is often used as a backend engine by other software. To help with this a machine interface has been defined to have an unambiguous way to do this. This is most likely used with the `--server' command but may also be used in the standard operation mode by using the `--status-fd' option. * Menu: * Automated signature checking:: Automated signature checking. * CSR and certificate creation:: CSR and certificate creation.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Automated signature checking, Next: CSR and certificate creation, Up: Unattended Usage 4.5.1 Automated signature checking ---------------------------------- It is very important to understand the semantics used with signature verification. Checking a signature is not as simple as it may sound and so the operation is a bit complicated. In most cases it is required to look at several status lines. Here is a table of all cases a signed message may have: The signature is valid This does mean that the signature has been successfully verified, the certificates are all sane. However there are two subcases with important information: One of the certificates may have expired or a signature of a message itself as expired. It is a sound practise to consider such a signature still as valid but additional information should be displayed. Depending on the subcase `gpgsm' will issue these status codes: signature valid and nothing did expire `GOODSIG', `VALIDSIG', `TRUST_FULLY' signature valid but at least one certificate has expired `EXPKEYSIG', `VALIDSIG', `TRUST_FULLY' signature valid but expired `EXPSIG', `VALIDSIG', `TRUST_FULLY' Note, that this case is currently not implemented. The signature is invalid This means that the signature verification failed (this is an indication of af a transfer error, a program error or tampering with the message). `gpgsm' issues one of these status codes sequences: ``BADSIG'' ``GOODSIG', `VALIDSIG' `TRUST_NEVER'' Error verifying a signature For some reason the signature could not be verified, i.e. it cannot be decided whether the signature is valid or invalid. A common reason for this is a missing certificate.  File: gnupg.info, Node: CSR and certificate creation, Prev: Automated signature checking, Up: Unattended Usage 4.5.2 CSR and certificate creation ---------------------------------- *Please notice*: The immediate creation of certificates is only supported by GnuPG version 2.1 or later. With a 2.0 version you may only create a CSR. The command `--gen-key' may be used along with the option `--batch' to either create a certificate signing request (CSR) or an X.509 certificate. The is controlled by a parameter file; the format of this file is as follows: * Text only, line length is limited to about 1000 characters. * UTF-8 encoding must be used to specify non-ASCII characters. * Empty lines are ignored. * Leading and trailing while space is ignored. * A hash sign as the first non white space character indicates a comment line. * Control statements are indicated by a leading percent sign, the arguments are separated by white space from the keyword. * Parameters are specified by a keyword, followed by a colon. Arguments are separated by white space. * The first parameter must be `Key-Type', control statements may be placed anywhere. * The order of the parameters does not matter except for `Key-Type' which must be the first parameter. The parameters are only used for the generated CSR/certificate; parameters from previous sets are not used. Some syntactically checks may be performed. * Key generation takes place when either the end of the parameter file is reached, the next `Key-Type' parameter is encountered or at the control statement `%commit' is encountered. Control statements: %echo TEXT Print TEXT as diagnostic. %dry-run Suppress actual key generation (useful for syntax checking). %commit Perform the key generation. Note that an implicit commit is done at the next Key-Type parameter. General Parameters: Key-Type: ALGO Starts a new parameter block by giving the type of the primary key. The algorithm must be capable of signing. This is a required parameter. The only supported value for ALGO is `rsa'. Key-Length: NBITS The requested length of a generated key in bits. Defaults to 2048. Key-Grip: HEXSTRING This is optional and used to generate a CSR or certificatet for an already existing key. Key-Length will be ignored when given. Key-Usage: USAGE-LIST Space or comma delimited list of key usage, allowed values are `encrypt', `sign' and `cert'. This is used to generate the keyUsage extension. Please make sure that the algorithm is capable of this usage. Default is to allow encrypt and sign. Name-DN: SUBJECT-NAME This is the Distinguished Name (DN) of the subject in RFC-2253 format. Name-Email: STRING This is an email address for the altSubjectName. This parameter is optional but may occur several times to add several email addresses to a certificate. Name-DNS: STRING The is an DNS name for the altSubjectName. This parameter is optional but may occur several times to add several DNS names to a certificate. Name-URI: STRING This is an URI for the altSubjectName. This parameter is optional but may occur several times to add several URIs to a certificate. Additional parameters used to create a certificate (in contrast to a certificate signing request): Serial: SN If this parameter is given an X.509 certificate will be generated. SN is expected to be a hex string representing an unsigned integer of arbitary length. The special value `random' can be used to create a 64 bit random serial number. Issuer-DN: ISSUER-NAME This is the DN name of the issuer in rfc2253 format. If it is not set it will default to the subject DN and a special GnuPG extension will be included in the certificate to mark it as a standalone certificate. Creation-Date: ISO-DATE Not-Before: ISO-DATE Set the notBefore date of the certificate. Either a date like `1986-04-26' or `1986-04-26 12:00' or a standard ISO timestamp like `19860426T042640' may be used. The time is considered to be UTC. If it is not given the current date is used. Expire-Date: ISO-DATE Not-After: ISO-DATE Set the notAfter date of the certificate. Either a date like `2063-04-05' or `2063-04-05 17:00' or a standard ISO timestamp like `20630405T170000' may be used. The time is considered to be UTC. If it is not given a default value in the not too far future is used. Signing-Key: KEYGRIP This gives the keygrip of the key used to sign the certificate. If it is not given a self-signed certificate will be created. For compatibility with future versions, it is suggested to prefix the keygrip with a `&'. Hash-Algo: HASH-ALGO Use HASH-ALGO for this CSR or certificate. The supported hash algorithms are: `sha1', `sha256', `sha384' and `sha512'; they may also be specified with uppercase letters. The default is `sha1'.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM Protocol, Prev: Unattended Usage, Up: Invoking GPGSM 4.6 The Protocol the Server Mode Uses. ====================================== Description of the protocol used to access `GPGSM'. `GPGSM' does implement the Assuan protocol and in addition provides a regular command line interface which exhibits a full client to this protocol (but uses internal linking). To start `gpgsm' as a server the command line the option `--server' must be used. Additional options are provided to select the communication method (i.e. the name of the socket). We assume that the connection has already been established; see the Assuan manual for details. * Menu: * GPGSM ENCRYPT:: Encrypting a message. * GPGSM DECRYPT:: Decrypting a message. * GPGSM SIGN:: Signing a message. * GPGSM VERIFY:: Verifying a message. * GPGSM GENKEY:: Generating a key. * GPGSM LISTKEYS:: List available keys. * GPGSM EXPORT:: Export certificates. * GPGSM IMPORT:: Import certificates. * GPGSM DELETE:: Delete certificates. * GPGSM GETINFO:: Information about the process  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM ENCRYPT, Next: GPGSM DECRYPT, Up: GPGSM Protocol 4.6.1 Encrypting a Message -------------------------- Before encryption can be done the recipient must be set using the command: RECIPIENT USERID Set the recipient for the encryption. USERID should be the internal representation of the key; the server may accept any other way of specification. If this is a valid and trusted recipient the server does respond with OK, otherwise the return is an ERR with the reason why the recipient cannot be used, the encryption will then not be done for this recipient. If the policy is not to encrypt at all if not all recipients are valid, the client has to take care of this. All `RECIPIENT' commands are cumulative until a `RESET' or an successful `ENCRYPT' command. INPUT FD[=N] [--armor|--base64|--binary] Set the file descriptor for the message to be encrypted to N. Obviously the pipe must be open at that point, the server establishes its own end. If the server returns an error the client should consider this session failed. If N is not given, this commands uses the last file descriptor passed to the application. *Note the assuan_sendfd function: (assuan)fun-assuan_sendfd, on how to do descriptor passing. The `--armor' option may be used to advice the server that the input data is in PEM format, `--base64' advices that a raw base-64 encoding is used, `--binary' advices of raw binary input (BER). If none of these options is used, the server tries to figure out the used encoding, but this may not always be correct. OUTPUT FD[=N] [--armor|--base64] Set the file descriptor to be used for the output (i.e. the encrypted message). Obviously the pipe must be open at that point, the server establishes its own end. If the server returns an error he client should consider this session failed. The option armor encodes the output in PEM format, the `--base64' option applies just a base 64 encoding. No option creates binary output (BER). The actual encryption is done using the command ENCRYPT It takes the plaintext from the `INPUT' command, writes to the ciphertext to the file descriptor set with the `OUTPUT' command, take the recipients from all the recipients set so far. If this command fails the clients should try to delete all output currently done or otherwise mark it as invalid. `GPGSM' does ensure that there will not be any security problem with leftover data on the output in this case. This command should in general not fail, as all necessary checks have been done while setting the recipients. The input and output pipes are closed.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM DECRYPT, Next: GPGSM SIGN, Prev: GPGSM ENCRYPT, Up: GPGSM Protocol 4.6.2 Decrypting a message -------------------------- Input and output FDs are set the same way as in encryption, but `INPUT' refers to the ciphertext and output to the plaintext. There is no need to set recipients. `GPGSM' automatically strips any S/MIME headers from the input, so it is valid to pass an entire MIME part to the INPUT pipe. The encryption is done by using the command DECRYPT It performs the decrypt operation after doing some check on the internal state. (e.g. that all needed data has been set). Because it utilizes the GPG-Agent for the session key decryption, there is no need to ask the client for a protecting passphrase - GpgAgent takes care of this by requesting this from the user.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM SIGN, Next: GPGSM VERIFY, Prev: GPGSM DECRYPT, Up: GPGSM Protocol 4.6.3 Signing a Message ----------------------- Signing is usually done with these commands: INPUT FD[=N] [--armor|--base64|--binary] This tells `GPGSM' to read the data to sign from file descriptor N. OUTPUT FD[=M] [--armor|--base64] Write the output to file descriptor M. If a detached signature is requested, only the signature is written. SIGN [--detached] Sign the data set with the INPUT command and write it to the sink set by OUTPUT. With `--detached', a detached signature is created (surprise). The key used for signing is the default one or the one specified in the configuration file. To get finer control over the keys, it is possible to use the command SIGNER USERID to the signer's key. USERID should be the internal representation of the key; the server may accept any other way of specification. If this is a valid and trusted recipient the server does respond with OK, otherwise the return is an ERR with the reason why the key cannot be used, the signature will then not be created using this key. If the policy is not to sign at all if not all keys are valid, the client has to take care of this. All `SIGNER' commands are cumulative until a `RESET' is done. Note that a `SIGN' does not reset this list of signers which is in contrats to the `RECIPIENT' command.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM VERIFY, Next: GPGSM GENKEY, Prev: GPGSM SIGN, Up: GPGSM Protocol 4.6.4 Verifying a Message ------------------------- To verify a mesage the command: VERIFY is used. It does a verify operation on the message send to the input FD. The result is written out using status lines. If an output FD was given, the signed text will be written to that. If the signature is a detached one, the server will inquire about the signed material and the client must provide it.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM GENKEY, Next: GPGSM LISTKEYS, Prev: GPGSM VERIFY, Up: GPGSM Protocol 4.6.5 Generating a Key ---------------------- This is used to generate a new keypair, store the secret part in the PSE and the public key in the key database. We will probably add optional commands to allow the client to select whether a hardware token is used to store the key. Configuration options to `GPGSM' can be used to restrict the use of this command. GENKEY `GPGSM' checks whether this command is allowed and then does an INQUIRY to get the key parameters, the client should then send the key parameters in the native format: S: INQUIRE KEY_PARAM native C: D foo:fgfgfg C: D bar C: END Please note that the server may send Status info lines while reading the data lines from the client. After this the key generation takes place and the server eventually does send an ERR or OK response. Status lines may be issued as a progress indicator.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM LISTKEYS, Next: GPGSM EXPORT, Prev: GPGSM GENKEY, Up: GPGSM Protocol 4.6.6 List available keys ------------------------- To list the keys in the internal database or using an external key provider, the command: LISTKEYS PATTERN is used. To allow multiple patterns (which are ORed during the search) quoting is required: Spaces are to be translated into "+" or into "%20"; in turn this requires that the usual escape quoting rules are done. LISTSECRETKEYS PATTERN Lists only the keys where a secret key is available. The list commands commands are affected by the option OPTION list-mode=MODE where mode may be: `0' Use default (which is usually the same as 1). `1' List only the internal keys. `2' List only the external keys. `3' List internal and external keys. Note that options are valid for the entire session.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM EXPORT, Next: GPGSM IMPORT, Prev: GPGSM LISTKEYS, Up: GPGSM Protocol 4.6.7 Export certificates ------------------------- To export certificate from the internal key database the command: EXPORT [--data [--armor] [--base64]] [--] PATTERN is used. To allow multiple patterns (which are ORed) quoting is required: Spaces are to be translated into "+" or into "%20"; in turn this requires that the usual escape quoting rules are done. If the `--data' option has not been given, the format of the output depends on what was set with the OUTPUT command. When using PEM encoding a few informational lines are prepended. If the `--data' has been given, a target set via OUTPUT is ignored and the data is returned inline using standard `D'-lines. This avoids the need for an extra file descriptor. In this case the options `--armor' and `--base64' may be used in the same way as with the OUTPUT command.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM IMPORT, Next: GPGSM DELETE, Prev: GPGSM EXPORT, Up: GPGSM Protocol 4.6.8 Import certificates ------------------------- To import certificates into the internal key database, the command IMPORT [--re-import] is used. The data is expected on the file descriptor set with the `INPUT' command. Certain checks are performed on the certificate. Note that the code will also handle PKCS#12 files and import private keys; a helper program is used for that. With the option `--re-import' the input data is expected to a be a linefeed separated list of fingerprints. The command will re-import the corresponding certificates; that is they are made permanent by removing their ephemeral flag.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM DELETE, Next: GPGSM GETINFO, Prev: GPGSM IMPORT, Up: GPGSM Protocol 4.6.9 Delete certificates ------------------------- To delete a certificate the command DELKEYS PATTERN is used. To allow multiple patterns (which are ORed) quoting is required: Spaces are to be translated into "+" or into "%20"; in turn this requires that the usual escape quoting rules are done. The certificates must be specified unambiguously otherwise an error is returned.  File: gnupg.info, Node: GPGSM GETINFO, Prev: GPGSM DELETE, Up: GPGSM Protocol 4.6.10 Return information about the process ------------------------------------------- This is a multipurpose function to return a variety of information. GETINFO WHAT The value of WHAT specifies the kind of information returned: `version' Return the version of the program. `pid' Return the process id of the process. `agent-check' Return success if the agent is running. `cmd_has_option CMD OPT' Return success if the command CMD implements the option OPT. The leading two dashes usually used with OPT shall not be given.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Invoking SCDAEMON, Next: Specify a User ID, Prev: Invoking GPGSM, Up: Top 5 Invoking the SCDAEMON *********************** The `scdaemon' is a daemon to manage smartcards. It is usually invoked by `gpg-agent' and in general not used directly. *Note Option Index::, for an index to `scdaemon''s commands and options. * Menu: * Scdaemon Commands:: List of all commands. * Scdaemon Options:: List of all options. * Card applications:: Description of card applications. * Scdaemon Configuration:: Configuration files. * Scdaemon Examples:: Some usage examples. * Scdaemon Protocol:: The protocol the daemon uses.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon Commands, Next: Scdaemon Options, Up: Invoking SCDAEMON 5.1 Commands ============ Commands are not distinguished from options except for the fact that only one command is allowed. `--version' Print the program version and licensing information. Not that you can abbreviate this command. `--help, -h' Print a usage message summarizing the most useful command-line options. Not that you can abbreviate this command. `--dump-options' Print a list of all available options and commands. Not that you can abbreviate this command. `--server' Run in server mode and wait for commands on the `stdin'. This is default mode is to create a socket and listen for commands there. `--multi-server' Run in server mode and wait for commands on the `stdin' as well as on an additional Unix Domain socket. The server command `GETINFO' may be used to get the name of that extra socket. `--daemon' Run the program in the background. This option is required to prevent it from being accidentally running in the background.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon Options, Next: Card applications, Prev: Scdaemon Commands, Up: Invoking SCDAEMON 5.2 Option Summary ================== `--options FILE' Reads configuration from FILE instead of from the default per-user configuration file. The default configuration file is named `scdaemon.conf' and expected in the `.gnupg' directory directly below the home directory of the user. `--homedir DIR' Set the name of the home directory to DIR. If this option is not used, the home directory defaults to `~/.gnupg'. It is only recognized when given on the command line. It also overrides any home directory stated through the environment variable `GNUPGHOME' or (on W32 systems) by means of the Registry entry HKCU\SOFTWARE\GNU\GNUPG:HOMEDIR. `-v' `--verbose' Outputs additional information while running. You can increase the verbosity by giving several verbose commands to `gpgsm', such as `-vv'. `--debug-level LEVEL' Select the debug level for investigating problems. LEVEL may be a numeric value or a keyword: `none' No debugging at all. A value of less than 1 may be used instead of the keyword. `basic' Some basic debug messages. A value between 1 and 2 may be used instead of the keyword. `advanced' More verbose debug messages. A value between 3 and 5 may be used instead of the keyword. `expert' Even more detailed messages. A value between 6 and 8 may be used instead of the keyword. `guru' All of the debug messages you can get. A value greater than 8 may be used instead of the keyword. The creation of hash tracing files is only enabled if the keyword is used. How these messages are mapped to the actual debugging flags is not specified and may change with newer releases of this program. They are however carefully selected to best aid in debugging. Note: All debugging options are subject to change and thus should not be used by any application program. As the name says, they are only used as helpers to debug problems. `--debug FLAGS' This option is only useful for debugging and the behaviour may change at any time without notice. FLAGS are bit encoded and may be given in usual C-Syntax. The currently defined bits are: `0 (1)' command I/O `1 (2)' values of big number integers `2 (4)' low level crypto operations `5 (32)' memory allocation `6 (64)' caching `7 (128)' show memory statistics. `9 (512)' write hashed data to files named `dbgmd-000*' `10 (1024)' trace Assuan protocol. See also option `--debug-assuan-log-cats'. `11 (2048)' trace APDU I/O to the card. This may reveal sensitive data. `12 (4096)' trace some card reader related function calls. `--debug-all' Same as `--debug=0xffffffff' `--debug-wait N' When running in server mode, wait N seconds before entering the actual processing loop and print the pid. This gives time to attach a debugger. `--debug-ccid-driver' Enable debug output from the included CCID driver for smartcards. Using this option twice will also enable some tracing of the T=1 protocol. Note that this option may reveal sensitive data. `--debug-disable-ticker' This option disables all ticker functions like checking for card insertions. `--debug-allow-core-dump' For security reasons we won't create a core dump when the process aborts. For debugging purposes it is sometimes better to allow core dump. This options enables it and also changes the working directory to `/tmp' when running in `--server' mode. `--debug-log-tid' This option appends a thread ID to the PID in the log output. `--debug-assuan-log-cats CATS' Changes the active Libassuan logging categories to CATS. The value for CATS is an unsigned integer given in usual C-Syntax. A value of of 0 switches to a default category. If this option is not used the categories are taken from the environment variable `ASSUAN_DEBUG'. Note that this option has only an effect if the Assuan debug flag has also been with the option `--debug'. For a list of categories see the Libassuan manual. `--no-detach' Don't detach the process from the console. This is mainly useful for debugging. `--log-file FILE' Append all logging output to FILE. This is very helpful in seeing what the agent actually does. `--pcsc-driver LIBRARY' Use LIBRARY to access the smartcard reader. The current default is `libpcsclite.so'. Instead of using this option you might also want to install a symbolic link to the default file name (e.g. from `libpcsclite.so.1'). `--ctapi-driver LIBRARY' Use LIBRARY to access the smartcard reader. The current default is `libtowitoko.so'. Note that the use of this interface is deprecated; it may be removed in future releases. `--disable-ccid' Disable the integrated support for CCID compliant readers. This allows to fall back to one of the other drivers even if the internal CCID driver can handle the reader. Note, that CCID support is only available if libusb was available at build time. `--reader-port NUMBER_OR_STRING' This option may be used to specify the port of the card terminal. A value of 0 refers to the first serial device; add 32768 to access USB devices. The default is 32768 (first USB device). PC/SC or CCID readers might need a string here; run the program in verbose mode to get a list of available readers. The default is then the first reader found. To get a list of available CCID readers you may use this command: echo scd getinfo reader_list | gpg-connect-agent --decode | awk '/^D/ {print $2}' `--card-timeout N' If N is not 0 and no client is actively using the card, the card will be powered down after N seconds. Powering down the card avoids a potential risk of damaging a card when used with certain cheap readers. This also allows non Scdaemon aware applications to access the card. The disadvantage of using a card timeout is that accessing the card takes longer and that the user needs to enter the PIN again after the next power up. Note that with the current version of Scdaemon the card is powered down immediately at the next timer tick for any value of N other than 0. `--enable-pinpad-varlen' Please specify this option when the card reader supports variable length input for pinpad (default is no). For known readers (listed in ccid-driver.c and apdu.c), this option is not needed. Note that if your card reader doesn't supports variable length input but you want to use it, you need to specify your pinpad request on your card. `--disable-pinpad' Even if a card reader features a pinpad, do not try to use it. `--deny-admin' This option disables the use of admin class commands for card applications where this is supported. Currently we support it for the OpenPGP card. This commands is useful to inhibit accidental access to admin class command which could ultimately lock the card through wrong PIN numbers. Note that GnuPG versions older than 2.0.11 featured an `--allow-admin' command which was required to use such admin commands. This option has no more effect today because the default is now to allow admin commands. `--disable-application NAME' This option disables the use of the card application named NAME. This is mainly useful for debugging or if a application with lower priority should be used by default. All the long options may also be given in the configuration file after stripping off the two leading dashes.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Card applications, Next: Scdaemon Configuration, Prev: Scdaemon Options, Up: Invoking SCDAEMON 5.3 Description of card applications ==================================== `scdaemon' supports the card applications as described below. * Menu: * OpenPGP Card:: The OpenPGP card application * NKS Card:: The Telesec NetKey card application * DINSIG Card:: The DINSIG card application * PKCS#15 Card:: The PKCS#15 card application * Geldkarte Card:: The Geldkarte application * Undefined Card:: The Undefined stub application  File: gnupg.info, Node: OpenPGP Card, Next: NKS Card, Up: Card applications 5.3.1 The OpenPGP card application "openpgp" -------------------------------------------- This application is currently only used by `gpg' but may in future also be useful with `gpgsm'. Version 1 and version 2 of the card is supported. The specifications for these cards are available at `http://g10code.com/docs/openpgp-card-1.0.pdf' and `http://g10code.com/docs/openpgp-card-2.0.pdf'.  File: gnupg.info, Node: NKS Card, Next: DINSIG Card, Prev: OpenPGP Card, Up: Card applications 5.3.2 The Telesec NetKey card "nks" ----------------------------------- This is the main application of the Telesec cards as available in Germany. It is a superset of the German DINSIG card. The card is used by `gpgsm'.  File: gnupg.info, Node: DINSIG Card, Next: PKCS#15 Card, Prev: NKS Card, Up: Card applications 5.3.3 The DINSIG card application "dinsig" ------------------------------------------ This is an application as described in the German draft standard _DIN V 66291-1_. It is intended to be used by cards supporting the German signature law and its bylaws (SigG and SigV).  File: gnupg.info, Node: PKCS#15 Card, Next: Geldkarte Card, Prev: DINSIG Card, Up: Card applications 5.3.4 The PKCS#15 card application "p15" ---------------------------------------- This is common framework for smart card applications. It is used by `gpgsm'.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Geldkarte Card, Next: Undefined Card, Prev: PKCS#15 Card, Up: Card applications 5.3.5 The Geldkarte card application "geldkarte" ------------------------------------------------ This is a simple application to display information of a German Geldkarte. The Geldkarte is a small amount debit card application which comes with almost all German banking cards.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Undefined Card, Prev: Geldkarte Card, Up: Card applications 5.3.6 The Undefined card application "undefined" ------------------------------------------------ This is a stub application to allow the use of the APDU command even if no supported application is found on the card. This application is not used automatically but must be explicitly requested using the SERIALNO command.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon Configuration, Next: Scdaemon Examples, Prev: Card applications, Up: Invoking SCDAEMON 5.4 Configuration files ======================= There are a few configuration files to control certain aspects of `scdaemons''s operation. Unless noted, they are expected in the current home directory (*note option --homedir::). `scdaemon.conf' This is the standard configuration file read by `scdaemon' on startup. It may contain any valid long option; the leading two dashes may not be entered and the option may not be abbreviated. This default name may be changed on the command line (*note option --options::). `scd-event' If this file is present and executable, it will be called on veyer card reader's status changed. An example of this script is provided with the distribution `reader_N.status' This file is created by `sdaemon' to let other applications now about reader status changes. Its use is now deprecated in favor of `scd-event'.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon Examples, Next: Scdaemon Protocol, Prev: Scdaemon Configuration, Up: Invoking SCDAEMON 5.5 Examples ============ $ scdaemon --server -v  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon Protocol, Prev: Scdaemon Examples, Up: Invoking SCDAEMON 5.6 Scdaemon's Assuan Protocol ============================== The SC-Daemon should be started by the system to provide access to external tokens. Using Smartcards on a multi-user system does not make much sense expect for system services, but in this case no regular user accounts are hosted on the machine. A client connects to the SC-Daemon by connecting to the socket named `/var/run/scdaemon/socket', configuration information is read from /ETC/SCDAEMON.CONF Each connection acts as one session, SC-Daemon takes care of synchronizing access to a token between sessions. * Menu: * Scdaemon SERIALNO:: Return the serial number. * Scdaemon LEARN:: Read all useful information from the card. * Scdaemon READCERT:: Return a certificate. * Scdaemon READKEY:: Return a public key. * Scdaemon PKSIGN:: Signing data with a Smartcard. * Scdaemon PKDECRYPT:: Decrypting data with a Smartcard. * Scdaemon GETATTR:: Read an attribute's value. * Scdaemon SETATTR:: Update an attribute's value. * Scdaemon WRITEKEY:: Write a key to a card. * Scdaemon GENKEY:: Generate a new key on-card. * Scdaemon RANDOM:: Return random bytes generate on-card. * Scdaemon PASSWD:: Change PINs. * Scdaemon CHECKPIN:: Perform a VERIFY operation. * Scdaemon RESTART:: Restart connection * Scdaemon APDU:: Send a verbatim APDU to the card  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon SERIALNO, Next: Scdaemon LEARN, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.1 Return the serial number ------------------------------ This command should be used to check for the presence of a card. It is special in that it can be used to reset the card. Most other commands will return an error when a card change has been detected and the use of this function is therefore required. Background: We want to keep the client clear of handling card changes between operations; i.e. the client can assume that all operations are done on the same card unless he call this function. SERIALNO Return the serial number of the card using a status response like: S SERIALNO D27600000000000000000000 0 The trailing 0 should be ignored for now, it is reserved for a future extension. The serial number is the hex encoded value identified by the `0x5A' tag in the GDO file (FIX=0x2F02).  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon LEARN, Next: Scdaemon READCERT, Prev: Scdaemon SERIALNO, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.2 Read all useful information from the card ----------------------------------------------- LEARN [--force] Learn all useful information of the currently inserted card. When used without the force options, the command might do an INQUIRE like this: INQUIRE KNOWNCARDP <hexstring_with_serialNumber> <timestamp> The client should just send an `END' if the processing should go on or a `CANCEL' to force the function to terminate with a cancel error message. The response of this command is a list of status lines formatted as this: S KEYPAIRINFO HEXSTRING_WITH_KEYGRIP HEXSTRING_WITH_ID If there is no certificate yet stored on the card a single "X" is returned in HEXSTRING_WITH_KEYGRIP.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon READCERT, Next: Scdaemon READKEY, Prev: Scdaemon LEARN, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.3 Return a certificate -------------------------- READCERT HEXIFIED_CERTID|KEYID This function is used to read a certificate identified by HEXIFIED_CERTID from the card. With OpenPGP cards the keyid `OpenPGP.3' may be used to rad the certificate of version 2 cards.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon READKEY, Next: Scdaemon PKSIGN, Prev: Scdaemon READCERT, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.4 Return a public key ------------------------- READKEY HEXIFIED_CERTID Return the public key for the given cert or key ID as an standard S-Expression.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon PKSIGN, Next: Scdaemon PKDECRYPT, Prev: Scdaemon READKEY, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.5 Signing data with a Smartcard ----------------------------------- To sign some data the caller should use the command SETDATA HEXSTRING to tell `scdaemon' about the data to be signed. The data must be given in hex notation. The actual signing is done using the command PKSIGN KEYID where KEYID is the hexified ID of the key to be used. The key id may have been retrieved using the command `LEARN'. If another hash algorithm than SHA-1 is used, that algorithm may be given like: PKSIGN --hash=ALGONAME KEYID With ALGONAME are one of `sha1', `rmd160' or `md5'.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon PKDECRYPT, Next: Scdaemon GETATTR, Prev: Scdaemon PKSIGN, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.6 Decrypting data with a Smartcard -------------------------------------- To decrypt some data the caller should use the command SETDATA HEXSTRING to tell `scdaemon' about the data to be decrypted. The data must be given in hex notation. The actual decryption is then done using the command PKDECRYPT KEYID where KEYID is the hexified ID of the key to be used. If the card is ware of the apdding format a status line with padding information is send before the plaintext data. The key for this status line is `PADDING' with the only defined value being 0 and meaning padding has been removed.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon GETATTR, Next: Scdaemon SETATTR, Prev: Scdaemon PKDECRYPT, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.7 Read an attribute's value. -------------------------------- TO BE WRITTEN.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon SETATTR, Next: Scdaemon WRITEKEY, Prev: Scdaemon GETATTR, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.8 Update an attribute's value. ---------------------------------- TO BE WRITTEN.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon WRITEKEY, Next: Scdaemon GENKEY, Prev: Scdaemon SETATTR, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.9 Write a key to a card. ---------------------------- WRITEKEY [--force] KEYID This command is used to store a secret key on a smartcard. The allowed keyids depend on the currently selected smartcard application. The actual keydata is requested using the inquiry `KEYDATA' and need to be provided without any protection. With `--force' set an existing key under this KEYID will get overwritten. The key data is expected to be the usual canonical encoded S-expression. A PIN will be requested in most cases. This however depends on the actual card application.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon GENKEY, Next: Scdaemon RANDOM, Prev: Scdaemon WRITEKEY, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.10 Generate a new key on-card. ---------------------------------- TO BE WRITTEN.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon RANDOM, Next: Scdaemon PASSWD, Prev: Scdaemon GENKEY, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.11 Return random bytes generate on-card. -------------------------------------------- TO BE WRITTEN.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon PASSWD, Next: Scdaemon CHECKPIN, Prev: Scdaemon RANDOM, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.12 Change PINs. ------------------- PASSWD [--reset] [--nullpin] CHVNO Change the PIN or reset the retry counter of the card holder verification vector number CHVNO. The option `--nullpin' is used to initialize the PIN of TCOS cards (6 byte NullPIN only).  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon CHECKPIN, Next: Scdaemon RESTART, Prev: Scdaemon PASSWD, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.13 Perform a VERIFY operation. ---------------------------------- CHECKPIN IDSTR Perform a VERIFY operation without doing anything else. This may be used to initialize a the PIN cache earlier to long lasting operations. Its use is highly application dependent: *OpenPGP* Perform a simple verify operation for CHV1 and CHV2, so that further operations won't ask for CHV2 and it is possible to do a cheap check on the PIN: If there is something wrong with the PIN entry system, only the regular CHV will get blocked and not the dangerous CHV3. IDSTR is the usual card's serial number in hex notation; an optional fingerprint part will get ignored. There is however a special mode if IDSTR is suffixed with the literal string `[CHV3]': In this case the Admin PIN is checked if and only if the retry counter is still at 3.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon RESTART, Next: Scdaemon APDU, Prev: Scdaemon CHECKPIN, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.14 Perform a RESTART operation. ----------------------------------- RESTART Restart the current connection; this is a kind of warm reset. It deletes the context used by this connection but does not actually reset the card. This is used by gpg-agent to reuse a primary pipe connection and may be used by clients to backup from a conflict in the serial command; i.e. to select another application.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Scdaemon APDU, Prev: Scdaemon RESTART, Up: Scdaemon Protocol 5.6.15 Send a verbatim APDU to the card. ---------------------------------------- APDU [--atr] [--more] [--exlen[=N]] [HEXSTRING] Send an APDU to the current reader. This command bypasses the high level functions and sends the data directly to the card. HEXSTRING is expected to be a proper APDU. If HEXSTRING is not given no commands are send to the card; However the command will implicitly check whether the card is ready for use. Using the option `--atr' returns the ATR of the card as a status message before any data like this: S CARD-ATR 3BFA1300FF813180450031C173C00100009000B1 Using the option `--more' handles the card status word MORE_DATA (61xx) and concatenate all responses to one block. Using the option `--exlen' the returned APDU may use extended length up to N bytes. If N is not given a default value is used (currently 4096).  File: gnupg.info, Node: Specify a User ID, Next: Helper Tools, Prev: Invoking SCDAEMON, Up: Top 6 How to Specify a User Id ************************** There are different ways to specify a user ID to GnuPG. Some of them are only valid for `gpg' others are only good for `gpgsm'. Here is the entire list of ways to specify a key: * By key Id. This format is deduced from the length of the string and its content or `0x' prefix. The key Id of an X.509 certificate are the low 64 bits of its SHA-1 fingerprint. The use of key Ids is just a shortcut, for all automated processing the fingerprint should be used. When using `gpg' an exclamation mark (!) may be appended to force using the specified primary or secondary key and not to try and calculate which primary or secondary key to use. The last four lines of the example give the key ID in their long form as internally used by the OpenPGP protocol. You can see the long key ID using the option `--with-colons'. 234567C4 0F34E556E 01347A56A 0xAB123456 234AABBCC34567C4 0F323456784E56EAB 01AB3FED1347A5612 0x234AABBCC34567C4 * By fingerprint. This format is deduced from the length of the string and its content or the `0x' prefix. Note, that only the 20 byte version fingerprint is available with `gpgsm' (i.e. the SHA-1 hash of the certificate). When using `gpg' an exclamation mark (!) may be appended to force using the specified primary or secondary key and not to try and calculate which primary or secondary key to use. The best way to specify a key Id is by using the fingerprint. This avoids any ambiguities in case that there are duplicated key IDs. 1234343434343434C434343434343434 123434343434343C3434343434343734349A3434 0E12343434343434343434EAB3484343434343434 0xE12343434343434343434EAB3484343434343434 (`gpgsm' also accepts colons between each pair of hexadecimal digits because this is the de-facto standard on how to present X.509 fingerprints.) * By exact match on OpenPGP user ID. This is denoted by a leading equal sign. It does not make sense for X.509 certificates. =Heinrich Heine <heinrichh@uni-duesseldorf.de> * By exact match on an email address. This is indicated by enclosing the email address in the usual way with left and right angles. <heinrichh@uni-duesseldorf.de> * By word match. All words must match exactly (not case sensitive) but can appear in any order in the user ID or a subjects name. Words are any sequences of letters, digits, the underscore and all characters with bit 7 set. +Heinrich Heine duesseldorf * By exact match on the subject's DN. This is indicated by a leading slash, directly followed by the RFC-2253 encoded DN of the subject. Note that you can't use the string printed by "gpgsm -list-keys" because that one as been reordered and modified for better readability; use -with-colons to print the raw (but standard escaped) RFC-2253 string /CN=Heinrich Heine,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR * By exact match on the issuer's DN. This is indicated by a leading hash mark, directly followed by a slash and then directly followed by the rfc2253 encoded DN of the issuer. This should return the Root cert of the issuer. See note above. #/CN=Root Cert,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR * By exact match on serial number and issuer's DN. This is indicated by a hash mark, followed by the hexadecimal representation of the serial number, then followed by a slash and the RFC-2253 encoded DN of the issuer. See note above. #4F03/CN=Root Cert,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR * By keygrip This is indicated by an ampersand followed by the 40 hex digits of a keygrip. `gpgsm' prints the keygrip when using the command `--dump-cert'. It does not yet work for OpenPGP keys. &D75F22C3F86E355877348498CDC92BD21010A480 * By substring match. This is the default mode but applications may want to explicitly indicate this by putting the asterisk in front. Match is not case sensitive. Heine *Heine Please note that we have reused the hash mark identifier which was used in old GnuPG versions to indicate the so called local-id. It is not anymore used and there should be no conflict when used with X.509 stuff. Using the RFC-2253 format of DNs has the drawback that it is not possible to map them back to the original encoding, however we don't have to do this because our key database stores this encoding as meta data.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Helper Tools, Next: Howtos, Prev: Specify a User ID, Up: Top 7 Helper Tools ************** GnuPG comes with a couple of smaller tools: * Menu: * watchgnupg:: Read logs from a socket. * gpgv:: Verify OpenPGP signatures. * addgnupghome:: Create .gnupg home directories. * gpgconf:: Modify .gnupg home directories. * applygnupgdefaults:: Run gpgconf for all users. * gpgsm-gencert.sh:: Generate an X.509 certificate request. * gpg-preset-passphrase:: Put a passphrase into the cache. * gpg-connect-agent:: Communicate with a running agent. * gpgparsemail:: Parse a mail message into an annotated format * symcryptrun:: Call a simple symmetric encryption tool. * gpg-zip:: Encrypt or sign files into an archive.  File: gnupg.info, Node: watchgnupg, Next: gpgv, Up: Helper Tools 7.1 Read logs from a socket =========================== Most of the main utilities are able to write their log files to a Unix Domain socket if configured that way. `watchgnupg' is a simple listener for such a socket. It ameliorates the output with a time stamp and makes sure that long lines are not interspersed with log output from other utilities. This tool is not available for Windows. `watchgnupg' is commonly invoked as watchgnupg --force ~/.gnupg/S.log This starts it on the current terminal for listening on the socket `~/.gnupg/S.log'. `watchgnupg' understands these options: `--force' Delete an already existing socket file. `--tcp N' Instead of reading from a local socket, listen for connects on TCP port N. `--verbose' Enable extra informational output. `--version' Print version of the program and exit. `--help' Display a brief help page and exit. Examples ******** $ watchgnupg --force /home/foo/.gnupg/S.log This waits for connections on the local socket `/home/foo/.gnupg/S.log' and shows all log entries. To make this work the option `log-file' needs to be used with all modules which logs are to be shown. The value for that option must be given with a special prefix (e.g. in the conf file): log-file socket:///home/foo/.gnupg/S.log For debugging purposes it is also possible to do remote logging. Take care if you use this feature because the information is send in the clear over the network. Use this syntax in the conf files: log-file tcp://192.168.1.1:4711 You may use any port and not just 4711 as shown above; only IP addresses are supported (v4 and v6) and no host names. You need to start `watchgnupg' with the `tcp' option. Note that under Windows the registry entry HKCU\SOFTWARE\GNU\GNUPG:DEFAULTLOGFILE can be used to change the default log output from `stderr' to whatever is given by that entry. However the only useful entry is a TCP name for remote debugging.  File: gnupg.info, Node: gpgv, Next: addgnupghome, Prev: watchgnupg, Up: Helper Tools 7.2 Verify OpenPGP signatures ============================= `gpgv2' is an OpenPGP signature verification tool. This program is actually a stripped-down version of `gpg' which is only able to check signatures. It is somewhat smaller than the fully-blown `gpg' and uses a different (and simpler) way to check that the public keys used to make the signature are valid. There are no configuration files and only a few options are implemented. `gpgv2' assumes that all keys in the keyring are trustworthy. By default it uses a keyring named `trustedkeys.gpg' which is assumed to be in the home directory as defined by GnuPG or set by an option or an environment variable. An option may be used to specify another keyring or even multiple keyrings. `gpgv2' recognizes these options: `--verbose' `-v' Gives more information during processing. If used twice, the input data is listed in detail. `--quiet' `-q' Try to be as quiet as possible. `--keyring FILE' Add FILE to the list of keyrings. If FILE begins with a tilde and a slash, these are replaced by the HOME directory. If the filename does not contain a slash, it is assumed to be in the home-directory ("~/.gnupg" if -homedir is not used). `--status-fd N' Write special status strings to the file descriptor N. See the file DETAILS in the documentation for a listing of them. `--logger-fd `n'' Write log output to file descriptor `n' and not to stderr. `--ignore-time-conflict' GnuPG normally checks that the timestamps associated with keys and signatures have plausible values. However, sometimes a signature seems to be older than the key due to clock problems. This option turns these checks into warnings. `--homedir DIR' Set the name of the home directory to DIR. If this option is not used, the home directory defaults to `~/.gnupg'. It is only recognized when given on the command line. It also overrides any home directory stated through the environment variable `GNUPGHOME' or (on W32 systems) by means of the Registry entry HKCU\SOFTWARE\GNU\GNUPG:HOMEDIR. The program returns 0 if everything is fine, 1 if at least one signature was bad, and other error codes for fatal errors. 7.2.1 Examples -------------- gpgv2 `pgpfile' gpgv2 `sigfile' [`datafile'] Verify the signature of the file. The second form is used for detached signatures, where `sigfile' is the detached signature (either ASCII-armored or binary) and `datafile' contains the signed data; if `datafile' is "-" the signed data is expected on `stdin'; if `datafile' is not given the name of the file holding the signed data is constructed by cutting off the extension (".asc", ".sig" or ".sign") from `sigfile'. 7.2.2 Environment ----------------- HOME Used to locate the default home directory. GNUPGHOME If set directory used instead of "~/.gnupg". 7.2.3 FILES ----------- ~/.gnupg/trustedkeys.gpg The default keyring with the allowed keys. `gpg2'(1)  File: gnupg.info, Node: addgnupghome, Next: gpgconf, Prev: gpgv, Up: Helper Tools 7.3 Create .gnupg home directories. =================================== If GnuPG is installed on a system with existing user accounts, it is sometimes required to populate the GnuPG home directory with existing files. Especially a `trustlist.txt' and a keybox with some initial certificates are often desired. This scripts help to do this by copying all files from `/etc/skel/.gnupg' to the home directories of the accounts given on the command line. It takes care not to overwrite existing GnuPG home directories. `addgnupghome' is invoked by root as: addgnupghome account1 account2 ... accountn  File: gnupg.info, Node: gpgconf, Next: applygnupgdefaults, Prev: addgnupghome, Up: Helper Tools 7.4 Modify .gnupg home directories. =================================== The `gpgconf' is a utility to automatically and reasonable safely query and modify configuration files in the `.gnupg' home directory. It is designed not to be invoked manually by the user, but automatically by graphical user interfaces (GUI).(1) `gpgconf' provides access to the configuration of one or more components of the GnuPG system. These components correspond more or less to the programs that exist in the GnuPG framework, like GnuPG, GPGSM, DirMngr, etc. But this is not a strict one-to-one relationship. Not all configuration options are available through `gpgconf'. `gpgconf' provides a generic and abstract method to access the most important configuration options that can feasibly be controlled via such a mechanism. `gpgconf' can be used to gather and change the options available in each component, and can also provide their default values. `gpgconf' will give detailed type information that can be used to restrict the user's input without making an attempt to commit the changes. `gpgconf' provides the backend of a configuration editor. The configuration editor would usually be a graphical user interface program, that allows to display the current options, their default values, and allows the user to make changes to the options. These changes can then be made active with `gpgconf' again. Such a program that uses `gpgconf' in this way will be called GUI throughout this section. * Menu: * Invoking gpgconf:: List of all commands and options. * Format conventions:: Formatting conventions relevant for all commands. * Listing components:: List all gpgconf components. * Checking programs:: Check all programs know to gpgconf. * Listing options:: List all options of a component. * Changing options:: Changing options of a component. * Listing global options:: List all global options. * Files used by gpgconf:: What files are used by gpgconf. ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) Please note that currently no locking is done, so concurrent access should be avoided. There are some precautions to avoid corruption with concurrent usage, but results may be inconsistent and some changes may get lost. The stateless design makes it difficult to provide more guarantees.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Invoking gpgconf, Next: Format conventions, Up: gpgconf 7.4.1 Invoking gpgconf ---------------------- One of the following commands must be given: `--list-components' List all components. This is the default command used if none is specified. `--check-programs' List all available backend programs and test whether they are runnable. `--list-options COMPONENT' List all options of the component COMPONENT. `--change-options COMPONENT' Change the options of the component COMPONENT. `--check-options COMPONENT' Check the options for the component COMPONENT. `--apply-defaults' Update all configuration files with values taken from the global configuration file (usually `/etc/gnupg/gpgconf.conf'). `--list-dirs' Lists the directories used by `gpgconf'. One directory is listed per line, and each line consists of a colon-separated list where the first field names the directory type (for example `sysconfdir') and the second field contains the percent-escaped directory. Although they are not directories, the socket file names used by `gpg-agent' and `dirmngr' are printed as well. Note that the socket file names and the `homedir' lines are the default names and they may be overridden by command line switches. `--list-config [FILENAME]' List the global configuration file in a colon separated format. If FILENAME is given, check that file instead. `--check-config [FILENAME]' Run a syntax check on the global configuration file. If FILENAME is given, check that file instead. `--reload [COMPONENT]' Reload all or the given component. This is basically the same as sending a SIGHUP to the component. Components which don't support reloading are ignored. The following options may be used: `-v' `--verbose' Outputs additional information while running. Specifically, this extends numerical field values by human-readable descriptions. `-n' `--dry-run' Do not actually change anything. This is currently only implemented for `--change-options' and can be used for testing purposes. `-r' `--runtime' Only used together with `--change-options'. If one of the modified options can be changed in a running daemon process, signal the running daemon to ask it to reparse its configuration file after changing. This means that the changes will take effect at run-time, as far as this is possible. Otherwise, they will take effect at the next start of the respective backend programs.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Format conventions, Next: Listing components, Prev: Invoking gpgconf, Up: gpgconf 7.4.2 Format conventions ------------------------ Some lines in the output of `gpgconf' contain a list of colon-separated fields. The following conventions apply: * The GUI program is required to strip off trailing newline and/or carriage return characters from the output. * `gpgconf' will never leave out fields. If a certain version provides a certain field, this field will always be present in all `gpgconf' versions from that time on. * Future versions of `gpgconf' might append fields to the list. New fields will always be separated from the previously last field by a colon separator. The GUI should be prepared to parse the last field it knows about up until a colon or end of line. * Not all fields are defined under all conditions. You are required to ignore the content of undefined fields. There are several standard types for the content of a field: verbatim Some fields contain strings that are not escaped in any way. Such fields are described to be used _verbatim_. These fields will never contain a colon character (for obvious reasons). No de-escaping or other formatting is required to use the field content. This is for easy parsing of the output, when it is known that the content can never contain any special characters. percent-escaped Some fields contain strings that are described to be _percent-escaped_. Such strings need to be de-escaped before their content can be presented to the user. A percent-escaped string is de-escaped by replacing all occurrences of `%XY' by the byte that has the hexadecimal value `XY'. `X' and `Y' are from the set `0-9a-f'. localised Some fields contain strings that are described to be _localised_. Such strings are translated to the active language and formatted in the active character set. unsigned number Some fields contain an _unsigned number_. This number will always fit into a 32-bit unsigned integer variable. The number may be followed by a space, followed by a human readable description of that value (if the verbose option is used). You should ignore everything in the field that follows the number. signed number Some fields contain a _signed number_. This number will always fit into a 32-bit signed integer variable. The number may be followed by a space, followed by a human readable description of that value (if the verbose option is used). You should ignore everything in the field that follows the number. boolean value Some fields contain a _boolean value_. This is a number with either the value 0 or 1. The number may be followed by a space, followed by a human readable description of that value (if the verbose option is used). You should ignore everything in the field that follows the number; checking just the first character is sufficient in this case. option Some fields contain an _option_ argument. The format of an option argument depends on the type of the option and on some flags: no argument The simplest case is that the option does not take an argument at all (TYPE `0'). Then the option argument is an unsigned number that specifies how often the option occurs. If the `list' flag is not set, then the only valid number is `1'. Options that do not take an argument never have the `default' or `optional arg' flag set. number If the option takes a number argument (ALT-TYPE is `2' or `3'), and it can only occur once (`list' flag is not set), then the option argument is either empty (only allowed if the argument is optional), or it is a number. A number is a string that begins with an optional minus character, followed by one or more digits. The number must fit into an integer variable (unsigned or signed, depending on ALT-TYPE). number list If the option takes a number argument and it can occur more than once, then the option argument is either empty, or it is a comma-separated list of numbers as described above. string If the option takes a string argument (ALT-TYPE is 1), and it can only occur once (`list' flag is not set) then the option argument is either empty (only allowed if the argument is optional), or it starts with a double quote character (`"') followed by a percent-escaped string that is the argument value. Note that there is only a leading double quote character, no trailing one. The double quote character is only needed to be able to differentiate between no value and the empty string as value. string list If the option takes a number argument and it can occur more than once, then the option argument is either empty, or it is a comma-separated list of string arguments as described above. The active language and character set are currently determined from the locale environment of the `gpgconf' program.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Listing components, Next: Checking programs, Prev: Format conventions, Up: gpgconf 7.4.3 Listing components ------------------------ The command `--list-components' will list all components that can be configured with `gpgconf'. Usually, one component will correspond to one GnuPG-related program and contain the options of that programs configuration file that can be modified using `gpgconf'. However, this is not necessarily the case. A component might also be a group of selected options from several programs, or contain entirely virtual options that have a special effect rather than changing exactly one option in one configuration file. A component is a set of configuration options that semantically belong together. Furthermore, several changes to a component can be made in an atomic way with a single operation. The GUI could for example provide a menu with one entry for each component, or a window with one tabulator sheet per component. The command argument `--list-components' lists all available components, one per line. The format of each line is: `NAME:DESCRIPTION:PGMNAME:' NAME This field contains a name tag of the component. The name tag is used to specify the component in all communication with `gpgconf'. The name tag is to be used _verbatim_. It is thus not in any escaped format. DESCRIPTION The _string_ in this field contains a human-readable description of the component. It can be displayed to the user of the GUI for informational purposes. It is _percent-escaped_ and _localized_. PGMNAME The _string_ in this field contains the absolute name of the program's file. It can be used to unambiguously invoke that program. It is _percent-escaped_. Example: $ gpgconf --list-components gpg:GPG for OpenPGP:/usr/local/bin/gpg2: gpg-agent:GPG Agent:/usr/local/bin/gpg-agent: scdaemon:Smartcard Daemon:/usr/local/bin/scdaemon: gpgsm:GPG for S/MIME:/usr/local/bin/gpgsm: dirmngr:Directory Manager:/usr/local/bin/dirmngr:  File: gnupg.info, Node: Checking programs, Next: Listing options, Prev: Listing components, Up: gpgconf 7.4.4 Checking programs ----------------------- The command `--check-programs' is similar to `--list-components' but works on backend programs and not on components. It runs each program to test whether it is installed and runnable. This also includes a syntax check of all config file options of the program. The command argument `--check-programs' lists all available programs, one per line. The format of each line is: `NAME:DESCRIPTION:PGMNAME:AVAIL:OKAY:CFGFILE:LINE:ERROR:' NAME This field contains a name tag of the program which is identical to the name of the component. The name tag is to be used _verbatim_. It is thus not in any escaped format. This field may be empty to indicate a continuation of error descriptions for the last name. The description and pgmname fields are then also empty. DESCRIPTION The _string_ in this field contains a human-readable description of the component. It can be displayed to the user of the GUI for informational purposes. It is _percent-escaped_ and _localized_. PGMNAME The _string_ in this field contains the absolute name of the program's file. It can be used to unambiguously invoke that program. It is _percent-escaped_. AVAIL The _boolean value_ in this field indicates whether the program is installed and runnable. OKAY The _boolean value_ in this field indicates whether the program's config file is syntactically okay. CFGFILE If an error occurred in the configuration file (as indicated by a false value in the field `okay'), this field has the name of the failing configuration file. It is _percent-escaped_. LINE If an error occurred in the configuration file, this field has the line number of the failing statement in the configuration file. It is an _unsigned number_. ERROR If an error occurred in the configuration file, this field has the error text of the failing statement in the configuration file. It is _percent-escaped_ and _localized_. In the following example the `dirmngr' is not runnable and the configuration file of `scdaemon' is not okay. $ gpgconf --check-programs gpg:GPG for OpenPGP:/usr/local/bin/gpg2:1:1: gpg-agent:GPG Agent:/usr/local/bin/gpg-agent:1:1: scdaemon:Smartcard Daemon:/usr/local/bin/scdaemon:1:0: gpgsm:GPG for S/MIME:/usr/local/bin/gpgsm:1:1: dirmngr:Directory Manager:/usr/local/bin/dirmngr:0:0: The command `--check-options COMPONENT' will verify the configuration file in the same manner as `--check-programs', but only for the component COMPONENT.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Listing options, Next: Changing options, Prev: Checking programs, Up: gpgconf 7.4.5 Listing options --------------------- Every component contains one or more options. Options may be gathered into option groups to allow the GUI to give visual hints to the user about which options are related. The command argument `--list-options COMPONENT' lists all options (and the groups they belong to) in the component COMPONENT, one per line. COMPONENT must be the string in the field NAME in the output of the `--list-components' command. There is one line for each option and each group. First come all options that are not in any group. Then comes a line describing a group. Then come all options that belong into each group. Then comes the next group and so on. There does not need to be any group (and in this case the output will stop after the last non-grouped option). The format of each line is: `NAME:FLAGS:LEVEL:DESCRIPTION:TYPE:ALT-TYPE:ARGNAME:DEFAULT:ARGDEF:VALUE' NAME This field contains a name tag for the group or option. The name tag is used to specify the group or option in all communication with `gpgconf'. The name tag is to be used _verbatim_. It is thus not in any escaped format. FLAGS The flags field contains an _unsigned number_. Its value is the OR-wise combination of the following flag values: `group (1)' If this flag is set, this is a line describing a group and not an option. The following flag values are only defined for options (that is, if the `group' flag is not used). `optional arg (2)' If this flag is set, the argument is optional. This is never set for TYPE `0' (none) options. `list (4)' If this flag is set, the option can be given multiple times. `runtime (8)' If this flag is set, the option can be changed at runtime. `default (16)' If this flag is set, a default value is available. `default desc (32)' If this flag is set, a (runtime) default is available. This and the `default' flag are mutually exclusive. `no arg desc (64)' If this flag is set, and the `optional arg' flag is set, then the option has a special meaning if no argument is given. `no change (128)' If this flag is set, gpgconf ignores requests to change the value. GUI frontends should grey out this option. Note, that manual changes of the configuration files are still possible. LEVEL This field is defined for options and for groups. It contains an _unsigned number_ that specifies the expert level under which this group or option should be displayed. The following expert levels are defined for options (they have analogous meaning for groups): `basic (0)' This option should always be offered to the user. `advanced (1)' This option may be offered to advanced users. `expert (2)' This option should only be offered to expert users. `invisible (3)' This option should normally never be displayed, not even to expert users. `internal (4)' This option is for internal use only. Ignore it. The level of a group will always be the lowest level of all options it contains. DESCRIPTION This field is defined for options and groups. The _string_ in this field contains a human-readable description of the option or group. It can be displayed to the user of the GUI for informational purposes. It is _percent-escaped_ and _localized_. TYPE This field is only defined for options. It contains an _unsigned number_ that specifies the type of the option's argument, if any. The following types are defined: Basic types: `none (0)' No argument allowed. `string (1)' An _unformatted string_. `int32 (2)' A _signed number_. `uint32 (3)' An _unsigned number_. Complex types: `pathname (32)' A _string_ that describes the pathname of a file. The file does not necessarily need to exist. `ldap server (33)' A _string_ that describes an LDAP server in the format: `HOSTNAME:PORT:USERNAME:PASSWORD:BASE_DN' `key fingerprint (34)' A _string_ with a 40 digit fingerprint specifying a certificate. `pub key (35)' A _string_ that describes a certificate by user ID, key ID or fingerprint. `sec key (36)' A _string_ that describes a certificate with a key by user ID, key ID or fingerprint. `alias list (37)' A _string_ that describes an alias list, like the one used with gpg's group option. The list consists of a key, an equal sign and space separated values. More types will be added in the future. Please see the ALT-TYPE field for information on how to cope with unknown types. ALT-TYPE This field is identical to TYPE, except that only the types `0' to `31' are allowed. The GUI is expected to present the user the option in the format specified by TYPE. But if the argument type TYPE is not supported by the GUI, it can still display the option in the more generic basic type ALT-TYPE. The GUI must support all the defined basic types to be able to display all options. More basic types may be added in future versions. If the GUI encounters a basic type it doesn't support, it should report an error and abort the operation. ARGNAME This field is only defined for options with an argument type TYPE that is not `0'. In this case it may contain a _percent-escaped_ and _localised string_ that gives a short name for the argument. The field may also be empty, though, in which case a short name is not known. DEFAULT This field is defined only for options for which the `default' or `default desc' flag is set. If the `default' flag is set, its format is that of an _option argument_ (*Note Format conventions::, for details). If the default value is empty, then no default is known. Otherwise, the value specifies the default value for this option. If the `default desc' flag is set, the field is either empty or contains a description of the effect if the option is not given. ARGDEF This field is defined only for options for which the `optional arg' flag is set. If the `no arg desc' flag is not set, its format is that of an _option argument_ (*Note Format conventions::, for details). If the default value is empty, then no default is known. Otherwise, the value specifies the default argument for this option. If the `no arg desc' flag is set, the field is either empty or contains a description of the effect of this option if no argument is given. VALUE This field is defined only for options. Its format is that of an _option argument_. If it is empty, then the option is not explicitly set in the current configuration, and the default applies (if any). Otherwise, it contains the current value of the option. Note that this field is also meaningful if the option itself does not take a real argument (in this case, it contains the number of times the option appears).  File: gnupg.info, Node: Changing options, Next: Listing global options, Prev: Listing options, Up: gpgconf 7.4.6 Changing options ---------------------- The command `--change-options COMPONENT' will attempt to change the options of the component COMPONENT to the specified values. COMPONENT must be the string in the field NAME in the output of the `--list-components' command. You have to provide the options that shall be changed in the following format on standard input: `NAME:FLAGS:NEW-VALUE' NAME This is the name of the option to change. NAME must be the string in the field NAME in the output of the `--list-options' command. FLAGS The flags field contains an _unsigned number_. Its value is the OR-wise combination of the following flag values: `default (16)' If this flag is set, the option is deleted and the default value is used instead (if applicable). NEW-VALUE The new value for the option. This field is only defined if the `default' flag is not set. The format is that of an _option argument_. If it is empty (or the field is omitted), the default argument is used (only allowed if the argument is optional for this option). Otherwise, the option will be set to the specified value. The output of the command is the same as that of `--check-options' for the modified configuration file. Examples: To set the force option, which is of basic type `none (0)': $ echo 'force:0:1' | gpgconf --change-options dirmngr To delete the force option: $ echo 'force:16:' | gpgconf --change-options dirmngr The `--runtime' option can influence when the changes take effect.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Listing global options, Next: Files used by gpgconf, Prev: Changing options, Up: gpgconf 7.4.7 Listing global options ---------------------------- Sometimes it is useful for applications to look at the global options file `gpgconf.conf'. The colon separated listing format is record oriented and uses the first field to identify the record type: `k' This describes a key record to start the definition of a new ruleset for a user/group. The format of a key record is: `k:USER:GROUP:' USER This is the user field of the key. It is percent escaped. See the definition of the gpgconf.conf format for details. GROUP This is the group field of the key. It is percent escaped. `r' This describes a rule record. All rule records up to the next key record make up a rule set for that key. The format of a rule record is: `r:::COMPONENT:OPTION:FLAGS:VALUE:' COMPONENT This is the component part of a rule. It is a plain string. OPTION This is the option part of a rule. It is a plain string. FLAG This is the flags part of a rule. There may be only one flag per rule but by using the same component and option, several flags may be assigned to an option. It is a plain string. VALUE This is the optional value for the option. It is a percent escaped string with a single quotation mark to indicate a string. The quotation mark is only required to distinguish between no value specified and an empty string. Unknown record types should be ignored. Note that there is intentionally no feature to change the global option file through `gpgconf'.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Files used by gpgconf, Prev: Listing global options, Up: gpgconf 7.4.8 Files used by gpgconf --------------------------- `/etc/gnupg/gpgconf.conf' If this file exists, it is processed as a global configuration file. A commented example can be found in the `examples' directory of the distribution.  File: gnupg.info, Node: applygnupgdefaults, Next: gpgsm-gencert.sh, Prev: gpgconf, Up: Helper Tools 7.5 Run gpgconf for all users. ============================== This script is a wrapper around `gpgconf' to run it with the command `--apply-defaults' for all real users with an existing GnuPG home directory. Admins might want to use this script to update he GnuPG configuration files for all users after `/etc/gnupg/gpgconf.conf' has been changed. This allows to enforce certain policies for all users. Note, that this is not a bulletproof of forcing a user to use certain options. A user may always directly edit the configuration files and bypass gpgconf. `applygnupgdefaults' is invoked by root as: applygnupgdefaults  File: gnupg.info, Node: gpgsm-gencert.sh, Next: gpg-preset-passphrase, Prev: applygnupgdefaults, Up: Helper Tools 7.6 Generate an X.509 certificate request ========================================= This is a simple tool to interactively generate a certificate request which will be printed to stdout. `gpgsm-gencert.sh' is invoked as: `gpgsm-cencert.sh'  File: gnupg.info, Node: gpg-preset-passphrase, Next: gpg-connect-agent, Prev: gpgsm-gencert.sh, Up: Helper Tools 7.7 Put a passphrase into the cache. ==================================== The `gpg-preset-passphrase' is a utility to seed the internal cache of a running `gpg-agent' with passphrases. It is mainly useful for unattended machines, where the usual `pinentry' tool may not be used and the passphrases for the to be used keys are given at machine startup. Passphrases set with this utility don't expire unless the `--forget' option is used to explicitly clear them from the cache -- or `gpg-agent' is either restarted or reloaded (by sending a SIGHUP to it). Nite that the maximum cache time as set with `--max-cache-ttl' is still honored. It is necessary to allow this passphrase presetting by starting `gpg-agent' with the `--allow-preset-passphrase'. * Menu: * Invoking gpg-preset-passphrase:: List of all commands and options.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Invoking gpg-preset-passphrase, Up: gpg-preset-passphrase 7.7.1 List of all commands and options. --------------------------------------- `gpg-preset-passphrase' is invoked this way: gpg-preset-passphrase [options] [command] CACHEID CACHEID is either a 40 character keygrip of hexadecimal characters identifying the key for which the passphrase should be set or cleared. The keygrip is listed along with the key when running the command: `gpgsm --dump-secret-keys'. Alternatively an arbitrary string may be used to identify a passphrase; it is suggested that such a string is prefixed with the name of the application (e.g `foo:12346'). One of the following command options must be given: `--preset' Preset a passphrase. This is what you usually will use. `gpg-preset-passphrase' will then read the passphrase from `stdin'. `--forget' Flush the passphrase for the given cache ID from the cache. The following additional options may be used: `-v' `--verbose' Output additional information while running. `-P STRING' `--passphrase STRING' Instead of reading the passphrase from `stdin', use the supplied STRING as passphrase. Note that this makes the passphrase visible for other users.  File: gnupg.info, Node: gpg-connect-agent, Next: gpgparsemail, Prev: gpg-preset-passphrase, Up: Helper Tools 7.8 Communicate with a running agent. ===================================== The `gpg-connect-agent' is a utility to communicate with a running `gpg-agent'. It is useful to check out the commands gpg-agent provides using the Assuan interface. It might also be useful for scripting simple applications. Input is expected at stdin and out put gets printed to stdout. It is very similar to running `gpg-agent' in server mode; but here we connect to a running instance. * Menu: * Invoking gpg-connect-agent:: List of all options. * Controlling gpg-connect-agent:: Control commands.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Invoking gpg-connect-agent, Next: Controlling gpg-connect-agent, Up: gpg-connect-agent 7.8.1 List of all options. -------------------------- `gpg-connect-agent' is invoked this way: gpg-connect-agent [options] [commands] The following options may be used: `-v' `--verbose' Output additional information while running. `-q' `--quiet' Try to be as quiet as possible. `--homedir DIR' Set the name of the home directory to DIR. If this option is not used, the home directory defaults to `~/.gnupg'. It is only recognized when given on the command line. It also overrides any home directory stated through the environment variable `GNUPGHOME' or (on W32 systems) by means of the Registry entry HKCU\SOFTWARE\GNU\GNUPG:HOMEDIR. `--agent-program FILE' Specify the agent program to be started if none is running. `-S' `--raw-socket NAME' Connect to socket NAME assuming this is an Assuan style server. Do not run any special initializations or environment checks. This may be used to directly connect to any Assuan style socket server. `-E' `--exec' Take the rest of the command line as a program and it's arguments and execute it as an assuan server. Here is how you would run `gpgsm': gpg-connect-agent --exec gpgsm --server Note that you may not use options on the command line in this case. `--no-ext-connect' When using `-S' or `--exec', `gpg-connect-agent' connects to the assuan server in extended mode to allow descriptor passing. This option makes it use the old mode. `--run FILE' Run the commands from FILE at startup and then continue with the regular input method. Note, that commands given on the command line are executed after this file. `-s' `--subst' Run the command `/subst' at startup. `--hex' Print data lines in a hex format and the ASCII representation of non-control characters. `--decode' Decode data lines. That is to remove percent escapes but make sure that a new line always starts with a D and a space.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Controlling gpg-connect-agent, Prev: Invoking gpg-connect-agent, Up: gpg-connect-agent 7.8.2 Control commands. ----------------------- While reading Assuan commands, gpg-agent also allows a few special commands to control its operation. These control commands all start with a slash (`/'). `/echo ARGS' Just print ARGS. `/let NAME VALUE' Set the variable NAME to VALUE. Variables are only substituted on the input if the `/subst' has been used. Variables are referenced by prefixing the name with a dollar sign and optionally include the name in curly braces. The rules for a valid name are identically to those of the standard bourne shell. This is not yet enforced but may be in the future. When used with curly braces no leading or trailing white space is allowed. If a variable is not found, it is searched in the environment and if found copied to the table of variables. Variable functions are available: The name of the function must be followed by at least one space and the at least one argument. The following functions are available: `get' Return a value described by the argument. Available arguments are: `cwd' The current working directory. `homedir' The gnupg homedir. `sysconfdir' GnuPG's system configuration directory. `bindir' GnuPG's binary directory. `libdir' GnuPG's library directory. `libexecdir' GnuPG's library directory for executable files. `datadir' GnuPG's data directory. `serverpid' The PID of the current server. Command `/serverpid' must have been given to return a useful value. `unescape ARGS' Remove C-style escapes from ARGS. Note that `\0' and `\x00' terminate the returned string implicitly. The string to be converted are the entire arguments right behind the delimiting space of the function name. `unpercent ARGS' `unpercent+ ARGS' Remove percent style escaping from ARGS. Note that `%00' terminates the string implicitly. The string to be converted are the entire arguments right behind the delimiting space of the function name. `unpercent+' also maps plus signs to a spaces. `percent ARGS' `percent+ ARGS' Escape the ARGS using percent style escaping. Tabs, formfeeds, linefeeds, carriage returns and colons are escaped. `percent+' also maps spaces to plus signs. `errcode ARG' `errsource ARG' `errstring ARG' Assume ARG is an integer and evaluate it using `strtol'. Return the gpg-error error code, error source or a formatted string with the error code and error source. `+' `-' `*' `/' `%' Evaluate all arguments as long integers using `strtol' and apply this operator. A division by zero yields an empty string. `!' `|' `&' Evaluate all arguments as long integers using `strtol' and apply the logical oeprators NOT, OR or AND. The NOT operator works on the last argument only. `/definq NAME VAR' Use content of the variable VAR for inquiries with NAME. NAME may be an asterisk (`*') to match any inquiry. `/definqfile NAME FILE' Use content of FILE for inquiries with NAME. NAME may be an asterisk (`*') to match any inquiry. `/definqprog NAME PROG' Run PROG for inquiries matching NAME and pass the entire line to it as command line arguments. `/datafile NAME' Write all data lines from the server to the file NAME. The file is opened for writing and created if it does not exists. An existing file is first truncated to 0. The data written to the file fully decoded. Using a single dash for NAME writes to stdout. The file is kept open until a new file is set using this command or this command is used without an argument. `/showdef' Print all definitions `/cleardef' Delete all definitions `/sendfd FILE MODE' Open FILE in MODE (which needs to be a valid `fopen' mode string) and send the file descriptor to the server. This is usually followed by a command like `INPUT FD' to set the input source for other commands. `/recvfd' Not yet implemented. `/open VAR FILE [MODE]' Open FILE and assign the file descriptor to VAR. Warning: This command is experimental and might change in future versions. `/close FD' Close the file descriptor FD. Warning: This command is experimental and might change in future versions. `/showopen' Show a list of open files. `/serverpid' Send the Assuan command `GETINFO pid' to the server and store the returned PID for internal purposes. `/sleep' Sleep for a second. `/hex' `/nohex' Same as the command line option `--hex'. `/decode' `/nodecode' Same as the command line option `--decode'. `/subst' `/nosubst' Enable and disable variable substitution. It defaults to disabled unless the command line option `--subst' has been used. If /subst as been enabled once, leading whitespace is removed from input lines which makes scripts easier to read. `/while CONDITION' `/end' These commands provide a way for executing loops. All lines between the `while' and the corresponding `end' are executed as long as the evaluation of CONDITION yields a non-zero value or is the string `true' or `yes'. The evaluation is done by passing CONDITION to the `strtol' function. Example: /subst /let i 3 /while $i /echo loop couter is $i /let i ${- $i 1} /end `/if CONDITION' `/end' These commands provide a way for conditional execution. All lines between the `if' and the corresponding `end' are executed only if the evaluation of CONDITION yields a non-zero value or is the string `true' or `yes'. The evaluation is done by passing CONDITION to the `strtol' function. `/run FILE' Run commands from FILE. `/bye' Terminate the connection and the program `/help' Print a list of available control commands.  File: gnupg.info, Node: gpgparsemail, Next: symcryptrun, Prev: gpg-connect-agent, Up: Helper Tools 7.9 Parse a mail message into an annotated format ================================================= The `gpgparsemail' is a utility currently only useful for debugging. Run it with `--help' for usage information.  File: gnupg.info, Node: symcryptrun, Next: gpg-zip, Prev: gpgparsemail, Up: Helper Tools 7.10 Call a simple symmetric encryption tool. ============================================= Sometimes simple encryption tools are already in use for a long time and there might be a desire to integrate them into the GnuPG framework. The protocols and encryption methods might be non-standard or not even properly documented, so that a full-fledged encryption tool with an interface like gpg is not doable. `symcryptrun' provides a solution: It operates by calling the external encryption/decryption module and provides a passphrase for a key using the standard `pinentry' based mechanism through `gpg-agent'. Note, that `symcryptrun' is only available if GnuPG has been configured with `--enable-symcryptrun' at build time. * Menu: * Invoking symcryptrun:: List of all commands and options.  File: gnupg.info, Node: Invoking symcryptrun, Up: symcryptrun 7.10.1 List of all commands and options. ---------------------------------------- `symcryptrun' is invoked this way: symcryptrun --class CLASS --program PROGRAM --keyfile KEYFILE [--decrypt | --encrypt] [inputfile] For encryption, the plain text must be provided on STDIN or as the argument INPUTFILE, and the ciphertext will be output to STDOUT. For decryption vice versa. CLASS describes the calling conventions of the external tool. Currently it must be given as `confucius'. PROGRAM is the full filename of that external tool. For the class `confucius' the option `--keyfile' is required; KEYFILE is the name of a file containing the secret key, which may be protected by a passphrase. For detailed calling conventions, see the source code. Note, that `gpg-agent' must be running before starting `symcryptrun'. The following additional options may be used: `-v' `--verbose' Output additional information while running. `-q' `--quiet' Try to be as quiet as possible. `--homedir DIR' Set the name of the home directory to DIR. If this option is not used, the home directory defaults to `~/.gnupg'. It is only recognized when given on the command line. It also overrides any home directory stated through the environment variable `GNUPGHOME' or (on W32 systems) by means of the Registry entry HKCU\SOFTWARE\GNU\GNUPG:HOMEDIR. `--log-file FILE' Append all logging output to FILE. Default is to write logging information to STDERR. The possible exit status codes of `symcryptrun' are: `0' Success. `1' Some error occured. `2' No valid passphrase was provided. `3' The operation was canceled by the user.  File: gnupg.info, Node: gpg-zip, Prev: symcryptrun, Up: Helper Tools 7.11 Encrypt or sign files into an archive ========================================== `gpg-zip' encrypts or signs files into an archive. It is an gpg-ized tar using the same format as used by PGP's PGP Zip. `gpg-zip' is invoked this way: gpg-zip [options] FILENAME1 [FILENAME2, ...] DIRECTORY [DIRECTORY2, ...] `gpg-zip' understands these options: `--encrypt' `-e' Encrypt data. This option may be combined with `--symmetric' (for output that may be decrypted via a secret key or a passphrase). `--decrypt' `-d' Decrypt data. `--symmetric' `-c' Encrypt with a symmetric cipher using a passphrase. The default symmetric cipher used is CAST5, but may be chosen with the `--cipher-algo' option to `gpg'. `--sign' `-s' Make a signature. See `gpg'. `--recipient USER' `-r USER' Encrypt for user id USER. See `gpg'. `--local-user USER' `-u USER' Use USER as the key to sign with. See `gpg'. `--list-archive' List the contents of the specified archive. `--output FILE' `-o FILE' Write output to specified file FILE. `--gpg GPGCMD' Use the specified command GPGCMD instead of `gpg'. `--gpg-args ARGS' Pass the specified options to `gpg'. `--tar TARCMD' Use the specified command TARCMD instead of `tar'. `--tar-args ARGS' Pass the specified options to `tar'. `--version' Print version of the program and exit. `--help' Display a brief help page and exit. The program returns 0 if everything was fine, 1 otherwise. Some examples: Encrypt the contents of directory `mydocs' for user Bob to file `test1': gpg-zip --encrypt --output test1 --gpg-args -r Bob mydocs List the contents of archive `test1': gpg-zip --list-archive test1  File: gnupg.info, Node: Howtos, Next: System Notes, Prev: Helper Tools, Up: Top 8 How to do certain things ************************** This is a collection of small howto documents. * Menu: * Howto Create a Server Cert:: Creating a TLS server certificate.