* g10/call-agent.c (scd_keypairinfo_status_cb): Also store the usage
flags.
* sm/call-agent.c (scd_keypairinfo_status_cb): Ditto.
* sm/certreqgen-ui.c (gpgsm_gencertreq_tty): Print the usage flags.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* sm/certreqgen-ui.c (gpgsm_gencertreq_tty): Get and show algo.
--
This extends the prompt to show something like
Serial number of the card: FF020001008A77F6
Available keys:
(1) 4130F84FA3704F4645924AEC3FFA48AD26D33656 PIV.9A nistp384
(2) AB2988FB8C227BCD5175BF92F66AA3A95AE83214 PIV.9E rsa2048
(3) DB7DDAEAA88534BA45CCD7A9B761425103EA2090 PIV.9C rsa2048
(4) BABB48C3D80ACCF9839F101DF2910966C8B988DF PIV.9D nistp256
Your selection? 1
Having the algorithm here is helpful in particular because right now
we support only RSA with X.509. Take care: PIV card based certificate
creation does not yet work.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* doc/gpgsm.texi, doc/howto-create-a-server-cert.texi: : update
default to 3072 bits.
* sm/certreqgen-ui.c (gpgsm_gencertreq_tty): update default to
3072 bits.
* sm/certreqgen.c (proc_parameters): update default to 3072 bits.
* sm/gpgsm.c (main): print correct default_pubkey_algo.
--
3072-bit RSA is widely considered to be 128-bit-equivalent security.
This is a sensible default in 2017.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
Gbp-Pq: Topic update-defaults
Gbp-Pq: Name 0014-gpgsm-default-to-3072-bit-keys.patch
* common/sexputil.c (get_pk_algo_from_canon_sexp): Change to return a
string.
* g10/keygen.c (check_keygrip): Adjust for change.
* sm/certreqgen-ui.c (check_keygrip): Likewise.
* agent/pksign.c (do_encode_dsa): Remove bogus map_pk_openpgp_to_gcry.
* g10/misc.c (map_pk_openpgp_to_gcry): Remove.
(openpgp_pk_test_algo): Change to a wrapper for openpgp_pk_test_algo2.
(openpgp_pk_test_algo2): Rewrite.
(openpgp_pk_algo_usage, pubkey_nbits): Add support for EdDSA.
(openpgp_pk_algo_name): Rewrite to remove need for gcry calls.
(pubkey_get_npkey, pubkey_get_nskey): Ditto.
(pubkey_get_nsig, pubkey_get_nenc): Ditto.
* g10/keygen.c(do_create_from_keygrip): Support EdDSA.
(common_gen, gen_ecc, ask_keysize, generate_keypair): Ditto.
* g10/build-packet.c (do_key): Ditto.
* g10/export.c (transfer_format_to_openpgp): Ditto.
* g10/getkey.c (cache_public_key): Ditto.
* g10/import.c (transfer_secret_keys): Ditto.
* g10/keylist.c (list_keyblock_print, list_keyblock_colon): Ditto.
* g10/mainproc.c (proc_pubkey_enc): Ditto.
* g10/parse-packet.c (parse_key): Ditto,
* g10/sign.c (hash_for, sign_file, make_keysig_packet): Ditto.
* g10/keyserver.c (print_keyrec): Use openpgp_pk_algo_name.
* g10/pkglue.c (pk_verify, pk_encrypt, pk_check_secret_key): Use only
OpenPGP algo ids and support EdDSA.
* g10/pubkey-enc.c (get_it): Use only OpenPGP algo ids.
* g10/seskey.c (encode_md_value): Ditto.
--
This patch separates Libgcrypt and OpenPGP public key algorithms ids
and in most cases completely removes the Libgcrypt ones. This is
useful because for Libgcrypt we specify the algorithm in the
S-expressions and the public key ids are not anymore needed.
This patch also adds some support for PUBKEY_ALGO_EDDSA which will
eventually be used instead of merging EdDSA with ECDSA. As of now an
experimental algorithm id is used but the plan is to write an I-D so
that we can get a new id from the IETF. Note that EdDSA (Ed25519)
does not yet work and that more changes are required.
The ECC support is still broken right now. Needs to be fixed.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
The asymmetric quotes used by GNU in the past (`...') don't render
nicely on modern systems. We now use two \x27 characters ('...').
The proper solution would be to use the correct Unicode symmetric
quotes here. However this has the disadvantage that the system
requires Unicode support. We don't want that today. If Unicode is
available a generated po file can be used to output proper quotes. A
simple sed script like the one used for en@quote is sufficient to
change them.
The changes have been done by applying
sed -i "s/\`\([^'\`]*\)'/'\1'/g"
to most files and fixing obvious problems by hand. The msgid strings in
the po files were fixed with a similar command.
Using "gpgsm --genkey" allows the creation of a self-signed
certificate via a new prompt.
Using "gpgsm --genkey --batch" should allow the creation of arbitrary
certificates controlled by a parameter file. An example parameter file
is
Key-Type: RSA
Key-Length: 1024
Key-Grip: 2C50DC6101C10C9C643E315FE3EADCCBC24F4BEA
Key-Usage: sign, encrypt
Serial: random
Name-DN: CN=some test key
Name-Email: foo@example.org
Name-Email: bar@exmaple.org
Hash-Algo: SHA384
not-after: 2038-01-16 12:44
This creates a self-signed X.509 certificate using the key given by
the keygrip and using SHA-384 as hash algorithm. The keyword
signing-key can be used to sign the certificate with a different key.
See sm/certreggen.c for details.
We better do this once and for all instead of cluttering all future
commits with diffs of trailing white spaces. In the majority of cases
blank or single lines are affected and thus this change won't disturb
a git blame too much. For future commits the pre-commit scripts
checks that this won't happen again.