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eae28f1bd4
-- The profiles are not any longer useful because global options are way more powerful (/etc/gnupg/gpg.conf et al.). The use of systemd is deprecated because of additional complexity and the race between systemd based autolaunching and the explicit gnupg based and lockfile protected autolaunching. GnuPG-bug-id: 6336
67 lines
3.0 KiB
Plaintext
67 lines
3.0 KiB
Plaintext
# gpgconf.conf - configuration for gpgconf
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#----------------------------------------------------------------------
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#
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# === The use of this feature is deprecated ===
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# == Please use the more powerful global options. ==
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#
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# This file is read by gpgconf(1) to setup defaults for all or
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# specified users and groups. It may be used to change the hardwired
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# defaults in gpgconf and to enforce certain values for the various
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# GnuPG related configuration files.
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#
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# NOTE: This is a legacy mechanism. The modern way is to use global
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# configuration files like /etc/gnupg/gpg.conf which are more
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# flexible and better integrated into the configuration system.
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#
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# Empty lines and comment lines, indicated by a hash mark as first non
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# white space character, are ignored. The line is separated by white
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# space into fields. The first field is used to match the user or
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# group and must start at the first column, the file is processed
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# sequential until a matching rule is found. A rule may contain
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# several lines; continuation lines are indicated by a indenting them.
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#
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# Syntax of a line:
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# <key>|WS <component> <option> ["["<flag>"]"] [<value>]
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#
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# Examples for the <key> field:
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# foo - Matches the user "foo".
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# foo: - Matches the user "foo".
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# foo:staff - Matches the user "foo" or the group "staff".
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# :staff - Matches the group "staff".
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# * - Matches any user.
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# All other variants are not defined and reserved for future use.
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#
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# <component> and <option> are as specified by gpgconf.
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# <flag> may be one of:
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# default - Delete the option so that the default is used.
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# no-change - Mark the field as non changeable by gpgconf.
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# change - Mark the field as changeable by gpgconf.
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#
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# Example file:
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#==========
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# :staff gpg-agent min-passphrase-len 6 [change]
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#
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# * gpg-agent min-passphrase-len [no-change] 8
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# gpg-agent min-passphrase-nonalpha [no-change] 1
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# gpg-agent max-passphrase-days [no-change] 700
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# gpg-agent enable-passphrase-history [no-change]
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# gpg-agent enforce-passphrase-constraints [default]
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# gpg-agent enforce-passphrase-constraints [no-change]
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# gpg-agent max-cache-ttl [no-change] 10800
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# gpg-agent max-cache-ttl-ssh [no-change] 10800
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# gpgsm enable-ocsp
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# gpg compliance [no-change]
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# gpgsm compliance [no-change]
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#===========
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# All users in the group "staff" are allowed to change the value for
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# --allow-mark-trusted; gpgconf's default is not to allow a change
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# through its interface. When "gpgconf --apply-defaults" is used,
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# "allow-mark-trusted" will get enabled and "min-passphrase-len" set
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# to 6. All other users are not allowed to change
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# "min-passphrase-len" and "allow-mark-trusted". When "gpgconf
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# --apply-defaults" is used for them, "min-passphrase-len" is set to
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# 8, "allow-mark-trusted" deleted from the config file and
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# "enable-ocsp" is put into the config file of gpgsm. The latter may
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# be changed by any user.
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#-------------------------------------------------------------------
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