1GPG-AGENT(1)                   GNU Privacy Guard                  GPG-AGENT(1)
2
3
4

NAME

6       gpg-agent - Secret key management for GnuPG
7

SYNOPSIS

9       gpg-agent [--homedir dir] [--options file] [options]
10       gpg-agent [--homedir dir] [--options file] [options] --server
11       gpg-agent  [--homedir  dir]  [--options  file] [options] --daemon [com‐
12       mand_line]
13
14

DESCRIPTION

16       gpg-agent is a daemon to manage  secret  (private)  keys  independently
17       from  any  protocol.  It is used as a backend for gpg and gpgsm as well
18       as for a couple of other utilities.
19
20
21       The usual way to run the agent is from the ~/.xsession file:
22
23         eval $(gpg-agent --daemon)
24
25
26       If you don't use an X server, you can also put this into  your  regular
27       startup file ~/.profile or .bash_profile.  It is best not to run multi‐
28       ple instance of the gpg-agent, so you should make sure that only one is
29       running: gpg-agent uses an environment variable to inform clients about
30       the communication parameters. You can write the content of  this  envi‐
31       ronment  variable  to  a file so that you can test for a running agent.
32       Here is an example using Bourne shell syntax:
33
34         gpg-agent --daemon --enable-ssh-support \
35                   --write-env-file "${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info"
36
37       This code should only be run once per user session to initially fire up
38       the agent.  In the example the optional support for the included Secure
39       Shell agent is enabled and the information about the agent  is  written
40       to  a file in the HOME directory.  Note that by running gpg-agent with‐
41       out arguments you may test whether an agent is already running; however
42       such a test may lead to a race condition, thus it is not suggested.
43
44
45       The second script needs to be run for each interactive session:
46
47         if [ -f "${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info" ]; then
48           . "${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info"
49           export GPG_AGENT_INFO
50           export SSH_AUTH_SOCK
51           export SSH_AGENT_PID
52         fi
53
54
55       It  reads  the  data out of the file and exports the variables.  If you
56       don't use Secure Shell, you don't need the last two export statements.
57
58
59       You should always add the following lines to your .bashrc  or  whatever
60       initialization file is used for all shell invocations:
61
62         GPG_TTY=$(tty)
63         export GPG_TTY
64
65
66       It is important that this environment variable always reflects the out‐
67       put of the tty command.  For W32 systems this option is not required.
68
69       Please make sure that a proper  pinentry  program  has  been  installed
70       under  the  default  filename  (which  is  system dependant) or use the
71       option pinentry-program to specify the full name of that  program.   It
72       is  often useful to install a symbolic link from the actual used pinen‐
73       try  (e.g.  ‘/usr/bin/pinentry-gtk’)  to   the   expected   one   (e.g.
74/usr/bin/pinentry’).
75
76
77
78

COMMANDS

80       Commands  are  not  distinguished from options except for the fact that
81       only one command is allowed.
82
83
84       --version
85              Print the program version and licensing information.   Not  that
86              you can abbreviate this command.
87
88
89       --help
90
91       -h     Print  a  usage message summarizing the most useful command-line
92              options.  Not that you can abbreviate this command.
93
94
95       --dump-options
96              Print a list of all available options and  commands.   Not  that
97              you can abbreviate this command.
98
99
100       --server
101              Run  in  server  mode  and  wait for commands on the stdin.  The
102              default mode is to create  a  socket  and  listen  for  commands
103              there.
104
105
106       --daemon [command line]
107              Start  the  gpg-agent  as  a daemon; that is, detach it from the
108              console and run it in the background.  Because gpg-agent  prints
109              out important information required for further use, a common way
110              of invoking gpg-agent is: eval $(gpg-agent  --daemon)  to  setup
111              the  environment  variables.   The  option  --write-env-file  is
112              another way commonly used to do this.  Yet another way is creat‐
113              ing  a  new  process as a child of gpg-agent: gpg-agent --daemon
114              /bin/sh.  This way you get a new shell with the environment set‐
115              up  properly;  if you exit from this shell, gpg-agent terminates
116              as well.
117
118

OPTIONS

120       --options file
121              Reads configuration from file instead of from the  default  per-
122              user  configuration  file.   The  default  configuration file is
123              named ‘gpg-agent.conf’ and expected in  the  ‘.gnupg’  directory
124              directly below the home directory of the user.
125
126
127
128       --homedir dir
129              Set the name of the home directory to dir. If this option is not
130              used, the home directory defaults to  ‘~/.gnupg’.   It  is  only
131              recognized  when  given  on the command line.  It also overrides
132              any home  directory  stated  through  the  environment  variable
133GNUPGHOME’  or  (on W32 systems) by means of the Registry entry
134              HKCU\Software\GNU\GnuPG:HomeDir.
135
136
137
138
139       -v
140
141       --verbose
142              Outputs additional information while running.  You can  increase
143              the  verbosity by giving several verbose commands to gpgsm, such
144              as '-vv'.
145
146
147       -q
148
149       --quiet
150              Try to be as quiet as possible.
151
152
153       --batch
154              Don't invoke a pinentry or do any other  thing  requiring  human
155              interaction.
156
157
158       --faked-system-time epoch
159              This  option is only useful for testing; it sets the system time
160              back or forth to epoch which is the number  of  seconds  elapsed
161              since the year 1970.
162
163
164       --debug-level level
165              Select  the debug level for investigating problems. level may be
166              a numeric value or a keyword:
167
168
169              none   No debugging at all.  A value of less than 1 may be  used
170                     instead of the keyword.
171
172              basic  Some  basic  debug messages.  A value between 1 and 2 may
173                     be used instead of the keyword.
174
175              advanced
176                     More verbose debug messages.  A value between 3 and 5 may
177                     be used instead of the keyword.
178
179              expert Even more detailed messages.  A value between 6 and 8 may
180                     be used instead of the keyword.
181
182              guru   All of the debug messages you can get.  A  value  greater
183                     than  8 may be used instead of the keyword.  The creation
184                     of hash tracing files is only enabled if the  keyword  is
185                     used.
186
187       How  these  messages  are  mapped  to the actual debugging flags is not
188       specified and may change with newer releases of this program. They  are
189       however carefully selected to best aid in debugging.
190
191
192       --debug flags
193              This  option  is only useful for debugging and the behaviour may
194              change at any time without notice.  FLAGS are  bit  encoded  and
195              may be given in usual C-Syntax. The currently defined bits are:
196
197
198              0 (1)  X.509 or OpenPGP protocol related data
199
200              1 (2)  values of big number integers
201
202              2 (4)  low level crypto operations
203
204              5 (32) memory allocation
205
206              6 (64) caching
207
208              7 (128)
209                     show memory statistics.
210
211              9 (512)
212                     write hashed data to files named dbgmd-000*
213
214              10 (1024)
215                     trace Assuan protocol
216
217              12 (4096)
218                     bypass all certificate validation
219
220
221       --debug-all
222              Same as --debug=0xffffffff
223
224
225       --debug-wait n
226              When  running in server mode, wait n seconds before entering the
227              actual processing loop and print the pid.  This  gives  time  to
228              attach a debugger.
229
230
231       --no-detach
232              Don't  detach the process from the console.  This is mainly use‐
233              ful for debugging.
234
235
236       -s
237
238       --sh
239
240       -c
241
242       --csh  Format the info output in daemon mode for use with the  standard
243              Bourne  shell  or  the  C-shell respectively.  The default is to
244              guess it based on the environment variable SHELL which  is  cor‐
245              rect in almost all cases.
246
247
248       --write-env-file file
249              Often  it is required to connect to the agent from a process not
250              being an inferior of gpg-agent and thus the environment variable
251              with the socket name is not available.  To help setting up those
252              variables in other sessions, this option may be  used  to  write
253              the information into file.  If file is not specified the default
254              name ‘${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info’ will  be  used.   The  format  is
255              suitable  to  be evaluated by a Bourne shell like in this simple
256              example:
257
258         eval $(cat file)
259         eval $(cut -d= -f 1 < file | xargs echo export)
260
261
262
263
264       --no-grab
265              Tell the pinentry not to grab  the  keyboard  and  mouse.   This
266              option  should  in  general  not  be  used  to  avoid X-sniffing
267              attacks.
268
269
270       --log-file file
271              Append all logging output to file.  This is very helpful in see‐
272              ing what the agent actually does.
273
274
275
276       --allow-mark-trusted
277              Allow  clients  to  mark keys as trusted, i.e. put them into the
278trustlist.txt’ file.  This is by default not allowed to make it
279              harder for users to inadvertently accept Root-CA keys.
280
281
282       --ignore-cache-for-signing
283              This  option  will let gpg-agent bypass the passphrase cache for
284              all signing operation.  Note that there is  also  a  per-session
285              option  to  control  this behaviour but this command line option
286              takes precedence.
287
288
289       --default-cache-ttl n
290              Set the time a cache entry is valid to n seconds.   The  default
291              is 600 seconds.
292
293
294       --default-cache-ttl-ssh n
295              Set  the time a cache entry used for SSH keys is valid to n sec‐
296              onds.  The default is 1800 seconds.
297
298
299       --max-cache-ttl n
300              Set the maximum time a cache entry is valid to n seconds.  After
301              this  time  a  cache  entry  will be expired even if it has been
302              accessed recently.  The default is 2 hours (7200 seconds).
303
304
305       --max-cache-ttl-ssh n
306              Set the maximum time a cache entry used for SSH keys is valid to
307              n  seconds.   After this time a cache entry will be expired even
308              if it has been accessed recently.  The default is 2 hours  (7200
309              seconds).
310
311
312       --enforce-passphrase-constraints
313              Enforce  the  passphrase constraints by not allowing the user to
314              bypass them using the ``Take it anyway'' button.
315
316
317       --min-passphrase-len n
318              Set the minimal length of a passphrase.   When  entering  a  new
319              passphrase  shorter than this value a warning will be displayed.
320              Defaults to 8.
321
322
323       --min-passphrase-nonalpha n
324              Set the minimal number of digits or special characters  required
325              in  a passphrase.  When entering a new passphrase with less than
326              this number of digits or special characters a  warning  will  be
327              displayed.  Defaults to 1.
328
329
330       --check-passphrase-pattern file
331              Check  the  passphrase  against the pattern given in file.  When
332              entering a new passphrase matching one of these pattern a  warn‐
333              ing will be displayed. file should be an absolute filename.  The
334              default is not to use any pattern file.
335
336              Security note: It is known that checking a passphrase against  a
337              list  of  pattern  or  even against a complete dictionary is not
338              very effective to enforce good  passphrases.   Users  will  soon
339              figure  up  ways to bypass such a policy.  A better policy is to
340              educate users on good security behavior and optionally to run  a
341              passphrase  cracker  regularly on all users passphrases to catch
342              the very simple ones.
343
344
345       --max-passphrase-days n
346              Ask the user to change the passphrase  if  n  days  have  passed
347              since  the  last  change.  With --enforce-passphrase-constraints
348              set the user may not bypass this check.
349
350
351       --enable-passphrase-history
352              This option does nothing yet.
353
354
355       --pinentry-program filename
356              Use program filename as the PIN entry.  The default is installa‐
357              tion dependent and can be shown with the --version command.
358
359
360       --pinentry-touch-file filename
361              By default the filename of the socket gpg-agent is listening for
362              requests is passed to Pinentry, so that it can touch  that  file
363              before  exiting (it does this only in curses mode).  This option
364              changes the file passed to Pinentry to  filename.   The  special
365              name  /dev/null  may be used to completely disable this feature.
366              Note that Pinentry will not  create  that  file,  it  will  only
367              change the modification and access time.
368
369
370
371       --scdaemon-program filename
372              Use  program  filename  as the Smartcard daemon.  The default is
373              installation dependent and can be shown with the --version  com‐
374              mand.
375
376
377       --disable-scdaemon
378              Do  not  make  use  of  the  scdaemon tool.  This option has the
379              effect of disabling the  ability  to  do  smartcard  operations.
380              Note,  that  enabling  this  option  at runtime does not kill an
381              already forked scdaemon.
382
383
384       --use-standard-socket
385
386       --no-use-standard-socket
387              By enabling this option gpg-agent  will  listen  on  the  socket
388              named ‘S.gpg-agent’, located in the home directory, and not cre‐
389              ate a random socket below a temporary directory.  Tools connect‐
390              ing to gpg-agent should first try to connect to the socket given
391              in environment variable GPG_AGENT_INFO and  then  fall  back  to
392              this  socket.  This option may not be used if the home directory
393              is mounted as a remote file system.  Note, that  --use-standard-
394              socket is the default on Windows systems.
395
396
397
398       --display string
399
400       --ttyname string
401
402       --ttytype string
403
404       --lc-ctype string
405
406       --lc-messages string
407
408       --xauthority string
409              These options are used with the server mode to pass localization
410              information.
411
412
413       --keep-tty
414
415       --keep-display
416              Ignore requests to change the current tty or X  window  system's
417              DISPLAY  variable  respectively.   This  is  useful  to lock the
418              pinentry to pop up at the tty or display you started the agent.
419
420
421
422       --enable-ssh-support
423
424              Enable emulation of the OpenSSH Agent protocol.
425
426              In this mode of operation, the agent does not only implement the
427              gpg-agent  protocol, but also the agent protocol used by OpenSSH
428              (through a separate socket).  Consequently, it should be  possi‐
429              ble  to  use the gpg-agent as a drop-in replacement for the well
430              known ssh-agent.
431
432              SSH Keys, which are to be used through the  agent,  need  to  be
433              added  to  the  gpg-agent initially through the ssh-add utility.
434              When a key is added, ssh-add will ask for the  password  of  the
435              provided  key  file and send the unprotected key material to the
436              agent; this causes the gpg-agent to ask for a passphrase,  which
437              is  to be used for encrypting the newly received key and storing
438              it in a gpg-agent specific directory.
439
440              Once a key has been added to the gpg-agent this  way,  the  gpg-
441              agent will be ready to use the key.
442
443              Note:  in  case  the gpg-agent receives a signature request, the
444              user might need to be prompted for a passphrase, which is neces‐
445              sary  for decrypting the stored key.  Since the ssh-agent proto‐
446              col does not contain a mechanism for telling the agent on  which
447              display/terminal it is running, gpg-agent's ssh-support will use
448              the TTY or X display  where  gpg-agent  has  been  started.   To
449              switch  this  display  to the current one, the following command
450              may be used:
451
452         echo UPDATESTARTUPTTY | gpg-connect-agent
453
454
455
456
457       All the long options may also be given in the configuration file  after
458       stripping off the two leading dashes.
459
460
461

EXAMPLES

463       The usual way to invoke gpg-agent is
464
465         $ eval $(gpg-agent --daemon)
466
467       An  alternative  way  is by replacing ssh-agent with gpg-agent.  If for
468       example ssh-agent is started as part of  the  Xsession  initialization,
469       you may simply replace ssh-agent by a script like:
470
471         #!/bin/sh
472
473         exec /usr/local/bin/gpg-agent --enable-ssh-support --daemon \
474               --write-env-file ${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info "$@"
475
476
477       and add something like (for Bourne shells)
478
479           if [ -f "${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info" ]; then
480             . "${HOME}/.gpg-agent-info"
481             export GPG_AGENT_INFO
482             export SSH_AUTH_SOCK
483             export SSH_AGENT_PID
484           fi
485
486
487       to your shell initialization file (e.g. ‘~/.bashrc’).
488
489
490

FILES

492       There  are  a  few  configuration files needed for the operation of the
493       agent. By default they may all be found in the current  home  directory
494       (see: [option --homedir]).
495
496
497
498       gpg-agent.conf
499                This is the standard configuration file read by gpg-agent on
500                startup.  It may contain any valid long option; the leading
501                two dashes may not be entered and the option may not be abbre‐
502              viated.
503                This file is also read after a SIGHUP however only a few
504                options will actually have an effect.  This default  name  may
505              be
506                changed on the command line (see: [option --options]).
507                You should backup this file.
508
509
510       trustlist.txt
511                This  is  the  list  of  trusted keys.  You should backup this
512              file.
513
514                Comment lines, indicated by a leading hash mark,  as  well  as
515              empty
516                lines are ignored.  To mark a key as trusted you need to enter
517              its
518                fingerprint followed by  a  space  and  a  capital  letter  S.
519              Colons
520                may optionally be used to separate the bytes of a fingerprint;
521              this
522                allows to cut and paste the fingerprint  from  a  key  listing
523              output.  If
524                the line is prefixed with a ! the key is explicitly marked as
525                not trusted.
526
527                Here  is  an  example  where two keys are marked as ultimately
528              trusted
529                and one as not trusted:
530
531                .RS 2
532                # CN=Wurzel ZS 3,O=Intevation GmbH,C=DE
533                A6935DD34EF3087973C706FC311AA2CCF733765B S
534
535                # CN=PCA-1-Verwaltung-02/O=PKI-1-Verwaltung/C=DE
536                DC:BD:69:25:48:BD:BB:7E:31:6E:BB:80:D3:00:80:35:D4:F8:A6:CD S
537
538                # CN=Root-CA/O=Schlapphuete/L=Pullach/C=DE
539                !14:56:98:D3:FE:9C:CA:5A:31:6E:BC:81:D3:11:4E:00:90:A3:44:C2 S
540                .fi
541
542       Before entering a key into this file, you need to ensure its
543       authenticity.  How to do this depends on your organisation; your
544       administrator might have already entered those keys which are deemed
545       trustworthy enough into this file.  Places where to look for the
546       fingerprint of a root certificate are letters received from the CA or
547       the website of the CA (after making 100% sure that this is indeed the
548       website of that CA).  You may want to consider allowing interactive
549       updates of this file by using the see: [option --allow-mark-trusted].
550       This is however not as secure as maintaining this file manually.  It is
551       even advisable to change the permissions to read-only so that this file
552       can't be changed inadvertently.
553
554       As a special feature a line include-default will include a global
555       list of trusted certificates (e.g. ‘/etc/gnupg/trustlist.txt’).
556       This global list is also used if the local list is not available.
557
558       It is possible to add further flags after the S for use by the
559       caller:
560
561
562              relax  Relax checking of some root certificate requirements.  This is for
563                     example required if the certificate is missing the basicConstraints
564                     attribute (despite that it is a MUST for CA certificates).
565
566
567              cm     If validation of a certificate finally issued by a CA with this flag set
568                     fails, try again using the chain validation model.
569
570
571
572
573       sshcontrol
574
575              This file is used when support for the secure shell agent protocol has
576              been enabled (see: [option --enable-ssh-support]). Only keys present in
577              this file are used in the SSH protocol.  You should backup this file.
578
579              The ssh-add tool may be used to add new entries to this file;
580              you may also add them manually.  Comment lines, indicated by a leading
581              hash mark, as well as empty lines are ignored.  An entry starts with
582              optional whitespace, followed by the keygrip of the key given as 40 hex
583              digits, optionally followed by the caching TTL in seconds and another
584              optional field for arbitrary flags.  A non-zero TTL overrides the global
585              default as set by --default-cache-ttl-ssh.
586
587              The keygrip may be prefixed with a ! to disable an entry entry.
588
589              The following example lists exactly one key.  Note that keys available
590              through a OpenPGP smartcard in the active smartcard reader are
591              implicitly added to this list; i.e. there is no need to list them.
592
593                .RS 2
594                # Key added on 2005-02-25 15:08:29
595                5A6592BF45DC73BD876874A28FD4639282E29B52 0
596                .fi
597
598
599       private-keys-v1.d/
600
601                This is the directory where gpg-agent stores the private keys.  Each
602                key is stored in a file with the name made up of the keygrip and the
603                suffix ‘key’.  You should backup all files in this directory
604                and take great care to keep this backup closed away.
605
606
607
608              Note that on larger installations, it is useful to put predefined
609              files into the directory ‘/etc/skel/.gnupg/’ so that newly created
610              users start up with a working configuration.  For existing users the
611              a small helper script is provided to create these files (see: [addgnupghome]).
612
613
614
615
616

SIGNALS

618       A running gpg-agent may be controlled by signals, i.e. using  the  kill
619       command to send a signal to the process.
620
621       Here is a list of supported signals:
622
623
624
625       SIGHUP This  signal  flushes  all cached passphrases and if the program
626              has been started with a configuration  file,  the  configuration
627              file  is  read  again.  Only certain options are honored: quiet,
628              verbose, debug, debug-all, debug-level,  no-grab,  pinentry-pro‐
629              gram,  default-cache-ttl,  max-cache-ttl, ignore-cache-for-sign‐
630              ing, allow-mark-trusted and disable-scdaemon.   scdaemon-program
631              is  also  supported but due to the current implementation, which
632              calls the scdaemon only once, it is not of much use  unless  you
633              manually kill the scdaemon.
634
635
636
637       SIGTERM
638              Shuts  down the process but waits until all current requests are
639              fulfilled.  If the process has received 3 of these  signals  and
640              requests are still pending, a shutdown is forced.
641
642
643       SIGINT Shuts down the process immediately.
644
645
646       SIGUSR1
647              Dump internal information to the log file.
648
649
650       SIGUSR2
651              This signal is used for internal purposes.
652
653
654
655

SEE ALSO

657       gpg2(1), gpgsm(1), gpg-connect-agent(1), scdaemon(1)
658
659       The full documentation for this tool is maintained as a Texinfo manual.
660       If GnuPG and the info program are properly installed at your site,  the
661       command
662
663         info gnupg
664
665       should  give  you access to the complete manual including a menu struc‐
666       ture and an index.
667
668
669
670GnuPG 2.0.14                      2018-07-13                      GPG-AGENT(1)
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