gnupg/g10/dirmngr-conf.skel

70 lines
2.7 KiB
Plaintext

# dirmngr-conf.skel - Skeleton to create dirmngr.conf.
# (Note that the first three lines are not copied.)
#
# dirmngr.conf - Options for Dirmngr
# Written in 2015 by The GnuPG Project <https://gnupg.org>
#
# To the extent possible under law, the authors have dedicated all
# copyright and related and neighboring rights to this file to the
# public domain worldwide. This file is distributed without any
# warranty. You should have received a copy of the CC0 Public Domain
# Dedication along with this file. If not, see
# <http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/>.
#
#
# Unless you specify which option file to use (with the command line
# option "--options filename"), the file ~/.gnupg/dirmngr.conf is used
# by dirmngr. The file can contain any long options which are valid
# for Dirmngr. If the first non white space character of a line is a
# '#', the line is ignored. Empty lines are also ignored. See the
# dirmngr man page or the manual for a list of options.
#
# --keyserver URI
#
# GPG can send and receive keys to and from a keyserver. These
# servers can be HKP, Email, or LDAP (if GnuPG is built with LDAP
# support).
#
# Example HKP keyservers:
# hkp://keys.gnupg.net
#
# Example HKP keyserver using a Tor OnionBalance service
# hkp://jirk5u4osbsr34t5.onion
#
# Example HKPS keyservers (see --hkp-cacert below):
# hkps://hkps.pool.sks-keyservers.net
#
# Example LDAP keyservers:
# ldap://pgp.surfnet.nl:11370
#
# Regular URL syntax applies, and you can set an alternate port
# through the usual method:
# hkp://keyserver.example.net:22742
#
# Most users just set the name and type of their preferred keyserver.
# Note that most servers (with the notable exception of
# ldap://keyserver.pgp.com) synchronize changes with each other. Note
# also that a single server name may actually point to multiple
# servers via DNS round-robin. hkp://keys.gnupg.net is an example of
# such a "server", which spreads the load over a number of physical
# servers.
#
# If exactly two keyservers are configured and only one is a Tor hidden
# service, Dirmngr selects the keyserver to use depending on whether
# Tor is locally running or not (on a per session base).
keyserver hkp://jirk5u4osbsr34t5.onion
keyserver hkp://keys.gnupg.net
# --hkp-cacert FILENAME
#
# For the "hkps" scheme (keyserver access over TLS), Dirmngr needs to
# know the root certificates for verification of the TLS certificates
# used for the connection. Enter the full name of a file with the
# root certificates here. If that file is in PEM format a ".pem"
# suffix is expected. This option may be given multiple times to add
# more root certificates. Tilde expansion is supported.
#hkp-cacert /path/to/CA/sks-keyservers.netCA.pem