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1119 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
1119 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
-*- text -*-
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Format of colon listings
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========================
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First an example:
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$ gpg --fixed-list-mode --with-colons --list-keys \
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--with-fingerprint --with-fingerprint wk@gnupg.org
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pub:f:1024:17:6C7EE1B8621CC013:899817715:1055898235::m:::scESC:
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fpr:::::::::ECAF7590EB3443B5C7CF3ACB6C7EE1B8621CC013:
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uid:f::::::::Werner Koch <wk@g10code.com>:
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uid:f::::::::Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>:
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sub:f:1536:16:06AD222CADF6A6E1:919537416:1036177416:::::e:
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fpr:::::::::CF8BCC4B18DE08FCD8A1615906AD222CADF6A6E1:
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sub:r:1536:20:5CE086B5B5A18FF4:899817788:1025961788:::::esc:
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fpr:::::::::AB059359A3B81F410FCFF97F5CE086B5B5A18FF4:
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The double --with-fingerprint prints the fingerprint for the subkeys
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too. --fixed-list-mode is the modern listing way printing dates in
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seconds since Epoch and does not merge the first userID with the pub
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record; gpg2 does this by default and the option is a dummy.
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1. Field: Type of record
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pub = public key
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crt = X.509 certificate
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crs = X.509 certificate and private key available
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sub = subkey (secondary key)
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sec = secret key
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ssb = secret subkey (secondary key)
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uid = user id (only field 10 is used).
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uat = user attribute (same as user id except for field 10).
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sig = signature
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rev = revocation signature
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fpr = fingerprint: (fingerprint is in field 10)
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pkd = public key data (special field format, see below)
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grp = keygrip
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rvk = revocation key
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tru = trust database information
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spk = signature subpacket
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2. Field: A letter describing the calculated validity. This is a single
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letter, but be prepared that additional information may follow
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in some future versions. (not used for secret keys)
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o = Unknown (this key is new to the system)
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i = The key is invalid (e.g. due to a missing self-signature)
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d = The key has been disabled
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(deprecated - use the 'D' in field 12 instead)
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r = The key has been revoked
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e = The key has expired
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- = Unknown validity (i.e. no value assigned)
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q = Undefined validity
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'-' and 'q' may safely be treated as the same
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value for most purposes
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n = The key is valid
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m = The key is marginal valid.
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f = The key is fully valid
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u = The key is ultimately valid. This often means
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that the secret key is available, but any key may
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be marked as ultimately valid.
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If the validity information is given for a UID or UAT
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record, it describes the validity calculated based on this
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user ID. If given for a key record it describes the best
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validity taken from the best rated user ID.
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For X.509 certificates a 'u' is used for a trusted root
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certificate (i.e. for the trust anchor) and an 'f' for all
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other valid certificates.
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3. Field: length of key in bits.
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4. Field: Algorithm: 1 = RSA
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16 = Elgamal (encrypt only)
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17 = DSA (sometimes called DH, sign only)
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20 = Elgamal (sign and encrypt - don't use them!)
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(for other id's see include/cipher.h)
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5. Field: KeyID
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6. Field: Creation Date (in UTC). For UID and UAT records, this is
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the self-signature date. Note that the date is usally
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printed in seconds since epoch, however, we are migrating
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to an ISO 8601 format (e.g. "19660205T091500"). This is
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currently only relevant for X.509. A simple way to detect
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the new format is to scan for the 'T'.
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7. Field: Key or user ID/user attribute expiration date or empty if none.
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8. Field: Used for serial number in crt records (used to be the Local-ID).
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For UID and UAT records, this is a hash of the user ID contents
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used to represent that exact user ID. For trust signatures,
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this is the trust depth seperated by the trust value by a
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space.
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9. Field: Ownertrust (primary public keys only)
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This is a single letter, but be prepared that additional
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information may follow in some future versions. For trust
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signatures with a regular expression, this is the regular
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expression value, quoted as in field 10.
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10. Field: User-ID. The value is quoted like a C string to avoid
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control characters (the colon is quoted "\x3a").
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For a "pub" record this field is not used on --fixed-list-mode.
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A UAT record puts the attribute subpacket count here, a
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space, and then the total attribute subpacket size.
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In gpgsm the issuer name comes here
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An FPR record stores the fingerprint here.
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The fingerprint of an revocation key is stored here.
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11. Field: Signature class as per RFC-4880. This is a 2 digit
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hexnumber followed by either the letter 'x' for an
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exportable signature or the letter 'l' for a local-only
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signature. The class byte of an revocation key is also
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given here, 'x' and 'l' is used the same way. IT is not
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used for X.509.
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12. Field: Key capabilities:
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e = encrypt
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s = sign
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c = certify
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a = authentication
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A key may have any combination of them in any order. In
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addition to these letters, the primary key has uppercase
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versions of the letters to denote the _usable_
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capabilities of the entire key, and a potential letter 'D'
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to indicate a disabled key.
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13. Field: Used in FPR records for S/MIME keys to store the
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fingerprint of the issuer certificate. This is useful to
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build the certificate path based on certificates stored in
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the local keyDB; it is only filled if the issuer
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certificate is available. The root has been reached if
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this is the same string as the fingerprint. The advantage
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of using this value is that it is guaranteed to have been
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been build by the same lookup algorithm as gpgsm uses.
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For "uid" records this lists the preferences in the same
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way the gpg's --edit-key menu does.
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For "sig" records, this is the fingerprint of the key that
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issued the signature. Note that this is only filled in if
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the signature verified correctly. Note also that for
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various technical reasons, this fingerprint is only
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available if --no-sig-cache is used.
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14. Field Flag field used in the --edit menu output:
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15. Field Used in sec/sbb to print the serial number of a token
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(internal protect mode 1002) or a '#' if that key is a
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simple stub (internal protect mode 1001)
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All dates are displayed in the format yyyy-mm-dd unless you use the
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option --fixed-list-mode in which case they are displayed as seconds
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since Epoch. More fields may be added later, so parsers should be
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prepared for this. When parsing a number the parser should stop at the
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first non-number character so that additional information can later be
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added.
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If field 1 has the tag "pkd", a listing looks like this:
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pkd:0:1024:B665B1435F4C2 .... FF26ABB:
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! ! !-- the value
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! !------ for information number of bits in the value
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!--------- index (eg. DSA goes from 0 to 3: p,q,g,y)
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Example for a "tru" trust base record:
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tru:o:0:1166697654:1:3:1:5
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The fields are:
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2: Reason for staleness of trust. If this field is empty, then the
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trustdb is not stale. This field may have multiple flags in it:
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o: Trustdb is old
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t: Trustdb was built with a different trust model than the one we
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are using now.
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3: Trust model:
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0: Classic trust model, as used in PGP 2.x.
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1: PGP trust model, as used in PGP 6 and later. This is the same
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as the classic trust model, except for the addition of trust
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signatures.
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GnuPG before version 1.4 used the classic trust model by default.
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GnuPG 1.4 and later uses the PGP trust model by default.
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4: Date trustdb was created in seconds since 1970-01-01.
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5: Date trustdb will expire in seconds since 1970-01-01.
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6: Number of marginally trusted users to introduce a new key signer
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(gpg's option --marginals-needed)
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7: Number of completely trusted users to introduce a new key signer.
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(gpg's option --completes-needed)
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8: Maximum depth of a certification chain.
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*gpg's option --max-cert-depth)
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The "spk" signature subpacket records have the fields:
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2: Subpacket number as per RFC-4880 and later.
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3: Flags in hex. Currently the only two bits assigned are 1, to
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indicate that the subpacket came from the hashed part of the
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signature, and 2, to indicate the subpacket was marked critical.
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4: Length of the subpacket. Note that this is the length of the
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subpacket, and not the length of field 5 below. Due to the need
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for %-encoding, the length of field 5 may be up to 3x this value.
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5: The subpacket data. Printable ASCII is shown as ASCII, but other
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values are rendered as %XX where XX is the hex value for the byte.
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Format of the "--status-fd" output
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==================================
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Every line is prefixed with "[GNUPG:] ", followed by a keyword with
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the type of the status line and a some arguments depending on the
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type (maybe none); an application should always be prepared to see
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more arguments in future versions.
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NEWSIG
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May be issued right before a signature verification starts. This
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is useful to define a context for parsing ERROR status
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messages. No arguments are currently defined.
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GOODSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <username>
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The signature with the keyid is good. For each signature only
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one of the codes GOODSIG, BADSIG, EXPSIG, EXPKEYSIG, REVKEYSIG
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or ERRSIG will be emitted. In the past they were used as a
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marker for a new signature; new code should use the NEWSIG
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status instead. The username is the primary one encoded in
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UTF-8 and %XX escaped. The fingerprint may be used instead of
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the long keyid if it is available. This is the case with CMS
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and might eventually also be available for OpenPGP.
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EXPSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <username>
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The signature with the keyid is good, but the signature is
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expired. The username is the primary one encoded in UTF-8 and
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%XX escaped. The fingerprint may be used instead of the long
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keyid if it is available. This is the case with CMS and might
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eventually also be available for OpenPGP.
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EXPKEYSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <username>
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The signature with the keyid is good, but the signature was
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made by an expired key. The username is the primary one
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encoded in UTF-8 and %XX escaped. The fingerprint may be used
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instead of the long keyid if it is available. This is the
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case with CMS and might eventually also be available for
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OpenPGP.
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REVKEYSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <username>
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The signature with the keyid is good, but the signature was
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made by a revoked key. The username is the primary one encoded
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in UTF-8 and %XX escaped. The fingerprint may be used instead
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of the long keyid if it is available. This is the case with
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CMS and might eventually also be available for OpenPGP.
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BADSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <username>
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The signature with the keyid has not been verified okay. The
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username is the primary one encoded in UTF-8 and %XX
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escaped. The fingerprint may be used instead of the long keyid
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if it is available. This is the case with CMS and might
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eventually also be available for OpenPGP.
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ERRSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <pubkey_algo> <hash_algo> \
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<sig_class> <timestamp> <rc>
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It was not possible to check the signature. This may be
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caused by a missing public key or an unsupported algorithm. A
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RC of 4 indicates unknown algorithm, a 9 indicates a missing
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public key. The other fields give more information about this
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signature. sig_class is a 2 byte hex-value. The fingerprint
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may be used instead of the long keyid if it is available.
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This is the case with CMS and might eventually also be
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available for OpenPGP.
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Note, that TIMESTAMP may either be a number with seconds since
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epoch or an ISO 8601 string which can be detected by the
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presence of the letter 'T' inside.
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VALIDSIG <fingerprint in hex> <sig_creation_date> <sig-timestamp>
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<expire-timestamp> <sig-version> <reserved> <pubkey-algo>
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<hash-algo> <sig-class> [ <primary-key-fpr> ]
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The signature with the keyid is good. This is the same as
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GOODSIG but has the fingerprint as the argument. Both status
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lines are emitted for a good signature. All arguments here
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are on one long line. sig-timestamp is the signature creation
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time in seconds after the epoch. expire-timestamp is the
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signature expiration time in seconds after the epoch (zero
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means "does not expire"). sig-version, pubkey-algo, hash-algo,
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and sig-class (a 2-byte hex value) are all straight from the
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signature packet. PRIMARY-KEY-FPR is the fingerprint of the
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primary key or identical to the first argument. This is
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useful to get back to the primary key without running gpg
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again for this purpose.
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The primary-key-fpr parameter is used for OpenPGP and not
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available for CMS signatures. The sig-version as well as the
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sig class is not defined for CMS and currently set to 0 and 00.
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Note, that *-TIMESTAMP may either be a number with seconds
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since epoch or an ISO 8601 string which can be detected by the
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presence of the letter 'T' inside.
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SIG_ID <radix64_string> <sig_creation_date> <sig-timestamp>
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This is emitted only for signatures of class 0 or 1 which
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have been verified okay. The string is a signature id
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and may be used in applications to detect replay attacks
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of signed messages. Note that only DLP algorithms give
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unique ids - others may yield duplicated ones when they
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have been created in the same second.
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Note, that SIG-TIMESTAMP may either be a number with seconds
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since epoch or an ISO 8601 string which can be detected by the
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presence of the letter 'T' inside.
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ENC_TO <long_keyid> <keytype> <keylength>
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The message is encrypted to this LONG_KEYID. KEYTYPE is the
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numerical value of the public key algorithm or 0 if it is not
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known, KEYLENGTH is the length of the key or 0 if it is not
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known (which is currently always the case). Gpg prints this
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line always; Gpgsm only if it knows the certificate.
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NODATA <what>
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No data has been found. Codes for what are:
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1 - No armored data.
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2 - Expected a packet but did not found one.
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3 - Invalid packet found, this may indicate a non OpenPGP
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message.
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4 - signature expected but not found
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You may see more than one of these status lines.
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UNEXPECTED <what>
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Unexpected data has been encountered
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0 - not further specified
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TRUST_UNDEFINED <error token>
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TRUST_NEVER <error token>
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TRUST_MARGINAL [0 [<validation_model>]]
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TRUST_FULLY [0 [<validation_model>]]
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TRUST_ULTIMATE [0 [<validation_model>]]
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For good signatures one of these status lines are emitted to
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indicate the validity of the key used to create the signature.
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The error token values are currently only emitted by gpgsm.
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VALIDATION_MODEL describes the algorithm used to check the
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validity of the key. The defaults are the standard Web of
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Trust model for gpg and the the standard X.509 model for
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gpgsm. The defined values are
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"pgp" for the standard PGP WoT.
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"shell" for the standard X.509 model.
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"chain" for the chain model.
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Note that we use the term "TRUST_" in the status names for
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historic reasons; we now speak of validity.
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PKA_TRUST_GOOD <mailbox>
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PKA_TRUST_BAD <mailbox>
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Depending on the outcome of the PKA check one of the above
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status codes is emitted in addition to a TRUST_* status.
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Without PKA info available or
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KEYEXPIRED <expire-timestamp>
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The key has expired. expire-timestamp is the expiration time
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in seconds since Epoch. This status line is not very useful
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because it will also be emitted for expired subkeys even if
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this subkey is not used. To check whether a key used to sign
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a message has expired, the EXPKEYSIG status line is to be
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used.
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Note, that TIMESTAMP may either be a number with seconds since
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epoch or an ISO 8601 string which can be detected by the
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presence of the letter 'T' inside.
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KEYREVOKED
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The used key has been revoked by its owner. No arguments yet.
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BADARMOR
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The ASCII armor is corrupted. No arguments yet.
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RSA_OR_IDEA
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The IDEA algorithms has been used in the data. A
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program might want to fallback to another program to handle
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the data if GnuPG failed. This status message used to be emitted
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also for RSA but this has been dropped after the RSA patent expired.
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However we can't change the name of the message.
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SHM_INFO
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SHM_GET
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SHM_GET_BOOL
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SHM_GET_HIDDEN
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GET_BOOL
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GET_LINE
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GET_HIDDEN
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GOT_IT
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NEED_PASSPHRASE <long main keyid> <long keyid> <keytype> <keylength>
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Issued whenever a passphrase is needed.
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keytype is the numerical value of the public key algorithm
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or 0 if this is not applicable, keylength is the length
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of the key or 0 if it is not known (this is currently always the case).
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NEED_PASSPHRASE_SYM <cipher_algo> <s2k_mode> <s2k_hash>
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Issued whenever a passphrase for symmetric encryption is needed.
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NEED_PASSPHRASE_PIN <card_type> <chvno> [<serialno>]
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Issued whenever a PIN is requested to unlock a card.
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MISSING_PASSPHRASE
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No passphrase was supplied. An application which encounters this
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message may want to stop parsing immediately because the next message
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will probably be a BAD_PASSPHRASE. However, if the application
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is a wrapper around the key edit menu functionality it might not
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make sense to stop parsing but simply ignoring the following
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BAD_PASSPHRASE.
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BAD_PASSPHRASE <long keyid>
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The supplied passphrase was wrong or not given. In the latter case
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you may have seen a MISSING_PASSPHRASE.
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GOOD_PASSPHRASE
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The supplied passphrase was good and the secret key material
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is therefore usable.
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NO_PUBKEY <long keyid>
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NO_SECKEY <long keyid>
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The key is not available
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IMPORT_CHECK <long keyid> <fingerprint> <user ID>
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This status is emitted in interactive mode right before
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the "import.okay" prompt.
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IMPORTED <long keyid> <username>
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The keyid and name of the signature just imported
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IMPORT_OK <reason> [<fingerprint>]
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The key with the primary key's FINGERPRINT has been imported.
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Reason flags:
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0 := Not actually changed
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1 := Entirely new key.
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2 := New user IDs
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4 := New signatures
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8 := New subkeys
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16 := Contains private key.
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The flags may be ORed.
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IMPORT_PROBLEM <reason> [<fingerprint>]
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Issued for each import failure. Reason codes are:
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0 := "No specific reason given".
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1 := "Invalid Certificate".
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2 := "Issuer Certificate missing".
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3 := "Certificate Chain too long".
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4 := "Error storing certificate".
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IMPORT_RES <count> <no_user_id> <imported> <imported_rsa> <unchanged>
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<n_uids> <n_subk> <n_sigs> <n_revoc> <sec_read> <sec_imported>
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<sec_dups> <skipped_new_keys> <not_imported>
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Final statistics on import process (this is one long line)
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FILE_START <what> <filename>
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Start processing a file <filename>. <what> indicates the performed
|
|
operation:
|
|
1 - verify
|
|
2 - encrypt
|
|
3 - decrypt
|
|
|
|
FILE_DONE
|
|
Marks the end of a file processing which has been started
|
|
by FILE_START.
|
|
|
|
BEGIN_DECRYPTION
|
|
END_DECRYPTION
|
|
Mark the start and end of the actual decryption process. These
|
|
are also emitted when in --list-only mode.
|
|
|
|
DECRYPTION_INFO <mdc_method> <sym_algo>
|
|
Print information about the symmetric encryption algorithm and
|
|
the MDC method. This will be emitted even if the decryption
|
|
fails.
|
|
|
|
DECRYPTION_FAILED
|
|
The symmetric decryption failed - one reason could be a wrong
|
|
passphrase for a symmetrical encrypted message.
|
|
|
|
DECRYPTION_OKAY
|
|
The decryption process succeeded. This means, that either the
|
|
correct secret key has been used or the correct passphrase
|
|
for a conventional encrypted message was given. The program
|
|
itself may return an errorcode because it may not be possible to
|
|
verify a signature for some reasons.
|
|
|
|
BEGIN_ENCRYPTION <mdc_method> <sym_algo>
|
|
END_ENCRYPTION
|
|
Mark the start and end of the actual encryption process.
|
|
|
|
BEGIN_SIGNING
|
|
Mark the start of the actual signing process. This may be used
|
|
as an indication that all requested secret keys are ready for
|
|
use.
|
|
|
|
DELETE_PROBLEM reason_code
|
|
Deleting a key failed. Reason codes are:
|
|
1 - No such key
|
|
2 - Must delete secret key first
|
|
3 - Ambigious specification
|
|
|
|
PROGRESS what char cur total
|
|
Used by the primegen and Public key functions to indicate progress.
|
|
"char" is the character displayed with no --status-fd enabled, with
|
|
the linefeed replaced by an 'X'. "cur" is the current amount
|
|
done and "total" is amount to be done; a "total" of 0 indicates that
|
|
the total amount is not known. The condition
|
|
TOATL && CUR == TOTAL
|
|
may be used to detect the end of an operation.
|
|
Well known values for WHAT:
|
|
"pk_dsa" - DSA key generation
|
|
"pk_elg" - Elgamal key generation
|
|
"primegen" - Prime generation
|
|
"need_entropy" - Waiting for new entropy in the RNG
|
|
"file:XXX" - processing file XXX
|
|
(note that current gpg versions leave out the
|
|
"file:" prefix).
|
|
"tick" - generic tick without any special meaning - useful
|
|
for letting clients know that the server is
|
|
still working.
|
|
"starting_agent" - A gpg-agent was started because it is not
|
|
running as a daemon.
|
|
"learncard" Send by the agent and gpgsm while learing
|
|
the data of a smartcard.
|
|
"card_busy" A smartcard is still working
|
|
|
|
SIG_CREATED <type> <pubkey algo> <hash algo> <class> <timestamp> <key fpr>
|
|
A signature has been created using these parameters.
|
|
type: 'D' = detached
|
|
'C' = cleartext
|
|
'S' = standard
|
|
(only the first character should be checked)
|
|
class: 2 hex digits with the signature class
|
|
|
|
Note, that TIMESTAMP may either be a number with seconds since
|
|
epoch or an ISO 8601 string which can be detected by the
|
|
presence of the letter 'T' inside.
|
|
|
|
KEY_CREATED <type> <fingerprint> [<handle>]
|
|
A key has been created
|
|
type: 'B' = primary and subkey
|
|
'P' = primary
|
|
'S' = subkey
|
|
The fingerprint is one of the primary key for type B and P and
|
|
the one of the subkey for S. Handle is an arbitrary
|
|
non-whitespace string used to match key parameters from batch
|
|
key creation run.
|
|
|
|
KEY_NOT_CREATED [<handle>]
|
|
The key from batch run has not been created due to errors.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SESSION_KEY <algo>:<hexdigits>
|
|
The session key used to decrypt the message. This message will
|
|
only be emitted when the special option --show-session-key
|
|
is used. The format is suitable to be passed to the option
|
|
--override-session-key
|
|
|
|
NOTATION_NAME <name>
|
|
NOTATION_DATA <string>
|
|
name and string are %XX escaped; the data may be split
|
|
among several NOTATION_DATA lines.
|
|
|
|
USERID_HINT <long main keyid> <string>
|
|
Give a hint about the user ID for a certain keyID.
|
|
|
|
POLICY_URL <string>
|
|
string is %XX escaped
|
|
|
|
BEGIN_STREAM
|
|
END_STREAM
|
|
Issued by pipemode.
|
|
|
|
INV_RECP <reason> <requested_recipient>
|
|
INV_SGNR <reason> <requested_sender>
|
|
Issued for each unusable recipient/sender. The reasons codes
|
|
currently in use are:
|
|
0 := "No specific reason given".
|
|
1 := "Not Found"
|
|
2 := "Ambigious specification"
|
|
3 := "Wrong key usage"
|
|
4 := "Key revoked"
|
|
5 := "Key expired"
|
|
6 := "No CRL known"
|
|
7 := "CRL too old"
|
|
8 := "Policy mismatch"
|
|
9 := "Not a secret key"
|
|
10 := "Key not trusted"
|
|
11 := "Missing certificate"
|
|
12 := "Missing issuer certificate"
|
|
|
|
Note that for historical reasons the INV_RECP status is also
|
|
used for gpgsm's SIGNER command where it relates to signer's
|
|
of course. Newer GnuPG versions are using INV_SGNR;
|
|
applications should ignore the INV_RECP during the sender's
|
|
command processing once they have seen an INV_SGNR. We use
|
|
different code so that we can distinguish them while doing an
|
|
encrypt+sign.
|
|
|
|
|
|
NO_RECP <reserved>
|
|
NO_SGNR <reserved>
|
|
Issued when no recipients/senders are usable.
|
|
|
|
ALREADY_SIGNED <long-keyid>
|
|
Warning: This is experimental and might be removed at any time.
|
|
|
|
TRUNCATED <maxno>
|
|
The output was truncated to MAXNO items. This status code is issued
|
|
for certain external requests
|
|
|
|
ERROR <error location> <error code> [<more>]
|
|
|
|
This is a generic error status message, it might be followed
|
|
by error location specific data. <error code> and
|
|
<error_location> should not contain spaces. The error code is
|
|
a either a string commencing with a letter or such a string
|
|
prefixed with a numerical error code and an underscore; e.g.:
|
|
"151011327_EOF".
|
|
|
|
SUCCESS [<location>]
|
|
Postive confirimation that an operation succeeded. <location>
|
|
is optional but if given should not contain spaces.
|
|
Used only with a few commands.
|
|
|
|
|
|
ATTRIBUTE <fpr> <octets> <type> <index> <count>
|
|
<timestamp> <expiredate> <flags>
|
|
This is one long line issued for each attribute subpacket when
|
|
an attribute packet is seen during key listing. <fpr> is the
|
|
fingerprint of the key. <octets> is the length of the
|
|
attribute subpacket. <type> is the attribute type
|
|
(1==image). <index>/<count> indicates that this is the Nth
|
|
indexed subpacket of count total subpackets in this attribute
|
|
packet. <timestamp> and <expiredate> are from the
|
|
self-signature on the attribute packet. If the attribute
|
|
packet does not have a valid self-signature, then the
|
|
timestamp is 0. <flags> are a bitwise OR of:
|
|
0x01 = this attribute packet is a primary uid
|
|
0x02 = this attribute packet is revoked
|
|
0x04 = this attribute packet is expired
|
|
|
|
CARDCTRL <what> [<serialno>]
|
|
This is used to control smartcard operations.
|
|
Defined values for WHAT are:
|
|
1 = Request insertion of a card. Serialnumber may be given
|
|
to request a specific card. Used by gpg 1.4 w/o scdaemon.
|
|
2 = Request removal of a card. Used by gpg 1.4 w/o scdaemon.
|
|
3 = Card with serialnumber detected
|
|
4 = No card available.
|
|
5 = No card reader available
|
|
6 = No card support available
|
|
|
|
PLAINTEXT <format> <timestamp> <filename>
|
|
This indicates the format of the plaintext that is about to be
|
|
written. The format is a 1 byte hex code that shows the
|
|
format of the plaintext: 62 ('b') is binary data, 74 ('t') is
|
|
text data with no character set specified, and 75 ('u') is
|
|
text data encoded in the UTF-8 character set. The timestamp
|
|
is in seconds since the epoch. If a filename is available it
|
|
gets printed as the third argument, percent-escaped as usual.
|
|
|
|
PLAINTEXT_LENGTH <length>
|
|
This indicates the length of the plaintext that is about to be
|
|
written. Note that if the plaintext packet has partial length
|
|
encoding it is not possible to know the length ahead of time.
|
|
In that case, this status tag does not appear.
|
|
|
|
SIG_SUBPACKET <type> <flags> <len> <data>
|
|
This indicates that a signature subpacket was seen. The
|
|
format is the same as the "spk" record above.
|
|
|
|
SC_OP_FAILURE [<code>]
|
|
An operation on a smartcard definitely failed. Currently
|
|
there is no indication of the actual error code, but
|
|
application should be prepared to later accept more arguments.
|
|
Defined values for CODE are:
|
|
0 - unspecified error (identically to a missing CODE)
|
|
1 - canceled
|
|
2 - bad PIN
|
|
|
|
SC_OP_SUCCESS
|
|
A smart card operaion succeeded. This status is only printed
|
|
for certain operation and is mostly useful to check whether a
|
|
PIN change really worked.
|
|
|
|
BACKUP_KEY_CREATED fingerprint fname
|
|
A backup key named FNAME has been created for the key with
|
|
KEYID.
|
|
|
|
MOUNTPOINT <name>
|
|
NAME is a percent-plus escaped filename describing the
|
|
mountpoint for the current operation (e.g. g13 --mount). This
|
|
may either be the specified mountpoint or one randomly choosen
|
|
by g13.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Status lines which are not anymore used:
|
|
|
|
SIGEXPIRED removed on 2011-02-04.
|
|
This is deprecated in favor of KEYEXPIRED.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Format of the "--attribute-fd" output
|
|
=====================================
|
|
|
|
When --attribute-fd is set, during key listings (--list-keys,
|
|
--list-secret-keys) GnuPG dumps each attribute packet to the file
|
|
descriptor specified. --attribute-fd is intended for use with
|
|
--status-fd as part of the required information is carried on the
|
|
ATTRIBUTE status tag (see above).
|
|
|
|
The contents of the attribute data is specified by RFC 4880. For
|
|
convenience, here is the Photo ID format, as it is currently the only
|
|
attribute defined:
|
|
|
|
Byte 0-1: The length of the image header. Due to a historical
|
|
accident (i.e. oops!) back in the NAI PGP days, this is
|
|
a little-endian number. Currently 16 (0x10 0x00).
|
|
|
|
Byte 2: The image header version. Currently 0x01.
|
|
|
|
Byte 3: Encoding format. 0x01 == JPEG.
|
|
|
|
Byte 4-15: Reserved, and currently unused.
|
|
|
|
All other data after this header is raw image (JPEG) data.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Format of the "--list-config" output
|
|
====================================
|
|
|
|
--list-config outputs information about the GnuPG configuration for
|
|
the benefit of frontends or other programs that call GnuPG. There are
|
|
several list-config items, all colon delimited like the rest of the
|
|
--with-colons output. The first field is always "cfg" to indicate
|
|
configuration information. The second field is one of (with
|
|
examples):
|
|
|
|
version: the third field contains the version of GnuPG.
|
|
|
|
cfg:version:1.3.5
|
|
|
|
pubkey: the third field contains the public key algorithmdcaiphers
|
|
this version of GnuPG supports, separated by semicolons. The
|
|
algorithm numbers are as specified in RFC-4880. Note that in
|
|
contrast to the --status-fd interface these are _not_ the
|
|
Libgcrypt identifiers.
|
|
|
|
cfg:pubkey:1;2;3;16;17
|
|
|
|
cipher: the third field contains the symmetric ciphers this version of
|
|
GnuPG supports, separated by semicolons. The cipher numbers
|
|
are as specified in RFC-4880.
|
|
|
|
cfg:cipher:2;3;4;7;8;9;10
|
|
|
|
digest: the third field contains the digest (hash) algorithms this
|
|
version of GnuPG supports, separated by semicolons. The
|
|
digest numbers are as specified in RFC-4880.
|
|
|
|
cfg:digest:1;2;3;8;9;10
|
|
|
|
compress: the third field contains the compression algorithms this
|
|
version of GnuPG supports, separated by semicolons. The
|
|
algorithm numbers are as specified in RFC-4880.
|
|
|
|
cfg:compress:0;1;2;3
|
|
|
|
group: the third field contains the name of the group, and the fourth
|
|
field contains the values that the group expands to, separated
|
|
by semicolons.
|
|
|
|
For example, a group of:
|
|
group mynames = paige 0x12345678 joe patti
|
|
|
|
would result in:
|
|
cfg:group:mynames:patti;joe;0x12345678;paige
|
|
|
|
|
|
Key generation
|
|
==============
|
|
See the Libcrypt manual.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unattended key generation
|
|
=========================
|
|
The the manual for a description.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Layout of the TrustDB
|
|
=====================
|
|
The TrustDB is built from fixed length records, where the first byte
|
|
describes the record type. All numeric values are stored in network
|
|
byte order. The length of each record is 40 bytes. The first record of
|
|
the DB is always of type 1 and this is the only record of this type.
|
|
|
|
FIXME: The layout changed, document it here.
|
|
|
|
Record type 0:
|
|
--------------
|
|
Unused record, can be reused for any purpose.
|
|
|
|
Record type 1:
|
|
--------------
|
|
Version information for this TrustDB. This is always the first
|
|
record of the DB and the only one with type 1.
|
|
1 byte value 1
|
|
3 bytes 'gpg' magic value
|
|
1 byte Version of the TrustDB (2)
|
|
1 byte marginals needed
|
|
1 byte completes needed
|
|
1 byte max_cert_depth
|
|
The three items are used to check whether the cached
|
|
validity value from the dir record can be used.
|
|
1 u32 locked flags [not used]
|
|
1 u32 timestamp of trustdb creation
|
|
1 u32 timestamp of last modification which may affect the validity
|
|
of keys in the trustdb. This value is checked against the
|
|
validity timestamp in the dir records.
|
|
1 u32 timestamp of last validation [currently not used]
|
|
(Used to keep track of the time, when this TrustDB was checked
|
|
against the pubring)
|
|
1 u32 record number of keyhashtable [currently not used]
|
|
1 u32 first free record
|
|
1 u32 record number of shadow directory hash table [currently not used]
|
|
It does not make sense to combine this table with the key table
|
|
because the keyid is not in every case a part of the fingerprint.
|
|
1 u32 record number of the trusthashtbale
|
|
|
|
|
|
Record type 2: (directory record)
|
|
--------------
|
|
Informations about a public key certificate.
|
|
These are static values which are never changed without user interaction.
|
|
|
|
1 byte value 2
|
|
1 byte reserved
|
|
1 u32 LID . (This is simply the record number of this record.)
|
|
1 u32 List of key-records (the first one is the primary key)
|
|
1 u32 List of uid-records
|
|
1 u32 cache record
|
|
1 byte ownertrust
|
|
1 byte dirflag
|
|
1 byte maximum validity of all the user ids
|
|
1 u32 time of last validity check.
|
|
1 u32 Must check when this time has been reached.
|
|
(0 = no check required)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Record type 3: (key record)
|
|
--------------
|
|
Informations about a primary public key.
|
|
(This is mainly used to lookup a trust record)
|
|
|
|
1 byte value 3
|
|
1 byte reserved
|
|
1 u32 LID
|
|
1 u32 next - next key record
|
|
7 bytes reserved
|
|
1 byte keyflags
|
|
1 byte pubkey algorithm
|
|
1 byte length of the fingerprint (in bytes)
|
|
20 bytes fingerprint of the public key
|
|
(This is the value we use to identify a key)
|
|
|
|
Record type 4: (uid record)
|
|
--------------
|
|
Informations about a userid
|
|
We do not store the userid but the hash value of the userid because that
|
|
is sufficient.
|
|
|
|
1 byte value 4
|
|
1 byte reserved
|
|
1 u32 LID points to the directory record.
|
|
1 u32 next next userid
|
|
1 u32 pointer to preference record
|
|
1 u32 siglist list of valid signatures
|
|
1 byte uidflags
|
|
1 byte validity of the key calculated over this user id
|
|
20 bytes ripemd160 hash of the username.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Record type 5: (pref record)
|
|
--------------
|
|
This record type is not anymore used.
|
|
|
|
1 byte value 5
|
|
1 byte reserved
|
|
1 u32 LID; points to the directory record (and not to the uid record!).
|
|
(or 0 for standard preference record)
|
|
1 u32 next
|
|
30 byte preference data
|
|
|
|
Record type 6 (sigrec)
|
|
-------------
|
|
Used to keep track of key signatures. Self-signatures are not
|
|
stored. If a public key is not in the DB, the signature points to
|
|
a shadow dir record, which in turn has a list of records which
|
|
might be interested in this key (and the signature record here
|
|
is one).
|
|
|
|
1 byte value 6
|
|
1 byte reserved
|
|
1 u32 LID points back to the dir record
|
|
1 u32 next next sigrec of this uid or 0 to indicate the
|
|
last sigrec.
|
|
6 times
|
|
1 u32 Local_id of signatures dir or shadow dir record
|
|
1 byte Flag: Bit 0 = checked: Bit 1 is valid (we have a real
|
|
directory record for this)
|
|
1 = valid is set (but may be revoked)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Record type 8: (shadow directory record)
|
|
--------------
|
|
This record is used to reserve a LID for a public key. We
|
|
need this to create the sig records of other keys, even if we
|
|
do not yet have the public key of the signature.
|
|
This record (the record number to be more precise) will be reused
|
|
as the dir record when we import the real public key.
|
|
|
|
1 byte value 8
|
|
1 byte reserved
|
|
1 u32 LID (This is simply the record number of this record.)
|
|
2 u32 keyid
|
|
1 byte pubkey algorithm
|
|
3 byte reserved
|
|
1 u32 hintlist A list of records which have references to
|
|
this key. This is used for fast access to
|
|
signature records which are not yet checked.
|
|
Note, that this is only a hint and the actual records
|
|
may not anymore hold signature records for that key
|
|
but that the code cares about this.
|
|
18 byte reserved
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Record Type 10 (hash table)
|
|
--------------
|
|
Due to the fact that we use fingerprints to lookup keys, we can
|
|
implement quick access by some simple hash methods, and avoid
|
|
the overhead of gdbm. A property of fingerprints is that they can be
|
|
used directly as hash values. (They can be considered as strong
|
|
random numbers.)
|
|
What we use is a dynamic multilevel architecture, which combines
|
|
hashtables, record lists, and linked lists.
|
|
|
|
This record is a hashtable of 256 entries; a special property
|
|
is that all these records are stored consecutively to make one
|
|
big table. The hash value is simple the 1st, 2nd, ... byte of
|
|
the fingerprint (depending on the indirection level).
|
|
|
|
When used to hash shadow directory records, a different table is used
|
|
and indexed by the keyid.
|
|
|
|
1 byte value 10
|
|
1 byte reserved
|
|
n u32 recnum; n depends on the record length:
|
|
n = (reclen-2)/4 which yields 9 for the current record length
|
|
of 40 bytes.
|
|
|
|
the total number of such record which makes up the table is:
|
|
m = (256+n-1) / n
|
|
which is 29 for a record length of 40.
|
|
|
|
To look up a key we use the first byte of the fingerprint to get
|
|
the recnum from this hashtable and look up the addressed record:
|
|
- If this record is another hashtable, we use 2nd byte
|
|
to index this hash table and so on.
|
|
- if this record is a hashlist, we walk all entries
|
|
until we found one a matching one.
|
|
- if this record is a key record, we compare the
|
|
fingerprint and to decide whether it is the requested key;
|
|
|
|
|
|
Record type 11 (hash list)
|
|
--------------
|
|
see hash table for an explanation.
|
|
This is also used for other purposes.
|
|
|
|
1 byte value 11
|
|
1 byte reserved
|
|
1 u32 next next hash list record
|
|
n times n = (reclen-5)/5
|
|
1 u32 recnum
|
|
|
|
For the current record length of 40, n is 7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Record type 254 (free record)
|
|
---------------
|
|
All these records form a linked list of unused records.
|
|
1 byte value 254
|
|
1 byte reserved (0)
|
|
1 u32 next_free
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
GNU extensions to the S2K algorithm
|
|
===================================
|
|
S2K mode 101 is used to identify these extensions.
|
|
After the hash algorithm the 3 bytes "GNU" are used to make
|
|
clear that these are extensions for GNU, the next bytes gives the
|
|
GNU protection mode - 1000. Defined modes are:
|
|
1001 - do not store the secret part at all
|
|
1002 - a stub to access smartcards (not used in 1.2.x)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other Notes
|
|
===========
|
|
* For packet version 3 we calculate the keyids this way:
|
|
RSA := low 64 bits of n
|
|
ELGAMAL := build a v3 pubkey packet (with CTB 0x99) and calculate
|
|
a rmd160 hash value from it. This is used as the
|
|
fingerprint and the low 64 bits are the keyid.
|
|
|
|
* Revocation certificates consist only of the signature packet;
|
|
"import" knows how to handle this. The rationale behind it is
|
|
to keep them small.
|
|
|
|
|
|
OIDs below the GnuPG arc:
|
|
=========================
|
|
|
|
1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2 GnuPG
|
|
1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2.1 notation
|
|
1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2.1.1 pkaAddress
|
|
1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2.2 X.509 extensions
|
|
1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2.2.1 standaloneCertificate
|
|
1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2.12242973 invalid encoded OID
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Keyserver Message Format
|
|
=========================
|
|
|
|
The keyserver may be contacted by a Unix Domain socket or via TCP.
|
|
|
|
The format of a request is:
|
|
|
|
====
|
|
command-tag
|
|
"Content-length:" digits
|
|
CRLF
|
|
=======
|
|
|
|
Where command-tag is
|
|
|
|
NOOP
|
|
GET <user-name>
|
|
PUT
|
|
DELETE <user-name>
|
|
|
|
|
|
The format of a response is:
|
|
|
|
======
|
|
"GNUPG/1.0" status-code status-text
|
|
"Content-length:" digits
|
|
CRLF
|
|
============
|
|
followed by <digits> bytes of data
|
|
|
|
|
|
Status codes are:
|
|
|
|
o 1xx: Informational - Request received, continuing process
|
|
|
|
o 2xx: Success - The action was successfully received, understood,
|
|
and accepted
|
|
|
|
o 4xx: Client Error - The request contains bad syntax or cannot be
|
|
fulfilled
|
|
|
|
o 5xx: Server Error - The server failed to fulfill an apparently
|
|
valid request
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Documentation on HKP (the http keyserver protocol):
|
|
|
|
A minimalistic HTTP server on port 11371 recognizes a GET for /pks/lookup.
|
|
The standard http URL encoded query parameters are this (always key=value):
|
|
|
|
- op=index (like pgp -kv), op=vindex (like pgp -kvv) and op=get (like
|
|
pgp -kxa)
|
|
|
|
- search=<stringlist>. This is a list of words that must occur in the key.
|
|
The words are delimited with space, points, @ and so on. The delimiters
|
|
are not searched for and the order of the words doesn't matter (but see
|
|
next option).
|
|
|
|
- exact=on. This switch tells the hkp server to only report exact matching
|
|
keys back. In this case the order and the "delimiters" are important.
|
|
|
|
- fingerprint=on. Also reports the fingerprints when used with 'index' or
|
|
'vindex'
|
|
|
|
The keyserver also recognizes http-POSTs to /pks/add. Use this to upload
|
|
keys.
|
|
|
|
|
|
A better way to do this would be a request like:
|
|
|
|
/pks/lookup/<gnupg_formatierte_user_id>?op=<operation>
|
|
|
|
This can be implemented using Hurd's translator mechanism.
|
|
However, I think the whole key server stuff has to be re-thought;
|
|
I have some ideas and probably create a white paper.
|