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1355 lines
54 KiB
Plaintext
[$htmltitle=GnuPG FAQ]
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[$htmlcharset=<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">]
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[$sfaqheader=The GnuPG FAQ says:]
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[$sfaqfooter=
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The most recent version of the FAQ is available from
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<http://www.gnupg.org/>
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]
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[$usenetheader=
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]
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[$maintainer=David D. Scribner, <faq 'at' gnupg.org>]
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[$hGPGHTTP=http://www.gnupg.org]
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[$hGPGFTP=ftp://ftp.gnupg.org]
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[$hVERSION=1.2.2]
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[H body bgcolor=#ffffff text=#000000 link=#1f00ff alink=#ff0000 vlink=#9900dd]
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[H h1]GnuPG Frequently Asked Questions[H /h1]
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[H p]
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Version: 1.6.3[H br]
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Last-Modified: Jul 30, 2003[H br]
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Maintained-by: [$maintainer]
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[H /p]
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This is the GnuPG FAQ. The latest HTML version is available
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[H a href=[$hGPGHTTP]/documentation/faqs.html]here[H/a].
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The index is generated automatically, so there may be errors. Not all
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questions may be in the section they belong to. Suggestions about how
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to improve the structure of this FAQ are welcome.
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Please send additions and corrections to the maintainer. It would be
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most convenient if you could provide the answer to be included here
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as well. Your help is very much appreciated!
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Please, don't send message like "This should be a FAQ - what's the
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answer?". If it hasn't been asked before, it isn't a FAQ. In that case
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you could search in the mailing list archive.
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[H hr]
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<C>
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[H hr]
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<S> GENERAL
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<Q> What is GnuPG?
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[H a href=[$hGPGHTTP]]GnuPG[H /a] stands for GNU Privacy Guard and
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is GNU's tool for secure communication and data storage. It can be
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used to encrypt data and to create digital signatures. It includes
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an advanced key management facility and is compliant with the
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proposed OpenPGP Internet standard as described in [H a href=http://www.rfc-editor.org/]RFC 2440[H/a].
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As such, it is aimed to be compatible with PGP from PGP Corp. and
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other OpenPGP tools
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<Q> Is GnuPG compatible with PGP?
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In general, yes. GnuPG and newer PGP releases should be implementing
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the OpenPGP standard. But there are some interoperability problems.
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See question <Rcompat> for details.
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<Q> Is GnuPG free to use for personal or commercial use?
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Yes. GnuPG is part of the GNU family of tools and applications built
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and provided in accordance with the Free Software Foundation (FSF)
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General Public License (GPL). Therefore the software is free to copy,
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use, modify and distribute in accordance with that license. Please
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read the file titled COPYING that accompanies the application for
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more information.
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<Q> What conventions are used in this FAQ?
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Although GnuPG is being developed for several operating systems
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(often in parallel), the conventions used in this FAQ reflect a
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UNIX shell environment. For Win32 users, references to a shell
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prompt (`$') should be interpreted as a command prompt (`>'),
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directory names separated by a forward slash (`/') may need to be
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converted to a back slash (`\'), and a tilde (`~') represents a
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user's "home" directory (reference question <Rhomedir> for an example).
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Some command-lines presented in this FAQ are too long to properly
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display in some browsers for the web page version of this file, and
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have been split into two or more lines. For these commands please
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remember to enter the entire command-string on one line or the
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command will error, or at minimum not give the desired results.
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Please keep in mind that this FAQ contains information that may not
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apply to your particular version, as new features and bug fixes are
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added on a continuing basis (reference the NEWS file included with
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the source or package for noteworthy changes between versions). One
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item to note is that starting with GnuPG version 1.1.92 the file
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containing user options and settings has been renamed from "options"
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to "gpg.conf". Information in the FAQ that relates to the options
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file may be interchangable with the newer gpg.conf file in many
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instances. See question <Roptions> for details.
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<S> SOURCES of INFORMATION
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<Q> Where can I find more information on GnuPG?
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On-line resources:
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[H ul]
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[H li]The documentation page is located at [H a href=[$hGPGHTTP]/documentation/]<[$hGPGHTTP]/documentation/>[H/a].
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Also, have a look at the HOWTOs and the GNU Privacy Handbook (GPH,
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available in English, Spanish and Russian). The latter provides a
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detailed user's guide to GnuPG. You'll also find a document about how
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to convert from PGP 2.x to GnuPG.
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[H li]At [H a href=[$hGPGHTTP]/documentation/mailing-lists.html]<[$hGPGHTTP]/documentation/mailing-lists.html>[H/a] you'll find
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an online archive of the GnuPG mailing lists. Most interesting should
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be gnupg-users for all user-related issues and gnupg-devel if you want
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to get in touch with the developers.
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In addition, searchable archives can be found on MARC, e.g.: [H br]
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gnupg-users: [H a href=http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=gnupg-users&r=1&w=2]<http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=gnupg-users&r=1&w=2>[H/a][H br]
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gnupg-devel: [H a href=http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=gnupg-devel&r=1&w=2]<http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=gnupg-devel&r=1&w=2>[H/a][H br]
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[H b]PLEASE:[H /b]
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Before posting to a list, read this FAQ and the available documentation.
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In addition, search the list archive - maybe your question has already
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been discussed. This way you help people focus on topics that have not
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yet been resolved.
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[H li]The GnuPG source distribution contains a subdirectory:
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[H samp]
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./doc
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[H /samp]
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where some additional documentation is located (mainly interesting
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for hackers, not the casual user).
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[H /ul]
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<Q> Where do I get GnuPG?
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You can download the GNU Privacy Guard from its primary FTP server
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[H a href=[$hGPGFTP]/gcrypt/]<[$hGPGFTP]/gcrypt/>[H /a] or from one of the mirrors:
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[H a href=[$hGPGHTTP]/download/mirrors.html]
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<[$hGPGHTTP]/download/mirrors.html>
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[H /a]
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The current stable version is [$hVERSION]. Please upgrade to this version as
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it includes additional features, functions and security fixes that may
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not have existed in prior versions.
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<S> INSTALLATION
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<Q> Which OSes does GnuPG run on?
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It should run on most Unices as well as Windows versions (including
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Windows NT/2000) and Macintosh OS/X. A list of OSes reported to be OK
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is presented at:
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[H a href=[$hGPGHTTP]/download/supported_systems.html]
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<[$hGPGHTTP]/download/supported_systems.html>
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[H /a]
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<Q> Which random data gatherer should I use?
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"Good" random numbers are crucial for the security of your encryption.
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Different operating systems provide a variety of more or less quality
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random data. Linux and *BSD provide kernel generated random data
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through /dev/random - this should be the preferred choice on these
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systems. Also Solaris users with the SUNWski package installed have
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a /dev/random. In these cases, use the configure option:
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[H samp]
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--enable-static-rnd=linux
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[H /samp]
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In addition, there's also the kernel random device by Andi Maier
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[H a href= http://www.cosy.sbg.ac.at/~andi/SUNrand/]<http://www.cosy.sbg.ac.at/~andi/SUNrand/>[H /a], but it's still beta. Use at your
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own risk!
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On other systems, the Entropy Gathering Daemon (EGD) is a good choice.
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It is a perl-daemon that monitors system activity and hashes it into
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random data. See the download page [H a href=[$hGPGHTTP]/download/]<[$hGPGHTTP]/download/>[H /a]
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to obtain EGD. Use:
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[H samp]
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--enable-static-rnd=egd
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[H /samp]
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here.
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If the above options do not work, you can use the random number
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generator "unix". This is [H B]very[H /B] slow and should be avoided. The
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random quality isn't very good so don't use it on sensitive data.
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<Didea>
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<Q> How do I include support for RSA and IDEA?
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RSA is included as of GnuPG version 1.0.3.
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The official GnuPG distribution does not contain IDEA due to a patent
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restriction. The patent does not expire before 2007 so don't expect
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official support before then.
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However, there is an unofficial module to include it even in earlier
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versions of GnuPG. It's available from
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[H a href=ftp://ftp.gnupg.dk/pub/contrib-dk/]<ftp://ftp.gnupg.dk/pub/contrib-dk/>[H /a]. Look for:
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[H pre]
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idea.c.gz (c module)
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idea.c.gz.sig (signature file)
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[H /pre]
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[H pre]
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ideadll.zip (c module and win32 dll)
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ideadll.zip.sig (signature file)
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[H /pre]
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Compilation directives are in the headers of these files. You will
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then need to add the following line to your ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf or
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~/.gnupg/options file:
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[H samp]
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load-extension idea
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[H /samp]
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<S> USAGE
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<Q> What is the recommended key size?
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1024 bit for DSA signatures; even for plain Elgamal signatures.
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This is sufficient as the size of the hash is probably the weakest
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link if the key size is larger than 1024 bits. Encryption keys may
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have greater sizes, but you should then check the fingerprint of
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this key:
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[H samp]
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$ gpg --fingerprint <user ID>
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[H /samp]
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As for the key algorithms, you should stick with the default (i.e.,
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DSA signature and Elgamal encryption). An Elgamal signing key has
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the following disadvantages: the signature is larger, it is hard
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to create such a key useful for signatures which can withstand some
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real world attacks, you don't get any extra security compared to
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DSA, and there might be compatibility problems with certain PGP
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versions. It has only been introduced because at the time it was
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not clear whether there was a patent on DSA.
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<Q> Why does it sometimes take so long to create keys?
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The problem here is that we need a lot of random bytes and for that
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we (on Linux the /dev/random device) must collect some random data.
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It is really not easy to fill the Linux internal entropy buffer; I
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talked to Ted Ts'o and he commented that the best way to fill the
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buffer is to play with your keyboard. Good security has its price.
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What I do is to hit several times on the shift, control, alternate,
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and caps lock keys, because these keys do not produce output to the
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screen. This way you get your keys really fast (it's the same thing
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PGP2 does).
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Another problem might be another program which eats up your random
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bytes (a program (look at your daemons) that reads from /dev/random).
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<Q> And it really takes long when I work on a remote system. Why?
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Don't do this at all! You should never create keys or even use GnuPG
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on a remote system because you normally have no physical control
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over your secret key ring (which is in most cases vulnerable to
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advanced dictionary attacks) - I strongly encourage everyone to only
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create keys on a local computer (a disconnected laptop is probably
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the best choice) and if you need it on your connected box (I know,
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we all do this) be sure to have a strong password for both your
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account and for your secret key, and that you can trust your system
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administrator.
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When I check GnuPG on a remote system via ssh (I have no Alpha here)
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;-) I have the same problem. It takes a *very* long time to create
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the keys, so I use a special option, --quick-random, to generate
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insecure keys which are only good for some tests.
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<Q> What is the difference between options and commands?
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If you do a 'gpg --help', you will get two separate lists. The first
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is a list of commands. The second is a list of options. Whenever you
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run GPG, you [H b]must[H /b] pick exactly one command (with one exception,
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see below). You [H b]may[H /b] pick one or more options. The command should,
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just by convention, come at the end of the argument list, after all
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the options. If the command takes a file (all the basic ones do),
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the filename comes at the very end. So the basic way to run gpg is:
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[H samp]
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$ gpg [--option something] [--option2] [--option3 something] --command file
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[H /samp]
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Some options take arguments. For example, the --output option (which
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can be abbreviated as -o) is an option that takes a filename. The
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option's argument must follow immediately after the option itself,
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otherwise gpg doesn't know which option the argument is supposed to
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paired with. As an option, --output and its filename must come before
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the command. The --recipient (-r) option takes a name or keyID to
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encrypt the message to, which must come right after the -r option.
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The --encrypt (or -e) command comes after all the options and is
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followed by the file you wish to encrypt. Therefore in this example
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the command-line issued would be:
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[H samp]
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$ gpg -r alice -o secret.txt -e test.txt
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[H /samp]
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If you write the options out in full, it is easier to read:
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[H samp]
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$ gpg --recipient alice --output secret.txt --encrypt test.txt
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[H /samp]
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If you're encrypting to a file with the extension ".txt", then you'd
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probably expect to see ASCII-armored text in the file (not binary),
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so you need to add the --armor (-a) option, which doesn't take any
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arguments:
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[H samp]
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$ gpg --armor --recipient alice --output secret.txt --encrypt test.txt
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[H /samp]
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If you imagine square brackets around the optional parts, it becomes
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a bit clearer:
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[H samp]
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$ gpg [--armor] [--recipient alice] [--output secret.txt] --encrypt test.txt
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[H /samp]
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The optional parts can be rearranged any way you want:
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[H samp]
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$ gpg --output secret.txt --recipient alice --armor --encrypt test.txt
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[H /samp]
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If your filename begins with a hyphen (e.g. "-a.txt"), GnuPG assumes
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this is an option and may complain. To avoid this you have to either
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use "./-a.txt", or stop the option and command processing with two
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hyphens: "-- -a.txt".
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[H B]The exception to using only one command:[H /B] signing and encrypting
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at the same time. For this you can combine both commands, such as in:
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[H samp]
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$ gpg [--options] --sign --encrypt foo.txt
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[H /samp]
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<Q> I can't delete a user ID on my secret keyring because it has
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already been deleted on my public keyring. What can I do?
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Because you can only select from the public key ring, there is no
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direct way to do this. However it is not very complicated to do
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anyway. Create a new user ID with exactly the same name and you
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will see that there are now two identical user IDs on the secret
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ring. Now select this user ID and delete it. Both user IDs will be
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removed from the secret ring.
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<Q> I can't delete my secret key because the public key disappeared.
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What can I do?
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To select a key a search is always done on the public keyring,
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therefore it is not possible to select a secret key without
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having the public key. Normally it should never happen that the
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public key got lost but the secret key is still available. The
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reality is different, so GnuPG implements a special way to deal
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with it: Simply use the long keyID to specify the key to delete,
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which can be obtained by using the --with-colons options (it is
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the fifth field in the lines beginning with "sec").
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If you've lost your public key and need to recreate it instead
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for continued use with your secret key, you may be able to use
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gpgsplit as detailed in question <Rgpgsplit>.
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<Q> What are trust, validity and ownertrust?
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With GnuPG, the term "ownertrust" is used instead of "trust" to
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help clarify that this is the value you have assigned to a key
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to express how much you trust the owner of this key to correctly
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sign (and thereby introduce) other keys. The "validity", or
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calculated trust, is a value which indicates how much GnuPG
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considers a key as being valid (that it really belongs to the
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one who claims to be the owner of the key). For more information
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on trust values see the chapter "The Web of Trust" in The GNU
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Privacy Handbook.
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<Q> How do I sign a patch file?
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Use "gpg --clearsign --not-dash-escaped ...". The problem with
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--clearsign is that all lines starting with a dash are quoted with
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"- "; obviously diff produces many lines starting with a dash and
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these are then quoted and that is not good for a patch ;-). To use
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a patch file without removing the cleartext signature, the special
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option --not-dash-escaped may be used to suppress generation of
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these escape sequences. You should not mail such a patch because
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spaces and line endings are also subject to the signature and a
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mailer may not preserve these. If you want to mail a file you can
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simply sign it using your MUA (Mail User Agent).
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<Q> Where is the "encrypt-to-self" option?
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Use "--encrypt-to your_keyID". You can use more than one of these
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options. To temporarily override the use of this additional key,
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you can use the option "--no-encrypt-to".
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<Q> How can I get rid of the Version and Comment headers in armored
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messages?
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Use "--no-version --comment ''". Note that the left over blank line
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is required by the protocol.
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<Q> What does the "You are using the xxxx character set." mean?
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This note is printed when UTF-8 mapping has to be done. Make sure
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that the displayed character set is the one you have activated on
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your system. Since "iso-8859-1" is the character set most used,
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this is the default. You can change the charset with the option
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"--charset". It is important that your active character set matches
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the one displayed - if not, restrict yourself to plain 7 bit ASCII
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and no mapping has to be done.
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<Q> How can I get list of key IDs used to encrypt a message?
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[H samp]
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$ gpg --batch --decrypt --list-only --status-fd 1 2>/dev/null |
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awk '/^\[GNUPG:\] ENC_TO / { print $3 }'
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[H /samp]
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<Q> Why can't I decrypt files encrypted as symmetrical-only (-c) with
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a version of GnuPG prior to 1.0.1.
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There was a bug in GnuPG versions prior to 1.0.1 which affected files
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only if 3DES or Twofish was used for symmetric-only encryption (this has
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never been the default). The bug has been fixed, but to enable decryption
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of old files you should run gpg with the option "--emulate-3des-s2k-bug",
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decrypt the file and encrypt it again without this option.
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NOTE: This option was removed in GnuPG development version 1.1.0 and later
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updates, so you will need to use a version between 1.0.1 and 1.0.7 to
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re-encrypt any affected files.
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<Q> How can I use GnuPG in an automated environment?
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You should use the option --batch and don't use passphrases as
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there is usually no way to store it more securely than on the
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secret keyring itself. The suggested way to create keys for an
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automated environment is:
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On a secure machine:
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[H ol]
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[H li] If you want to do automatic signing, create a signing subkey
|
|
for your key (use the interactive key editing menu by issueing
|
|
the command 'gpg --edit-key keyID', enter "addkey" and select
|
|
the DSA key type).
|
|
[H li] Make sure that you use a passphrase (needed by the current
|
|
implementation).
|
|
[H li] gpg --export-secret-subkeys --no-comment foo >secring.auto
|
|
[H li] Copy secring.auto and the public keyring to a test directory.
|
|
[H li] Change to this directory.
|
|
[H li] gpg --homedir . --edit foo and use "passwd" to remove the
|
|
passphrase from the subkeys. You may also want to remove all
|
|
unused subkeys.
|
|
[H li] Copy secring.auto to a floppy and carry it to the target box.
|
|
[H /ol]
|
|
|
|
On the target machine:
|
|
[H ol]
|
|
[H li] Install secring.auto as the secret keyring.
|
|
[H li] Now you can start your new service. It's also a good idea to
|
|
install an intrusion detection system so that you hopefully
|
|
get a notice of an successful intrusion, so that you in turn
|
|
can revoke all the subkeys installed on that machine and
|
|
install new subkeys.
|
|
[H /ol]
|
|
|
|
<Q> Which email-client can I use with GnuPG?
|
|
|
|
Using GnuPG to encrypt email is one of the most popular uses.
|
|
Several mail clients or mail user agents (MUAs) support GnuPG to
|
|
varying degrees. Simplifying a bit, there are two ways mail can be
|
|
encrypted with GnuPG: the "old style" ASCII armor (i.e. cleartext
|
|
encryption), and RFC 2015 style (previously PGP/MIME, now OpenPGP).
|
|
The latter has full MIME support. Some MUAs support only one of
|
|
them, so whichever you actually use depends on your needs as well
|
|
as the capabilities of your addressee. As well, support may be
|
|
native to the MUA, or provided via "plug-ins" or external tools.
|
|
|
|
The following list is not exhaustive:
|
|
|
|
[H pre]
|
|
MUA OpenPGP ASCII How? (N,P,T)
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Calypso N Y P (Unixmail)
|
|
Elm N Y T (mailpgp,morepgp)
|
|
Elm ME+ N Y N
|
|
Emacs/Gnus Y Y T (Mailcrypt,gpg.el)
|
|
Emacs/Mew Y Y N
|
|
Emacs/VM N Y T (Mailcrypt)
|
|
Evolution Y Y N
|
|
Exmh Y Y N
|
|
GNUMail.app Y Y P (PGPBundle)
|
|
GPGMail Y Y N
|
|
KMail (<=1.4.x) N Y N
|
|
KMail (1.5.x) Y(P) Y(N) P/N
|
|
Mozilla Y Y P (Enigmail)
|
|
Mulberry Y Y P
|
|
Mutt Y Y N
|
|
Sylpheed Y Y N
|
|
Claws-mail Y Y N
|
|
TkRat Y Y N
|
|
XEmacs/Gnus Y Y T (Mailcrypt)
|
|
XEmacs/Mew Y Y N
|
|
XEmacs/VM N Y T (Mailcrypt)
|
|
XFmail Y Y N
|
|
|
|
N - Native, P - Plug-in, T - External Tool
|
|
[H /pre]
|
|
|
|
The following table lists proprietary MUAs. The GNU Project
|
|
suggests against the use of these programs, but they are listed
|
|
for interoperability reasons for your convenience.
|
|
|
|
[H pre]
|
|
MUA OpenPGP ASCII How? (N,P,T)
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Apple Mail Y Y P (GPGMail)
|
|
Becky2 Y Y P (BkGnuPG)
|
|
Eudora Y Y P (EuroraGPG)
|
|
Eudora Pro Y Y P (EudoraGPG)
|
|
Lotus Notes N Y P
|
|
Netscape 4.x N Y P
|
|
Netscape 7.x Y Y P (Enigmail)
|
|
Novell Groupwise N Y P
|
|
Outlook N Y P (G-Data)
|
|
Outlook Express N Y P (GPGOE)
|
|
Pegasus N Y P (QDPGP,PM-PGP)
|
|
Pine N Y T (pgpenvelope,(gpg|pgp)4pine)
|
|
Postme N Y P (GPGPPL)
|
|
The Bat! N Y P (Ritlabs)
|
|
[H /pre]
|
|
|
|
Good overviews of OpenPGP-support can be found at:[H br]
|
|
[H a href=http://www.openpgp.fr.st/courrier_en.html]<http://www.openpgp.fr.st/courrier_en.html>[H /a] and[H br]
|
|
[H a href=http://www.bretschneidernet.de/tips/secmua.html]<http://www.bretschneidernet.de/tips/secmua.html>[H /a].
|
|
|
|
Users of Win32 MUAs that lack OpenPGP support may look into
|
|
using GPGrelay [H a href=http://gpgrelay.sourceforge.net]<http://gpgrelay.sourceforge.net>[H /a], a small
|
|
email-relaying server that uses GnuPG to enable many email clients
|
|
to send and receive emails that conform to PGP-MIME (RFC 2015).
|
|
|
|
<Q> Can't we have a gpg library?
|
|
|
|
This has been frequently requested. However, the current viewpoint
|
|
of the GnuPG maintainers is that this would lead to several security
|
|
issues and will therefore not be implemented in the foreseeable
|
|
future. However, for some areas of application gpgme could do the
|
|
trick. You'll find it at [H a href=[$hGPGFTP]/gcrypt/alpha/gpgme]<[$hGPGFTP]/gcrypt/alpha/gpgme>[H /a].
|
|
|
|
<Q> I have successfully generated a revocation certificate, but I don't
|
|
understand how to send it to the key servers.
|
|
|
|
Most keyservers don't accept a 'bare' revocation certificate. You
|
|
have to import the certificate into gpg first:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --import my-revocation.asc
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
then send the revoked key to the keyservers:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --keyserver certserver.pgp.com --send-keys mykeyid
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
(or use a keyserver web interface for this).
|
|
|
|
<Dhomedir>
|
|
<Q> How do I put my keyring in a different directory?
|
|
|
|
GnuPG keeps several files in a special homedir directory. These
|
|
include the options file, pubring.gpg, secring.gpg, trustdb.gpg,
|
|
and others. GnuPG will always create and use these files. On unices,
|
|
the homedir is usually ~/.gnupg; on Windows it is name "gnupg" and
|
|
found below the user's application directory. Run the gpg and
|
|
pass the option --version to see the name of that directory.
|
|
|
|
If you want to put your keyrings somewhere else, use the option:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
--homedir /my/path/
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
to make GnuPG create all its files in that directory. Your keyring
|
|
will be "/my/path/pubring.gpg". This way you can store your secrets
|
|
on a floppy disk. Don't use "--keyring" as its purpose is to specify
|
|
additional keyring files.
|
|
|
|
<Q> How do I verify signed packages?
|
|
|
|
Before you can verify the signature that accompanies a package,
|
|
you must first have the vendor, organisation, or issueing person's
|
|
key imported into your public keyring. To prevent GnuPG warning
|
|
messages the key should also be validated (or locally signed).
|
|
|
|
You will also need to download the detached signature file along
|
|
with the package. These files will usually have the same name as
|
|
the package, with either a binary (.sig) or ASCII armor (.asc)
|
|
extension.
|
|
|
|
Once their key has been imported, and the package and accompanying
|
|
signature files have been downloaded, use:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --verify sigfile signed-file
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
If the signature file has the same base name as the package file,
|
|
the package can also be verified by specifying just the signature
|
|
file, as GnuPG will derive the package's file name from the name
|
|
given (less the .sig or .asc extension). For example, to verify a
|
|
package named foobar.tar.gz against its detached binary signature
|
|
file, use:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --verify foobar.tar.gz.sig
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
<Q> How do I export a keyring with only selected signatures (keys)?
|
|
|
|
If you're wanting to create a keyring with only a subset of keys
|
|
selected from a master keyring (for a club, user group, or company
|
|
department for example), simply specify the keys you want to export:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --armor --export key1 key2 key3 key4 > keys1-4.asc
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
<Dgpgsplit>
|
|
<Q> I still have my secret key, but lost my public key. What can I do?
|
|
|
|
All OpenPGP secret keys have a copy of the public key inside them,
|
|
and in a worst-case scenario, you can create yourself a new public
|
|
key using the secret key.
|
|
|
|
A tool to convert a secret key into a public one has been included
|
|
(it's actually a new option for gpgsplit) and is available with GnuPG
|
|
versions 1.2.1 or later (or can be found in CVS). It works like this:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpgsplit --no-split --secret-to-public secret.gpg >publickey.gpg
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
One should first try to export the secret key and convert just this
|
|
one. Using the entire secret keyring should work too. After this has
|
|
been done, the publickey.gpg file can be imported into GnuPG as usual.
|
|
|
|
<Q> Clearsigned messages sent from my web-mail account have an invalid
|
|
signature. Why?
|
|
|
|
Check to make sure the settings for your web-based email account
|
|
do not use HTML formatting for the pasted clearsigned message. This can
|
|
alter the message with embedded HTML markup tags or spaces, resulting
|
|
in an invalid signature. The recipient may be able to copy the signed
|
|
message block to a text file for verification, or the web email
|
|
service may allow you to attach the clearsigned message as a file
|
|
if plaintext messages are not an option.
|
|
|
|
|
|
<S> COMPATIBILITY ISSUES
|
|
|
|
<Dcompat>
|
|
<Q> How can I encrypt a message with GnuPG so that PGP is able to decrypt it?
|
|
|
|
It depends on the PGP version.
|
|
|
|
[H ul]
|
|
[H li]PGP 2.x[H br]
|
|
You can't do that because PGP 2.x normally uses IDEA which is not
|
|
supported by GnuPG as it is patented (see <Ridea>), but if you have a
|
|
modified version of PGP you can try this:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --rfc1991 --cipher-algo 3des ...
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
Please don't pipe the data to encrypt to gpg but provide it using a
|
|
filename; otherwise, PGP 2 will not be able to handle it.
|
|
|
|
As for conventional encryption, you can't do this for PGP 2.
|
|
|
|
[H li]PGP 5.x and higher[H br]
|
|
You need to provide two additional options:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
--compress-algo 1 --cipher-algo cast5
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
You may also use "3des" instead of "cast5", and "blowfish" does not
|
|
work with all versions of PGP 5. You may also want to put:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
compress-algo 1
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
into your ~/.gnupg/options file - this does not affect normal GnuPG
|
|
operation.
|
|
|
|
This applies to conventional encryption as well.
|
|
[H /UL]
|
|
|
|
<Q> How do I migrate from PGP 2.x to GnuPG?
|
|
|
|
PGP 2 uses the RSA and IDEA encryption algorithms. Whereas the RSA
|
|
patent has expired and RSA is included as of GnuPG 1.0.3, the IDEA
|
|
algorithm is still patented until 2007. Under certain conditions you
|
|
may use IDEA even today. In that case, you may refer to Question
|
|
<Ridea> about how to add IDEA support to GnuPG and read
|
|
[H a href=[$hGPGHTTP]/gph/en/pgp2x.html]<[$hGPGHTTP]/gph/en/pgp2x.html>[H /a] to perform the migration.
|
|
|
|
<Q> (removed)
|
|
|
|
(empty)
|
|
|
|
<Q> Why is PGP 5.x not able to encrypt messages with some keys?
|
|
|
|
PGP, Inc. refuses to accept Elgamal keys of type 20 even for
|
|
encryption. They only support type 16 (which is identical at least
|
|
for decryption). To be more inter-operable, GnuPG (starting with
|
|
version 0.3.3) now also uses type 16 for the Elgamal subkey which is
|
|
created if the default key algorithm is chosen. You may add a type
|
|
16 Elgamal key to your public key, which is easy as your key
|
|
signatures are still valid.
|
|
|
|
<Q> Why is PGP 5.x not able to verify my messages?
|
|
|
|
PGP 5.x does not accept v4 signatures for data material but OpenPGP
|
|
requests generation of v4 signatures for all kind of data, that's why
|
|
GnuPG defaults to them. Use the option "--force-v3-sigs" to generate
|
|
v3 signatures for data.
|
|
|
|
<Q> How do I transfer owner trust values from PGP to GnuPG?
|
|
|
|
There is a script in the tools directory to help you. After you have
|
|
imported the PGP keyring you can give this command:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ lspgpot pgpkeyring | gpg --import-ownertrust
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
where pgpkeyring is the original keyring and not the GnuPG keyring
|
|
you might have created in the first step.
|
|
|
|
<Q> PGP does not like my secret key.
|
|
|
|
Older PGPs probably bail out on some private comment packets used by
|
|
GnuPG. These packets are fully in compliance with OpenPGP; however
|
|
PGP is not really OpenPGP aware. A workaround is to export the
|
|
secret keys with this command:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --export-secret-keys --no-comment -a your-KeyID
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
Another possibility is this: by default, GnuPG encrypts your secret
|
|
key using the Blowfish symmetric algorithm. Older PGPs will only
|
|
understand 3DES, CAST5, or IDEA symmetric algorithms. Using the
|
|
following method you can re-encrypt your secret gpg key with a
|
|
different algo:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --s2k-cipher-algo=CAST5 --s2k-digest-algo=SHA1
|
|
--compress-algo=1 --edit-key <username>
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
Then use passwd to change the password (just change it to the same
|
|
thing, but it will encrypt the key with CAST5 this time).
|
|
|
|
Now you can export it and PGP should be able to handle it.
|
|
|
|
For PGP 6.x the following options work to export a key:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --s2k-cipher-algo 3des --compress-algo 1 --rfc1991
|
|
--export-secret-keys <KeyID>
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
<Doptions>
|
|
<Q> GnuPG no longer installs a ~/.gnupg/options file. Is it missing?
|
|
|
|
No. The ~/.gnupg/options file has been renamed to ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf for
|
|
new installs as of version 1.1.92. If an existing ~/.gnupg/options file
|
|
is found during an upgrade it will still be used, but this change was
|
|
required to have a more consistent naming scheme with forthcoming tools.
|
|
An existing options file can be renamed to gpg.conf for users upgrading,
|
|
or receiving the message that the "old default options file" is ignored
|
|
(occurs if both a gpg.conf and an options file are found).
|
|
|
|
<Q> How do you export GnuPG keys for use with PGP?
|
|
|
|
This has come up fairly often, so here's the HOWTO:
|
|
|
|
PGP can (for most key types) use secret keys generated by GnuPG. The
|
|
problems that come up occasionally are generally because GnuPG
|
|
supports a few more features from the OpenPGP standard than PGP does.
|
|
If your secret key has any of those features in use, then PGP will
|
|
reject the key or you will have problems communicating later. Note
|
|
that PGP doesn't do Elgamal signing keys at all, so they are not
|
|
usable with any version.
|
|
|
|
These instructions should work for GnuPG 1.0.7 and later, and PGP
|
|
7.0.3 and later.
|
|
|
|
Start by editing the key. Most of this line is not really necessary
|
|
as the default values are correct, but it does not hurt to repeat the
|
|
values, as this will override them in case you have something else set
|
|
in your options file.
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --s2k-cipher-algo cast5 --s2k-digest-algo sha1 --s2k-mode 3
|
|
--simple-sk-checksum --edit KeyID
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
Turn off some features. Set the list of preferred ciphers, hashes,
|
|
and compression algorithms to things that PGP can handle. (Yes, I
|
|
know this is an odd list of ciphers, but this is what PGP itself uses,
|
|
minus IDEA).
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
> setpref S9 S8 S7 S3 S2 S10 H2 H3 Z1 Z0
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
Now put the list of preferences onto the key.
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
> updpref
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
Finally we must decrypt and re-encrypt the key, making sure that we
|
|
encrypt with a cipher that PGP likes. We set this up in the --edit
|
|
line above, so now we just need to change the passphrase to make it
|
|
take effect. You can use the same passphrase if you like, or take
|
|
this opportunity to actually change it.
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
> passwd
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
Save our work.
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
> save
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
Now we can do the usual export:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --export KeyID > mypublickey.pgp[H br]
|
|
$ gpg --export-secret-key KeyID > mysecretkey.pgp
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
Thanks to David Shaw for this information!
|
|
|
|
|
|
<S> PROBLEMS and ERROR MESSAGES
|
|
|
|
<Q> Why do I get "gpg: Warning: using insecure memory!"
|
|
|
|
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 them to disk and thereby keeping your
|
|
secret keys really secret. 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.
|
|
|
|
To setuid(root) permissions on the gpg binary you can either use:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ chmod u+s /path/to/gpg
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
or
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ chmod 4755 /path/to/gpg
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
Some refrain from using setuid(root) unless absolutely required for
|
|
security reasons. Please check with your system administrator if you
|
|
are not able to make these determinations yourself.
|
|
|
|
On UnixWare 2.x and 7.x you should install GnuPG with the 'plock'
|
|
privilege to get the same effect:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ filepriv -f plock /path/to/gpg
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
If you can't or don't want to install GnuPG setuid(root), you can
|
|
use the option "--no-secmem-warning" or put:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
no-secmem-warning
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
in your ~/.gnupg/options or ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf file (this disables
|
|
the warning).
|
|
|
|
On some systems (e.g., Windows) GnuPG does not lock memory pages
|
|
and older GnuPG versions (<=1.0.4) issue the warning:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
gpg: Please note that you don't have secure memory
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
This warning can't be switched off by the above option because it
|
|
was thought to be too serious an issue. However, it confused users
|
|
too much, so the warning was eventually removed.
|
|
|
|
<Q> Large File Support doesn't work ...
|
|
|
|
LFS works correctly in post-1.0.4 versions. If configure doesn't
|
|
detect it, try a different (i.e., better) compiler. egcs 1.1.2 works
|
|
fine, other gccs sometimes don't. BTW, several compilation problems
|
|
of GnuPG 1.0.3 and 1.0.4 on HP-UX and Solaris were due to broken LFS
|
|
support.
|
|
|
|
<Q> In the edit menu the trust values are not displayed correctly after
|
|
signing uids. Why?
|
|
|
|
This happens because some information is stored immediately in
|
|
the trustdb, but the actual trust calculation can be done after the
|
|
save command. This is a "not easy to fix" design bug which will be
|
|
addressed in some future release.
|
|
|
|
<Q> What does "skipping pubkey 1: already loaded" mean?
|
|
|
|
As of GnuPG 1.0.3, the RSA algorithm is included. If you still have
|
|
a "load-extension rsa" in your options file, the above message
|
|
occurs. Just remove the load command from the options file.
|
|
|
|
<Q> GnuPG 1.0.4 doesn't create ~/.gnupg ...
|
|
|
|
That's a known bug, already fixed in newer versions.
|
|
|
|
<Q> An Elgamal signature does not verify anymore since version 1.0.2 ...
|
|
|
|
Use the option --emulate-md-encode-bug.
|
|
|
|
<Q> Old versions of GnuPG can't verify Elgamal signatures
|
|
|
|
Update to GnuPG 1.0.2 or newer.
|
|
|
|
<Q> When I use --clearsign, the plain text has sometimes extra dashes
|
|
in it - why?
|
|
|
|
This is called dash-escaped text and is required by OpenPGP.
|
|
It always happens when a line starts with a dash ("-") and is
|
|
needed to make the lines that structure signature and text
|
|
(i.e., "-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----") to be the only lines
|
|
that start with two dashes.
|
|
|
|
If you use GnuPG to process those messages, the extra dashes
|
|
are removed. Good mail clients remove those extra dashes when
|
|
displaying such a message.
|
|
|
|
<Q> What is the thing with "can't handle multiple signatures"?
|
|
|
|
Due to different message formats GnuPG is not always able to split
|
|
a file with multiple signatures unambiguously into its parts. This
|
|
error message informs you that there is something wrong with the input.
|
|
|
|
The only way to have multiple signatures in a file is by using the
|
|
OpenPGP format with one-pass-signature packets (which is GnuPG's
|
|
default) or the cleartext signed format.
|
|
|
|
<Q> If I submit a key to a keyserver, nothing happens ...
|
|
|
|
You are most likely using GnuPG 1.0.2 or older on Windows. That's
|
|
feature isn't yet implemented, but it's a bug not to say it. Newer
|
|
versions issue a warning. Upgrade to 1.4.5 or newer.
|
|
|
|
<Q> I get "gpg: waiting for lock ..."
|
|
|
|
A previous instance of gpg has most likely exited abnormally and left
|
|
a lock file. Go to ~/.gnupg and look for .*.lock files and remove them.
|
|
|
|
<Q> Older gpg binaries (e.g., 1.0) have problems with keys from newer
|
|
gpg binaries ...
|
|
|
|
As of 1.0.3, keys generated with gpg are created with preferences to
|
|
TWOFISH (and AES since 1.0.4) and that also means that they have the
|
|
capability to use the new MDC encryption method. This will go into
|
|
OpenPGP soon, and is also suppoted by PGP 7. This new method avoids
|
|
a (not so new) attack on all email encryption systems.
|
|
|
|
This in turn means that pre-1.0.3 gpg binaries have problems with
|
|
newer keys. Because of security and bug fixes, you should keep your
|
|
GnuPG installation in a recent state anyway. As a workaround, you can
|
|
force gpg to use a previous default cipher algo by putting:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
cipher-algo cast5
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
into your options file.
|
|
|
|
<Q> With 1.0.4, I get "this cipher algorithm is deprecated ..."
|
|
|
|
If you just generated a new key and get this message while
|
|
encrypting, you've witnessed a bug in 1.0.4. It uses the new AES
|
|
cipher Rijndael that is incorrectly being referred as "deprecated".
|
|
Ignore this warning, more recent versions of gpg are corrected.
|
|
|
|
<Q> Some dates are displayed as ????-??-??. Why?
|
|
|
|
Due to constraints in most libc implementations, dates beyond
|
|
2038-01-19 can't be displayed correctly. 64-bit OSes are not
|
|
affected by this problem. To avoid printing wrong dates, GnuPG
|
|
instead prints some question marks. To see the correct value, you
|
|
can use the options --with-colons and --fixed-list-mode.
|
|
|
|
<Q> I still have a problem. How do I report a bug?
|
|
|
|
Are you sure that it's not been mentioned somewhere on the mailing
|
|
lists? Did you have a look at the bug list (you'll find a link to
|
|
the list of reported bugs on the documentation page). If you're not
|
|
sure about it being a bug, you can send mail to the gnupg-devel
|
|
list. Otherwise, use the bug tracking system
|
|
[H a href=http://bugs.gnupg.org]<http://bugs.gnupg.org>[H /a].
|
|
|
|
<Q> Why doesn't GnuPG support X.509 certificates?
|
|
|
|
That is only the case for GnuPG version 1.x. GnuPG 2.x fully
|
|
supports X.509 and S/MIME using the gpgsm tool.
|
|
|
|
<Q> Why do national characters in my user ID look funny?
|
|
|
|
According to OpenPGP, GnuPG encodes user ID strings (and other
|
|
things) using UTF-8. In this encoding of Unicode, most national
|
|
characters get encoded as two- or three-byte sequences. For
|
|
example, å (0xE5 in ISO-8859-1) becomes Ã¥ (0xC3,
|
|
0xA5). This might also be the reason why keyservers can't find
|
|
your key.
|
|
|
|
<Q> I get 'sed' errors when running ./configure on Mac OS X ...
|
|
|
|
This will be fixed after GnuPG has been upgraded to autoconf-2.50.
|
|
Until then, find the line setting CDPATH in the configure script
|
|
and place an:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
unset CDPATH
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
statement below it.
|
|
|
|
<Q> Why does GnuPG 1.0.6 bail out on keyrings used with 1.0.7?
|
|
|
|
There is a small bug in 1.0.6 which didn't parse trust packets
|
|
correctly. You may want to apply this patch if you can't upgrade:
|
|
|
|
[H a href=http://www.gnupg.org/developer/gpg-woody-fix.txt]<http://www.gnupg.org/developer/gpg-woody-fix.txt>[H /a]
|
|
|
|
<Q> I upgraded to GnuPG version 1.0.7 and now it takes longer to load my
|
|
keyrings. What can I do?
|
|
|
|
The way signature states are stored has changed so that v3 signatures
|
|
can be supported. You can use the new --rebuild-keydb-caches migration
|
|
command, which was built into this release and increases the speed of
|
|
many operations for existing keyrings.
|
|
|
|
<Q> Doesn't a fully trusted user ID on a key prevent warning messages
|
|
when encrypting to other IDs on the key?
|
|
|
|
No. That was actually a key validity bug in GnuPG 1.2.1 and earlier
|
|
versions. As part of the development of GnuPG 1.2.2, a bug was
|
|
discovered in the key validation code. This bug causes keys with
|
|
more than one user ID to give all user IDs on the key the amount of
|
|
validity given to the most-valid key. The bug has been fixed in GnuPG
|
|
release 1.2.2, and upgrading is the recommended fix for this problem.
|
|
More information and a patch for a some pre-1.2.2 versions of GnuPG
|
|
can be found at:
|
|
|
|
[H a href=http://lists.gnupg.org/pipermail/gnupg-announce/2003q2/000268.html]<http://lists.gnupg.org/pipermail/gnupg-announce/2003q2/000268.html>[H /a]
|
|
|
|
<Q> I just compiled GnuPG from source on my GNU/Linux RPM-based system
|
|
and it's not working. Why?
|
|
|
|
Many GNU/Linux distributions that are RPM-based will install a
|
|
version of GnuPG as part of its standard installation, placing the
|
|
binaries in the /usr/bin directory. Later, compiling and installing
|
|
GnuPG from source other than from a source RPM won't normally
|
|
overwrite these files, as the default location for placement of
|
|
GnuPG binaries is in /usr/local/bin unless the '--prefix' switch
|
|
is used during compile to specify an alternate location. Since the
|
|
/usr/bin directory more than likely appears in your path before
|
|
/usr/local/bin, the older RPM-version binaries will continue to
|
|
be used when called since they were not replaced.
|
|
|
|
To resolve this, uninstall the RPM-based version with 'rpm -e gnupg'
|
|
before installing the binaries compiled from source. If dependency
|
|
errors are displayed when attempting to uninstall the RPM (such as
|
|
when Red Hat's up2date is also installed, which uses GnuPG), uninstall
|
|
the RPM with 'rpm -e gnupg --nodeps' to force the uninstall. Any
|
|
dependent files should be automatically replaced during the install
|
|
of the compiled version. If the default /usr/local/bin directory is
|
|
used, some packages such as SuSE's Yast Online Update may need to be
|
|
configured to look for GnuPG binaries in the /usr/local/bin directory,
|
|
or symlinks can be created in /usr/bin that point to the binaries
|
|
located in /usr/local/bin.
|
|
|
|
|
|
<S> ADVANCED TOPICS
|
|
|
|
<Q> How does this whole thing work?
|
|
|
|
To generate a secret/public keypair, run:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --gen-key
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
and choose the default values.
|
|
|
|
Data that is encrypted with a public key can only be decrypted by
|
|
the matching secret key. The secret key is protected by a password,
|
|
the public key is not.
|
|
|
|
So to send your friend a message, you would encrypt your message
|
|
with his public key, and he would only be able to decrypt it by
|
|
having the secret key and putting in the password to use his secret
|
|
key.
|
|
|
|
GnuPG is also useful for signing things. Files that are encrypted
|
|
with the secret key can be decrypted with the public key. To sign
|
|
something, a hash is taken of the data, and then the hash is in some
|
|
form encoded with the secret key. If someone has your public key, they
|
|
can verify that it is from you and that it hasn't changed by checking
|
|
the encoded form of the hash with the public key.
|
|
|
|
A keyring is just a large file that stores keys. You have a public
|
|
keyring where you store yours and your friend's public keys. You have
|
|
a secret keyring that you keep your secret key on, and should be very
|
|
careful with. Never ever give anyone else access to it and use a *good*
|
|
passphrase to protect the data in it.
|
|
|
|
You can 'conventionally' encrypt something by using the option 'gpg -c'.
|
|
It is encrypted using a passphrase, and does not use public and secret
|
|
keys. If the person you send the data to knows that passphrase, they
|
|
can decrypt it. This is usually most useful for encrypting things to
|
|
yourself, although you can encrypt things to your own public key in the
|
|
same way. It should be used for communication with partners you know
|
|
and where it is easy to exchange the passphrases (e.g. with your boy
|
|
friend or your wife). The advantage is that you can change the
|
|
passphrase from time to time and decrease the risk, that many old
|
|
messages may be decrypted by people who accidently got your passphrase.
|
|
|
|
You can add and copy keys to and from your keyring with the 'gpg
|
|
--import' and 'gpg --export' command. 'gpg --export-secret-keys' will
|
|
export secret keys. This is normally not useful, but you can generate
|
|
the key on one machine then move it to another machine.
|
|
|
|
Keys can be signed under the 'gpg --edit-key' option. When you sign a
|
|
key, you are saying that you are certain that the key belongs to the
|
|
person it says it comes from. You should be very sure that is really
|
|
that person: You should verify the key fingerprint with:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --fingerprint KeyID
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
over the phone (if you really know the voice of the other person), at
|
|
a key signing party (which are often held at computer conferences),
|
|
or at a meeting of your local GNU/Linux User Group.
|
|
|
|
Hmm, what else. You may use the option '-o filename' to force output
|
|
to this filename (use '-' to force output to stdout). '-r' just lets
|
|
you specify the recipient (which public key you encrypt with) on the
|
|
command line instead of typing it interactively.
|
|
|
|
Oh yeah, this is important. By default all data is encrypted in some
|
|
weird binary format. If you want to have things appear in ASCII text
|
|
that is readable, just add the '-a' option. But the preferred method
|
|
is to use a MIME aware mail reader (Mutt, Pine and many more).
|
|
|
|
There is a small security glitch in the OpenPGP (and therefore GnuPG)
|
|
system; to avoid this you should always sign and encrypt a message
|
|
instead of only encrypting it.
|
|
|
|
<Q> Why are some signatures with an ELG-E key valid?
|
|
|
|
These are Elgamal keys generated by GnuPG in v3 (RFC 1991) packets.
|
|
The OpenPGP draft later changed the algorithm identifier for Elgamal
|
|
keys which are usable for signatures and encryption from 16 to 20.
|
|
GnuPG now uses 20 when it generates new Elgamal keys but still
|
|
accepts 16 (which is according to OpenPGP "encryption only") if this
|
|
key is in a v3 packet. GnuPG is the only program which had used
|
|
these v3 Elgamal keys - so this assumption is quite safe.
|
|
|
|
<Q> How does the whole trust thing work?
|
|
|
|
It works more or less like PGP. The difference is that the trust is
|
|
computed at the time it is needed. This is one of the reasons for
|
|
the trustdb which holds a list of valid key signatures. If you are
|
|
not running in batch mode you will be asked to assign a trust
|
|
parameter (ownertrust) to a key.
|
|
|
|
You can see the validity (calculated trust value) using this
|
|
command.
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --list-keys --with-colons
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
If the first field is "pub" or "uid", the second field shows you the
|
|
trust:
|
|
|
|
[H pre]
|
|
o = Unknown (this key is new to the system)
|
|
e = The key has expired
|
|
q = Undefined (no value assigned)
|
|
n = Don't trust this key at all
|
|
m = There is marginal trust in this key
|
|
f = The key is full trusted
|
|
u = The key is ultimately trusted; this is only used
|
|
for keys for which the secret key is also available.
|
|
r = The key has been revoked
|
|
d = The key has been disabled
|
|
[H /pre]
|
|
|
|
The value in the "pub" record is the best one of all "uid" records.
|
|
You can get a list of the assigned trust values (how much you trust
|
|
the owner to correctly sign another person's key) with:
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
$ gpg --list-ownertrust
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
The first field is the fingerprint of the primary key, the second
|
|
field is the assigned value:
|
|
|
|
[H pre]
|
|
- = No ownertrust value yet assigned or calculated.
|
|
n = Never trust this keyholder to correctly verify others signatures.
|
|
m = Have marginal trust in the keyholders capability to sign other
|
|
keys.
|
|
f = Assume that the key holder really knows how to sign keys.
|
|
u = No need to trust ourself because we have the secret key.
|
|
[H /pre]
|
|
|
|
Keep these values confidential because they express your opinions
|
|
about others. PGP stores this information with the keyring thus it
|
|
is not a good idea to publish a PGP keyring instead of exporting the
|
|
keyring. GnuPG stores the trust in the trustdb.gpg file so it is okay
|
|
to give a gpg keyring away (but we have a --export command too).
|
|
|
|
<Q> What kind of output is this: "key C26EE891.298, uid 09FB: ...."?
|
|
|
|
This is the internal representation of a user ID in the trustdb.
|
|
"C26EE891" is the keyid, "298" is the local ID (a record number in
|
|
the trustdb) and "09FB" is the last two bytes of a ripe-md-160 hash
|
|
of the user ID for this key.
|
|
|
|
<Q> How do I interpret some of the informational outputs?
|
|
|
|
While checking the validity of a key, GnuPG sometimes prints some
|
|
information which is prefixed with information about the checked
|
|
item.
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
"key 12345678.3456"
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
This is about the key with key ID 12345678 and the internal number
|
|
3456, which is the record number of the so called directory record
|
|
in the trustdb.
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
"uid 12345678.3456/ACDE"
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
This is about the user ID for the same key. To identify the user ID
|
|
the last two bytes of a ripe-md-160 over the user ID ring is printed.
|
|
|
|
[H samp]
|
|
"sig 12345678.3456/ACDE/9A8B7C6D"
|
|
[H /samp]
|
|
|
|
This is about the signature with key ID 9A8B7C6D for the above key
|
|
and user ID, if it is a signature which is direct on a key, the user
|
|
ID part is empty (..//..).
|
|
|
|
<Q> Are the header lines of a cleartext signature part of the signed
|
|
material?
|
|
|
|
No. For example you can add or remove "Comment:" lines. They have
|
|
a purpose like the mail header lines. However a "Hash:" line is
|
|
needed for OpenPGP signatures to tell the parser which hash
|
|
algorithm to use.
|
|
|
|
<Q> What is the list of preferred algorithms?
|
|
|
|
The list of preferred algorithms is a list of cipher, hash and
|
|
compression algorithms stored in the self-signature of a key during
|
|
key generation. When you encrypt a document, GnuPG uses this list
|
|
(which is then part of a public key) to determine which algorithms
|
|
to use. Basically it tells other people what algorithms the
|
|
recipient is able to handle and provides an order of preference.
|
|
|
|
<Q> How do I change the list of preferred algorithms?
|
|
|
|
In version 1.0.7 or later, you can use the edit menu and set the
|
|
new list of preference using the command "setpref"; the format of
|
|
this command resembles the output of the command "pref". The
|
|
preference is not changed immediately but the set preference will
|
|
be used when a new user ID is created. If you want to update the
|
|
preferences for existing user IDs, select those user IDs (or select
|
|
none to update all) and enter the command "updpref". Note that the
|
|
timestamp of the self-signature is increased by one second when
|
|
running this command.
|
|
|
|
<Q> How can I import all the missing signer keys?
|
|
|
|
If you imported a key and you want to also import all the signer's
|
|
keys, you can do this with this command:
|
|
|
|
gpg --check-sigs --with-colon KEYID \
|
|
| awk -F: '$1 == "sig" && $2 == "?" { print $5 }' \
|
|
| sort | uniq | xargs echo gpg --recv-keys
|
|
|
|
Note that the invocation of sort is also required to wait for the
|
|
of the listing before before starting the import.
|
|
|
|
|
|
<S> ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
|
|
|
|
Many thanks to Nils Ellmenreich for maintaining this FAQ file for
|
|
such a long time, Werner Koch for the original FAQ file, and to all
|
|
posters to gnupg-users and gnupg-devel. They all provided most of
|
|
the answers.
|
|
|
|
Also thanks to Casper Dik for providing us with a script to generate
|
|
this FAQ (he uses it for the excellent Solaris2 FAQ).
|
|
|
|
[H hr]
|
|
|
|
Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
|
|
51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02111, USA
|
|
|
|
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in
|
|
any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
|