directory"> file"> &ParmFile;"> files"> &ParmFiles;"> names"> &ParmNames;"> name"> &ParmName;"> key IDs"> n"> flags"> string"> value"> name=value"> ]> gpg 1 GNU Tools encryption and signing tool gpg --homedir --options command DESCRIPTION COMMANDS -s, --sign Make a signature. This command may be combined with --encrypt. --clearsign Make a clear text signature. -b, --detach-sign Make a detached signature. -e, --encrypt Encrypt data. This option may be combined with --sign. -c, --symmetric Encrypt with symmetric cipher only This command asks for a passphrase. --store Store only (make a simple RFC1991 packet). --decrypt &OptParmFile; Decrypt &ParmFile; (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 --list-keys &OptParmNames; --list-public-keys &OptParmNames; List all keys from the public keyrings, or just the ones given on the command line. --list-secret-keys &OptParmNames; List all keys from the secret keyrings, or just the ones given on the command line. --list-sigs &OptParmNames; Same as --list-keys, but the signatures are listed too. --check-sigs &OptParmNames; Same as --list-sigs, but the signatures are verified. --fingerprint &OptParmNames; List all keys 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. --gen-key Generate a new key pair. This command can only be used interactive. --edit-key &ParmName; Present a menu which enables you to do all key related tasks: sign Make a signature on key of user &ParmName; 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-exportbale and will therefore never be used by others. This may be used to make keys valid only in the local environment. revsig Revoke a signature. GnuPG asks for every every signature which has been done by one of the secret keys, whether a revocation certificate should be generated. trust Change the owner trust value. This updates the trust-db immediately and no save is required. disable enable Disable or enable an entire key. A disabled key can normally not be used for encryption. adduid Create an alternate user id. deluid Delete an user id. addkey Add a subkey to this key. delkey Remove a subkey. revkey Revoke a subkey. expire Change the key expiration time. If a key is selected, the time of this key will be changed. With no selection the key expiration of the primary key is changed. passwd Change the passphrase of the secret key. uid &ParmN; Toggle selection of user id with index &ParmN;. Use 0 to deselect all. key &ParmN; Toggle selection of subkey with index &ParmN;. Use 0 to deselect all. check Check all selected user ids. pref List preferences. toggle Toggle between public and secret key listing. 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. 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. eTrust calculation has failed. qNot enough information for calculation. nNever trust this key. mMarginally trusted. fFully trusted. uUltimately trusted. --sign-key &ParmName; Sign a public key with you secret key. This is a shortcut version of the subcommand sign from --edit. --lsign-key &ParmName; Sign a public key with you secret key but mark it as non-exportable. This is a shortcut version of the subcommand lsign from --edit. --delete-key &ParmName; Remove key from the public keyring --delete-secret-key &ParmName; Remove key from the secret and public keyring --gen-revoke Generate a revocation certificate for the complete key. To revoke a subkey or a signature, use the --edit command. --export &OptParmNames; 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 new keyring is written to stdout or to the file given with option "output". Use together with --armor to mail those keys. --send-keys &OptParmNames; Same as --export but sends the keys to a keyserver. 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. --export-all &OptParmNames; Same as --export, but does also export keys which are not compatible to OpenPGP. --export-secret-keys &OptParmNames; Same as --export, but does export the secret keys. This is normally not very useful and a security risk. --import &OptParmFiles; --fast-import &OptParmFiles; Import/merge keys. The fast version does not build the trustdb; this can be done at any time with the command --update-trustdb. --recv-keys &ParmKeyIDs; Import the keys with the given key IDs from a HKP keyserver. Option --keyserver must be used to give the name of this keyserver. --export-ownertrust List the assigned ownertrust values in ASCII format for backup purposes --import-ownertrust &OptParmFiles; Update the trustdb with the ownertrust values stored in &ParmFiles; (or stdin if not given); existing values will be overwritten. --print-md algo &OptParmFiles; Print message digest og algorithm ALGO for all given files of stdin. If "*" is used for the algorithm, digests for all available algorithms are printed. --gen-random 0|1|2 count Emit COUNT random bytes of the given quality level. If count is not given or zero, an endless sequenece of random bytes will be emitted. PLEASE, don't use this command unless you know waht you are doing, it may remove precious entropy from the system! --gen-prime mode bits qbits Use the source, Luke :-). The output format is still subject to change. --version Print version information along with a list of supported algorithms. --warranty Print warranty information. -h, --help Print usage information. This is a really long list even it does list not all options. OPTIONS Long options can be put in an options file (default "~/.gnupg/options"). 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 does not make sense. -a, --armor Create ASCII armored output. -o, --output &ParmFile; Write output to &ParmFile;. -u, --local-user &ParmName; Use &ParmName as the user ID to sign. This option is silently ignored for the list commands, so that it can be used in an options file. --default-key &ParmName; Use &ParmName; as default user ID for signatures. If this is not used the default user ID is the first user ID found in the secret keyring. -r, --recipient &ParmName; Encrypt for user id &ParmName;. If this option is not specified, GnuPG asks for the user-id unless --default-recipient is given --default-recipient &ParmName; Use &ParmName; as default recipient if option --recipient is not used and don't ask if this is a valid one. &ParmName; must be a 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. --encrypt-to &ParmName; Same as --recipient but this one is intended for in the options file and may be used together with an 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. --no-encrypt-to Disable the use of all --encrypt-to keys. -v, --verbose Give more information during processing. If used twice, the input data is listed in detail. -q, --quiet Try to be as quiet as possible. -z &ParmN; Set compression level to &ParmN;. A value of 0 for &ParmN; disables compression. Default is to use the default compression level of zlib (normally 6). -t, --textmode Use canonical text mode. If -t (but not --textmode) is used together with armoring and signing, this enables clearsigned messages. This kludge is needed for PGP compatibility; normally you would use --sign or --clearsign to selected the type of the signature. -n, --dry-run Don't make any changes (this is not completely implemented). -i, --interactive Prompt before overwriting any files. --batch Use batch mode. Never ask, do not allow interactive commands. --no-batch Disable batch mode. This may be of use if --batch is enabled from an options file. --yes Assume "yes" on most questions. --no Assume "no" on most questions. --keyserver &ParmName; Use &ParmName to lookup keys which are not yet in your keyring. This is only done while verifying messages with signatures. The option is also required for the command --send-keys to specify the keyserver to where the keys should be send. All keyservers synchronize with each other - so there is no need to send keys to more than one server. Using the command "host -l pgp.net | grep wwwkeys" gives you a list of keyservers. Because there is load balancing using round-robin DNS you may notice that you get different key servers. --keyring &ParmFile; Add &ParmFile to the list of keyrings. If &ParmFile 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). The filename may be prefixed with a scheme: "gnupg-ring:" is the default one. "gnupg-gdbm:" may be used for a GDBM ring. It might make sense to use it together with --no-default-keyring. --secret-keyring &ParmFile; Same as --keyring but for the secret keyrings. --homedir &ParmDir; Set the name of the home directory to &ParmDir; If this option is not used it defaults to "~/.gnupg". It does not make sense to use this in a options file. This also overrides the environment variable "GNUPGHOME". --charset &ParmName; Set the name of the native character set. This is used to convert some strings to proper UTF-8 encoding. Valid values for &ParmName; are: iso-8859-1This is the default Latin 1 set. iso-8859-2The Latin 2 set. koi8-rThe usual Russian set (rfc1489). --utf8-strings --no-utf8-strings Assume that the arguments are already given as UTF8 strings. The default (--no-utf8-strings) is to assume that arguments are encoded in the character set as specified by --charset. These options effects all following arguments. Both options may used multiple times. --options &ParmFile; Read options from &ParmFile; 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. --load-extension &ParmName; Load an extension module. If &ParmName; does not contain a slash it is searched in "/usr/local/lib/gnupg" See the manual for more information about extensions. --debug &ParmFlags; Set debugging flags. All flags are or-ed and &ParmFlags; may be given in C syntax (e.g. 0x0042). --debug-all Set all useful debugging flags. --status-fd &ParmN; Write special status strings to the file descriptor &ParmN;. See the file DETAILS in the documentation for a listing of them. --logger-fd &ParmN; Write log output to file descriptor &ParmN; and not to stderr. --no-comment Do not write comment packets. This option affects only the generation of secret keys. Output of option packets is disabled since version 0.4.2. --comment &ParmString; Use &ParmString; as comment string in clear text signatures. --default-comment Force to write the standard comment string in clear text signatures. Use this to overwrite a --comment from a config file. --no-version Omit the version string in clear text signatures. --emit-version Force to write the version string in clear text signatures. Use this to overwrite a previous --no-version from a config file. -N, --notation-data &ParmNameValue; Put the name value pair into the signature as notation data. &ParmName; must consists only of alphanumeric characters, digits or the underscore; the first character must not be a digit. &ParmValue; may be any printable string; it will encoded in UTF8, so sou should have check that your --charset is set right. If you prefix &ParmName; with an exclamation mark, the notation data will be flagged as critical (rfc2440:5.2.3.15). --set-policy-url &ParmString; Use &ParmString; as Policy URL for signatures (rfc2440:5.2.3.19). If you prefix it with an exclamation mark, the policy URL packet will be flagged as critical. --set-filename &ParmString; Use &ParmString; as the name of file which is stored in messages. --completes-needed &ParmN; Number of completely trusted users to introduce a new key signer (defaults to 1). --marginals-needed &ParmN; Number of marginally trusted users to introduce a new key signer (defaults to 3) --max-cert-depth &ParmN; Maximum depth of a certification chain (default is 5). --cipher-algo &ParmName; Use &ParmName; 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. --digest-algo &ParmName; Use &ParmName; as message digest algorithm. Running the program with the command --version yields a list of supported algorithms. Please note that using this option may violate the OpenPGP requirement, that a 160 bit hash is to be used for DSA. --s2k-cipher-algo &ParmName; Use &ParmName; as the cipher algorithm used to protect secret keys. The default cipher is BLOWFISH. This cipher is also used for conventional encryption if --cipher-algo is not given. --s2k-digest-algo &ParmName; Use &ParmName; as the digest algorithm used to mangle the passphrases. The default algorithm is RIPE-MD-160. This digest algorithm is also used for conventional encryption if --digest-algo is not given. --s2k-mode &ParmN; Selects how passphrases are mangled. If &ParmN; is 0 a plain passphrase (which is not recommended) will be used, a 1 (default) adds a salt to the passphrase and a 3 iterates the whole process a couple of times. Unless --rfc1991 is used, this mode is also used for conventional encryption. --compress-algo &ParmN; Use compress algorithm &ParmN;. Default is 2 which is RFC1950 compression. You may use 1 to use the old zlib version which is used by PGP. The default algorithm may give better results because the window size is not limited to 8K. If this is not used the OpenPGP behavior is used, i.e. the compression algorithm is selected from the preferences; note, that this can't be done if you do not encrypt the data. --throw-keyid Do not put the keyid into encrypted packets. This option hides the receiver of the message and is a countermeasure against traffic analysis. It may slow down the decryption process because all available secret keys are tried. --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 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. All other PGP versions do it this way too. This option is not enabled by default because it would violate rfc2440. --passphrase-fd &ParmN; Read the passphrase from file descriptor &ParmN;. If you use 0 for &ParmN;, the passphrase will be read from stdin. This can only be used if only one passphrase is supplied. Don't use this option if you can avoid it. --rfc1991 Try to be more RFC1991 (PGP 2.x) compliant. --openpgp Reset all packet, cipher and digest options to OpenPGP behavior. Use this option to reset all previous options like --rfc1991, --force-v3-sigs, --s2k-*, --cipher-algo, --digest-algo and --compress-algo to OpenPGP compliant values. --force-v3-sigs OpenPGP states that an implementation should generate v4 signatures but PGP 5.x recognizes v4 signatures only on key material. This options forces v3 signatures for signatures on data. --force-mdc Force the use of encryption with appended manipulation code. This is always used with the newer cipher (those with a blocksize greater than 64 bit). --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. --no-verbose Reset verbose level to 0. --no-greeting Suppress the initial copyright message but do not enter batch mode. --no-armor Assume the input data is not in ASCII armored format. --no-default-keyring Do not add the default keyrings to the list of keyrings. --skip-verify Skip the signature verification step. This may be used to make the encryption faster if the signature verification is not needed. --with-colons Print key listings delimited by colons. --with-key-data Print key listings delimited by colons and print the public key data. --with-fingerprint Same as the command --fingerprint but changes only the format of the output and may be used together with another command. 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. EXAMPLES gpg -se -r sign and encrypt for user Bob gpg --clearsign &ParmFile; make a clear text signature gpg -sb &ParmFile; make a detached signature gpg --list-keys show keys gpg --fingerprint show fingerprint ENVIRONMENT HOME Used to locate the default home directory. GNUPGHOME If set directory used instead of "~/.gnupg". FILES ~/.gnupg/secring.gpg The secret keyring ~/.gnupg/secring.gpg.lock and the lock file ~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg The public keyring ~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg.lock and the lock file ~/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg The trust database ~/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg.lock and the lock file ~/.gnupg/options May contain options /usr[/local]/share/gnupg/options.skel Skeleton options file /usr[/local]/lib/gnupg/ Default location for extensions 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! BUGS On many 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 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.