mirror of
git://git.gnupg.org/gnupg.git
synced 2024-11-04 20:38:50 +01:00
0d67241e31
* NEWS, acinclude.m4, agent/command-ssh.c, agent/command.c, agent/gpg-agent.c, agent/keyformat.txt, agent/protect-tool.c, common/asshelp.c, common/b64enc.c, common/recsel.c, doc/DETAILS, doc/HACKING, doc/Notes, doc/TRANSLATE, doc/dirmngr.texi, doc/faq.org, doc/gpg-agent.texi, doc/gpg.texi, doc/gpgsm.texi, doc/instguide.texi, g10/armor.c, g10/gpg.c, g10/keyedit.c, g10/mainproc.c, g10/pkclist.c, g10/tofu.c, g13/sh-cmd.c, g13/sh-dmcrypt.c, kbx/keybox-init.c, m4/pkg.m4, sm/call-dirmngr.c, sm/gpgsm.c, tests/Makefile.am, tests/gpgscm/Manual.txt, tests/gpgscm/scheme.c, tests/openpgp/gpgv-forged-keyring.scm, tests/openpgp/multisig.test, tests/openpgp/verify.scm, tests/pkits/README, tools/applygnupgdefaults, tools/gpg-connect-agent.c, tools/mime-maker.c, tools/mime-parser.c: minor spelling cleanup. Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
246 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
246 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
|
||
Add an infor page for watchgnupg.
|
||
|
||
> * How to mark a CA certificate as trusted.
|
||
|
||
There are two ways:
|
||
|
||
1. Let gpg-agent do this for you. Since version 1.9.9 you need to
|
||
add the option --allow-mark-trusted gpg-agent.conf or when
|
||
invoking gpg-agent. Every time gpgsm notices an untrusted root
|
||
certificate gpg-agent will pop up a dialog to ask whether this
|
||
certificate should be trusted. This is similar to whatmost
|
||
browsers do.
|
||
|
||
The disadvantage of this method and the reason why
|
||
--allow-mark-trusted is required is that the list of trusted root
|
||
certificates will grow, because almost all user will just hit
|
||
"yes, I trust" and "yes, I verified the fingerprint" without
|
||
understanding that this is a very serious decision.
|
||
|
||
2. Use your editor. Edit the file ~/.gnupg/trustlist.txt and add
|
||
the fingerprints of the trusted root certificates. There are
|
||
comments on the top explaining the simple format. The current
|
||
CVS version allows for colons in the fingerprint, so you can
|
||
easily cut and paste it from wherever you know that this is the
|
||
correct fingerprint.
|
||
|
||
An example for an entry in the trustlist.txt is:
|
||
|
||
# CN=PCA-1-Verwaltung,O=PKI-1-Verwaltung,C=de
|
||
3EEE3D8BB7F0FE5C9F5804A3A7E51BCE98209DF9 S
|
||
|
||
This is in fact one that probably made its way into the file using the
|
||
first method. As usual a # indicates a comment. The trailing S means
|
||
that this is to be used for (X.509).
|
||
|
||
It is not possible to trust intermediate CA certificates; gpgsm always
|
||
checks the entire chain of certificates.
|
||
|
||
> * How to import a key and bind it to some certificate already
|
||
> imported. Alternatively, import key and certificate together, from
|
||
> a pkcs12 blob, or pkcs8 + certificate blobs, or whatever.
|
||
> Alternatively, don't import the key at all, but specify location of
|
||
> key using a parameter when signing.
|
||
|
||
You always need to import the key; there is something similar to a
|
||
keyring (here called a keybox: ~/.gnupg/pubring.kbx).
|
||
|
||
Importing a key either from a binary or ascii armored (PEM) certificate
|
||
file or from a cert-only signature file is done using
|
||
|
||
gpg --import FILE
|
||
|
||
or
|
||
|
||
gpg --import < FILE
|
||
|
||
In general you should first import the root certificates and then down
|
||
to the end user certificate. You may put all into one file and gpgsm
|
||
will do the right thing in this case independend of the order.
|
||
|
||
While verifying a signature, all included certificates are
|
||
automagically imported.
|
||
|
||
To import from a pkcs#12 file you may use the same command; if a
|
||
private key is contained in that file, you will be asked for the
|
||
transport passphrases as well as for the new passphrase used to
|
||
protect it in gpg-agent's private key storage
|
||
(~/.gnupg/private-keys-v1.d/). Note that the pkcs#12 support is very
|
||
basic but sufficient for certificates exported from Mozilla, OpenSSL
|
||
and MS Outlook.
|
||
|
||
Background info on private keys:
|
||
|
||
If you want to look at the private key you first need to know the name
|
||
of the keyfile. Run the command "gpgsm -K --with-key-data [KEYID]" and
|
||
you get an output like:
|
||
|
||
crs::1024:1:CF8[..]6D:20040105T184908:2006[...]:09::CN=ZS[....]::esES:
|
||
fpr:::::::::3B50BF2BDAF2[...]1AE6796D:::2812[...]508F21F065E65E44:
|
||
grp:::::::::C92DB9CFD588ADE846BE3AC4E7A2E1B11A4A2ADB:
|
||
uid:::::::::CN=Werner Koch,OU=test,O=g10 Code,C=de::
|
||
uid:::::::::<wk@g10code.de>::
|
||
|
||
This should be familar to advanced gpg-users; see doc/DETAILS in gpg
|
||
1.3 (CVS HEAD) for a description of the records. The value in the
|
||
"grp" tagged record is the so called keygrip and you should find a
|
||
file ~/.gnupg/private-keys-v1.d/C92DB9CFD588ADE846BE3AC4E7A2E1B11A4A2ADB.key
|
||
with the private and public key in an S-expression like format. The
|
||
gpg-protect-tool may be used to display it in a human readable format:
|
||
|
||
$ gpgsm --call-protect-tool ~/.gnupg/private-keys-v1.d/C9[...]B.key
|
||
(protected-private-key
|
||
(rsa
|
||
(n #00C16B6E807C47BB[...]10487#)
|
||
(e #010001#)
|
||
(protected openpgp-s2k3-sha1-aes-cbc
|
||
(
|
||
(sha1 "Hvü9Qt^Ç" "96")
|
||
#2B17DC766AEA2568EE0C688E18F9757E#)
|
||
#65A4FF9F30750A1300[...]7#)
|
||
)
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
The current CVS version of gpgsm has a command --dump-keys which lists
|
||
more details of a key including the keygrip so you don't need to use
|
||
the colon format if you want to manually debug things.
|
||
|
||
$ gpgsm --dump-keys
|
||
Serial number: 01
|
||
Issuer: CN=Trust Anchor,O=Test Certificates,C=US
|
||
Subject: CN=Trust Anchor,O=Test Certificates,C=US
|
||
sha1_fpr: 66:8A:47:56:A2:DC:88:FF:DA:B8:95:E1:3C:63:37:55:5F:0A:F7:BF
|
||
md5_fpr: 03:01:3B:BB:EC:6C:5D:48:88:4C:95:63:99:84:ED:C0
|
||
keygrip: 6A082B3063F6DA6D68B2994AB11B4328FD6206D2
|
||
notBefore: 2001-04-19 14:57:20
|
||
notAfter: 2011-04-19 14:57:20
|
||
hashAlgo: 1.2.840.113549.1.1.5 (sha1WithRSAEncryption)
|
||
keyType: 1024 bit RSA
|
||
authKeyId: [none]
|
||
keyUsage: certSign crlSign
|
||
extKeyUsage: [none]
|
||
policies: [none]
|
||
chainLength: unlimited
|
||
crlDP: [none]
|
||
authInfo: [none]
|
||
subjInfo: [none]
|
||
extn: 2.5.29.14 (subjectKeyIdentifier) [22 octets]
|
||
|
||
> * How to import a CRL
|
||
|
||
CRLs are managed by the dirmngr which is a separate package. The idea
|
||
is to eventaully turn it into a system daemon, so that on a multi-user
|
||
machine CRLs are handled more efficiently. As of now the dirmngr
|
||
needs service from gpgsm thus it is best to call it through gpgsm:
|
||
|
||
gpgsm --call-dirmngr LOAD /absolute/filename/to/a/CRL/file
|
||
|
||
See the dirmngr README and manual for further details.
|
||
|
||
If you don't want to check CRLs, use the option --diable-crl-checks
|
||
with gpgsm.
|
||
|
||
> I'm trying to replace the S/MIME support in OpenSSL with gpgsm for the
|
||
> MUA Gnus.
|
||
|
||
Great; I'd love it.
|
||
|
||
> Perhaps I shouldn't be using gpgsm directly? gpgme didn't seem to
|
||
> have a command line front end.
|
||
|
||
For Gnus it makes sense to use gpgsm directly. Enhancing pgg to
|
||
support gpgsm should not be that hard. Things you need to take care
|
||
off are: Warn if GPG_AGENT_INFO has not been set, because this will
|
||
call gpg-agent for each operation and obviously does not cache the
|
||
passphrase them. If GPG_AGENT_INFO has been set, also disable the
|
||
passphrase code for gpg and pass --use-agent to gpg - this way gpg
|
||
benefits from the passphrase caching and the pinentry.
|
||
|
||
You may want to look at gpgconf (tools/README.gpgconf) to provide a
|
||
customization interface for gpgsm, gpg-agent and dirmngr.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Module Overview
|
||
================
|
||
|
||
gpgsm
|
||
libgpg-error
|
||
libgcrypt
|
||
libksba
|
||
libassuan [statically linked]
|
||
[Standard system libraries]
|
||
|
||
gpg-agent
|
||
libgpg-error
|
||
libgcrypt
|
||
libassuan [statically linked]
|
||
libpth [system library]
|
||
[Standard system libraries]
|
||
|
||
scdaemon
|
||
libgpg-error
|
||
libgcrypt
|
||
libksba
|
||
libassuan [statically linked]
|
||
libusb [system library, optional]
|
||
libopensc [system library, optional]
|
||
[For reader access libpcsclite or a CT-API library may be
|
||
linked at runtime (controllable by scdaemon.conf)]
|
||
[Standard system libraries]
|
||
|
||
gpg-protect-tool
|
||
libgpg-error
|
||
libgcrypt
|
||
[Standard system libraries]
|
||
|
||
dirmngr
|
||
libgpg-error
|
||
libgcrypt
|
||
libksba
|
||
libassuan [statically linked]
|
||
libldap [system library]
|
||
liblber [system library]
|
||
libsasl [system library, required by libldap]
|
||
libdb2 [system library, required by libsasl]
|
||
libcrypt [system library, required by libsasl - OOPS]
|
||
libpam [system library, required by libsasl]
|
||
[Standard system libraries]
|
||
|
||
pinentry-curses
|
||
libncurses
|
||
[Standard system libraries]
|
||
[Independent Assuan code is source included]
|
||
|
||
pinentry-gtk
|
||
libncurses
|
||
[GTK+ and X libraries]
|
||
[Standard system libraries]
|
||
[Independent Assuan code is source included]
|
||
|
||
pinentry-qt
|
||
libncurses
|
||
[QT and X libraries]
|
||
[Standard system libraries]
|
||
[Independent Assuan code is source included]
|
||
|
||
gpgme
|
||
[Standard system libraries]
|
||
[gpgsm is required at runtime]
|
||
[Independent Assuan code is source included]
|
||
|
||
libgpg-error
|
||
[none]
|
||
|
||
libgcrypt
|
||
libgpg-error
|
||
|
||
libksba
|
||
libgpg-error
|
||
|
||
libassuan
|
||
[none]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|