1GPGSM(1)                       GNU Privacy Guard                      GPGSM(1)
2
3
4

NAME

6       gpgsm - CMS encryption and signing tool
7

SYNOPSIS

9       gpgsm [--homedir dir] [--options file] [options] command [args]
10
11
12

DESCRIPTION

14       gpgsm  is a tool similar to gpg to provide digital encryption and sign‐
15       ing services on X.509 certificates and the CMS protocol.  It is  mainly
16       used  as  a  backend for S/MIME mail processing.  gpgsm includes a full
17       featured certificate management and complies with all rules defined for
18       the German Sphinx project.
19
20
21
22
23

COMMANDS

25       Commands  are  not  distinguished from options except for the fact that
26       only one command is allowed.
27
28
29
30
31
32   Commands not specific to the function
33
34
35
36       --version
37              Print the program version and licensing information.  Note  that
38              you cannot abbreviate this command.
39
40
41       --help, -h
42              Print  a  usage message summarizing the most useful command-line
43              options.  Note that you cannot abbreviate this command.
44
45
46       --warranty
47              Print warranty information.  Note  that  you  cannot  abbreviate
48              this command.
49
50
51       --dump-options
52              Print  a  list of all available options and commands.  Note that
53              you cannot abbreviate this command.
54
55
56
57
58   Commands to select the type of operation
59
60
61
62       --encrypt
63              Perform an encryption.  The keys the data is encrypted too  must
64              be set using the option --recipient.
65
66
67       --decrypt
68              Perform  a decryption; the type of input is automatically deter‐
69              mined.  It may either be in binary form or  PEM  encoded;  auto‐
70              matic determination of base-64 encoding is not done.
71
72
73       --sign Create a digital signature.  The key used is either the fist one
74              found in the keybox or those set with the --local-user option.
75
76
77       --verify
78              Check a signature file for validity.  Depending on the arguments
79              a detached signature may also be checked.
80
81
82       --server
83              Run in server mode and wait for commands on the stdin.
84
85
86       --call-dirmngr command [args]
87              Behave  as a Dirmngr client issuing the request command with the
88              optional list of args.  The output of  the  Dirmngr  is  printed
89              stdout.   Please  note that file names given as arguments should
90              have an absolute file name (i.e. commencing with / because  they
91              are  passed verbatim to the Dirmngr and the working directory of
92              the Dirmngr might not be the same as the  one  of  this  client.
93              Currently it is not possible to pass data via stdin to the Dirm‐
94              ngr.  command should not contain spaces.
95
96              This is command is required for certain maintaining tasks of the
97              dirmngr where a dirmngr must be able to call back to gpgsm.  See
98              the Dirmngr manual for details.
99
100
101       --call-protect-tool arguments
102              Certain maintenance operations are done by an  external  program
103              call gpg-protect-tool; this is usually not installed in a direc‐
104              tory listed in the PATH variable.  This command provides a  sim‐
105              ple  wrapper to access this tool.  arguments are passed verbatim
106              to this command; use '--help' to get a list of supported  opera‐
107              tions.
108
109
110
111
112
113
114   How to manage the certificates and keys
115
116
117
118       --gen-key
119              -This  command  allows  the  creation  of  a certificate signing
120              request.  It -is commonly used along with the --output option to
121              save  the  -created CSR into a file.  If used with the --batch a
122              parameter -file is used to create the CSR.  This command  allows
123              the  creation  of a certificate signing request or a self-signed
124              certificate.  It is commonly used along with the --output option
125              to  save  the  created  CSR or certificate into a file.  If used
126              with the --batch a parameter file is used to create the  CSR  or
127              certificate and it is further possible to create non-self-signed
128              certificates.
129
130
131       --list-keys
132
133       -k     List all available certificates stored in the  local  key  data‐
134              base.   Note  that  the  displayed data might be reformatted for
135              better human readability and illegal characters are replaced  by
136              safe substitutes.
137
138
139       --list-secret-keys
140
141       -K     List  all  available  certificates  for  which a corresponding a
142              secret key is available.
143
144
145       --list-external-keys pattern
146              List certificates matching pattern  using  an  external  server.
147              This utilizes the dirmngr service.
148
149
150       --list-chain
151              Same  as  --list-keys  but  also  prints  all keys making up the
152              chain.
153
154
155
156       --dump-cert
157
158       --dump-keys
159              List all available certificates stored in the local key database
160              using a format useful mainly for debugging.
161
162
163       --dump-chain
164              Same  as  --dump-keys  but  also  prints  all keys making up the
165              chain.
166
167
168       --dump-secret-keys
169              List all available certificates  for  which  a  corresponding  a
170              secret  key is available using a format useful mainly for debug‐
171              ging.
172
173
174       --dump-external-keys pattern
175              List certificates matching pattern  using  an  external  server.
176              This  utilizes  the  dirmngr  service.   It uses a format useful
177              mainly for debugging.
178
179
180       --keydb-clear-some-cert-flags
181              This is a debugging aid to reset certain flags in the key  data‐
182              base  which  are used to cache certain certificate stati.  It is
183              especially useful if a bad CRL or a weird running OCSP responder
184              did accidentally revoke certificate.  There is no security issue
185              with this command because gpgsm always make sure that the valid‐
186              ity of a certificate is checked right before it is used.
187
188
189       --delete-keys pattern
190              Delete the keys matching pattern.  Note that there is no command
191              to delete the secret part of the key directly.  In case you need
192              to  do this, you should run the command gpgsm --dump-secret-keys
193              KEYID before you delete the key, copy the string  of  hex-digits
194              in  the ``keygrip'' line and delete the file consisting of these
195              hex-digits and the  suffix  .key  from  the  ‘private-keys-v1.d
196              directory below our GnuPG home directory (usually ‘~/.gnupg’).
197
198
199       --export [pattern]
200              Export  all certificates stored in the Keybox or those specified
201              by the optional pattern. Those pattern consist of a list of user
202              ids (see: [how-to-specify-a-user-id]).  When used along with the
203              --armor option a few informational lines  are  prepended  before
204              each  block.   There  is one limitation: As there is no commonly
205              agreed upon way to pack more than one certificate into an  ASN.1
206              structure,  the  binary  export (i.e. without using armor) works
207              only for the export of one certificate.  Thus it is required  to
208              specify   a   pattern  which  yields  exactly  one  certificate.
209              Ephemeral certificate are only exported if all pattern are given
210              as fingerprints or keygrips.
211
212
213       --export-secret-key-p12 key-id
214              Export  the private key and the certificate identified by key-id
215              in a PKCS#12 format. When using along with the --armor option  a
216              few informational lines are prepended to the output.  Note, that
217              the PKCS#12 format is not very secure and this command  is  only
218              provided  if  there is no other way to exchange the private key.
219              (see: [option --p12-charset])
220
221
222       --import [files]
223              Import the certificates from the PEM or binary encoded files  as
224              well  as  from  signed-only  messages.  This command may also be
225              used to import a secret key from a PKCS#12 file.
226
227
228       --learn-card
229              Read information about the private keys from the  smartcard  and
230              import  the  certificates from there.  This command utilizes the
231              gpg-agent and in turn the scdaemon.
232
233
234       --passwd user_id
235              Change the passphrase of the private key belonging to  the  cer‐
236              tificate   specified   as  user_id.   Note,  that  changing  the
237              passphrase/PIN of a smartcard is not yet supported.
238
239
240
241
242

OPTIONS

244       GPGSM features a bunch of options to control the exact behaviour and to
245       change the default configuration.
246
247
248
249
250
251   How to change the configuration
252
253
254       These  options  are  used  to  change the configuration and are usually
255       found in the option file.
256
257
258
259       --options file
260              Reads configuration from file instead of from the  default  per-
261              user  configuration  file.   The  default  configuration file is
262              named  ‘gpgsm.conf’  and  expected  in  the  ‘.gnupg’  directory
263              directly below the home directory of the user.
264
265
266       --homedir dir
267              Set the name of the home directory to dir. If this option is not
268              used, the home directory defaults to  ‘~/.gnupg’.   It  is  only
269              recognized  when  given  on the command line.  It also overrides
270              any home  directory  stated  through  the  environment  variable
271GNUPGHOME’  or  (on W32 systems) by means of the Registry entry
272              HKCU\Software\GNU\GnuPG:HomeDir.
273
274
275
276
277       -v
278
279       --verbose
280              Outputs additional information while running.  You can  increase
281              the  verbosity by giving several verbose commands to gpgsm, such
282              as '-vv'.
283
284
285       --policy-file filename
286              Change the default name of the policy file to filename.
287
288
289       --agent-program file
290              Specify an agent program to be used for secret  key  operations.
291              The  default  value  is the ‘/usr/local/bin/gpg-agent’.  This is
292              only  used  as  a  fallback  when   the   environment   variable
293              GPG_AGENT_INFO is not set or a running agent can't be connected.
294
295
296       --dirmngr-program file
297              Specify  a  dirmngr  program  to  be  used  for CRL checks.  The
298              default value is ‘/usr/sbin/dirmngr’.  This is only  used  as  a
299              fallback  when  the environment variable DIRMNGR_INFO is not set
300              or a running dirmngr can't be connected.
301
302
303       --prefer-system-dirmngr
304              If a system wide dirmngr is running in daemon mode, first try to
305              connect  to  this  one.  Fallback to a pipe based server if this
306              does not work.  Under Windows this option is ignored because the
307              system dirmngr is always used.
308
309
310       --disable-dirmngr
311              Entirely disable the use of the Dirmngr.
312
313
314       --no-secmem-warning
315              Don't  print  a warning when the so called "secure memory" can't
316              be used.
317
318
319       --log-file file
320              When running in server mode, append all logging output to file.
321
322
323
324
325
326   Certificate related options
327
328
329
330
331       --enable-policy-checks
332
333       --disable-policy-checks
334              By default policy checks are enabled.  These options may be used
335              to change it.
336
337
338       --enable-crl-checks
339
340       --disable-crl-checks
341              By default the CRL checks are enabled and the DirMngr is used to
342              check for revoked certificates.  The disable option is most use‐
343              ful with an off-line network connection to suppress this check.
344
345
346       --enable-trusted-cert-crl-check
347
348       --disable-trusted-cert-crl-check
349              By  default  the  CRL  for trusted root certificates are checked
350              like for any other certificates.  This allows a CA to revoke its
351              own  certificates voluntary without the need of putting all ever
352              issued certificates into a CRL.  The disable option may be  used
353              to  switch this extra check off.  Due to the caching done by the
354              Dirmngr, there won't be any noticeable performance gain.   Note,
355              that  this  also  disables possible OCSP checks for trusted root
356              certificates.  A more specific way of disabling this check is by
357              adding  the  ``relax''  keyword  to  the  root  CA  line  of the
358trustlist.txt
359
360
361
362       --force-crl-refresh
363              Tell the dirmngr to reload the CRL for each request.  For better
364              performance,  the  dirmngr  will  actually optimize this by sup‐
365              pressing the loading for short time intervals (e.g. 30 minutes).
366              This option is useful to make sure that a fresh CRL is available
367              for certificates hold in the keybox.  The suggested way of doing
368              this  is by using it along with the option --with-validation for
369              a key listing command.  This option should not be used in a con‐
370              figuration file.
371
372
373       --enable-ocsp
374
375       --disable-ocsp
376              Be  default  OCSP checks are disabled.  The enable option may be
377              used to enable OCSP checks via Dirmngr.  If CRL checks are  also
378              enabled,  CRLs  will be used as a fallback if for some reason an
379              OCSP request won't succeed.  Note, that you have to  allow  OCSP
380              requests in Dirmngr's configuration too (option --allow-ocsp and
381              configure dirmngr properly.  If you don't do so you will get the
382              error code 'Not supported'.
383
384
385       --auto-issuer-key-retrieve
386              If  a required certificate is missing while validating the chain
387              of certificates, try to load that certificate from  an  external
388              location.  This usually means that Dirmngr is employed to search
389              for the certificate.  Note that this option makes  a  "web  bug"
390              like  behavior  possible.   LDAP  server operators can see which
391              keys you request, so by sending you a message signed by a  brand
392              new  key  (which  you naturally will not have on your local key‐
393              box), the operator can tell both your IP address  and  the  time
394              when you verified the signature.
395
396
397
398       --validation-model name
399              This option changes the default validation model.  The only pos‐
400              sible values are "shell" (which  is  the  default)  and  "chain"
401              which  forces  the  use  of the chain model.  The chain model is
402              also used if an option in the ‘trustlist.txt’ or an attribute of
403              the certificate requests it.  However the standard model (shell)
404              is in that case always tried first.
405
406
407       --ignore-cert-extension oid
408              Add oid to the list of ignored certificate extensions.  The  oid
409              is  expected  to be in dotted decimal form, like 2.5.29.3.  This
410              option may be used more than once.  Critical flagged certificate
411              extensions  matching  one of the OIDs in the list are treated as
412              if they are actually handled and thus the certificate  won't  be
413              rejected  due to an unknown critical extension.  Use this option
414              with care because extensions are usually flagged as critical for
415              a reason.
416
417
418
419
420   Input and Output
421
422
423
424       --armor
425
426       -a     Create PEM encoded output.  Default is binary output.
427
428
429       --base64
430              Create  Base-64  encoded  output;  i.e.  PEM  without the header
431              lines.
432
433
434       --assume-armor
435              Assume the input data is PEM encoded.  Default is to  autodetect
436              the encoding but this is may fail.
437
438
439       --assume-base64
440              Assume the input data is plain base-64 encoded.
441
442
443       --assume-binary
444              Assume the input data is binary encoded.
445
446
447
448       --p12-charset name
449              gpgsm  uses  the  UTF-8  encoding  when encoding passphrases for
450              PKCS#12 files.  This option may be used to force the  passphrase
451              to be encoded in the specified encoding name.  This is useful if
452              the application used to import the key uses a different encoding
453              and  thus  won't  be  able  to import a file generated by gpgsm.
454              Commonly used values for name are Latin1 and CP850.   Note  that
455              gpgsm  itself  automagically  imports any file with a passphrase
456              encoded to the most commonly used encodings.
457
458
459
460       --default-key user_id
461              Use user_id as the standard key for signing.  This key  is  used
462              if  no  other key has been defined as a signing key.  Note, that
463              the first --local-users option also sets this key if it has  not
464              yet been set; however --default-key always overrides this.
465
466
467
468       --local-user user_id
469
470       -u user_id
471              Set  the  user(s)  to  be  used for signing.  The default is the
472              first secret key found in the database.
473
474
475
476       --recipient name
477
478       -r     Encrypt to the user id name.  There are several ways a  user  id
479              may be given (see: [how-to-specify-a-user-id]).
480
481
482
483       --output file
484
485       -o file
486              Write output to file.  The default is to write it to stdout.
487
488
489
490       --with-key-data
491              Displays extra information with the --list-keys commands.  Espe‐
492              cially a line tagged grp is printed which tells you the  keygrip
493              of  a  key.  This string is for example used as the file name of
494              the secret key.
495
496
497       --with-validation
498              When doing a key listing, do a full validation  check  for  each
499              key  and  print  the  result.   This is usually a slow operation
500              because it requires a CRL lookup and other operations.
501
502              When used along with --import, a validation of  the  certificate
503              to  import  is  done  and only imported if it succeeds the test.
504              Note that this does not affect an already available  certificate
505              in  the  DB.  This option is therefore useful to simply verify a
506              certificate.
507
508
509
510       --with-md5-fingerprint
511              For standard key listings, also print the MD5 fingerprint of the
512              certificate.
513
514
515       --with-keygrip
516              Include  the  keygrip  in  standard key listings.  Note that the
517              keygrip is always listed in --with-colons mode.
518
519
520
521
522   How to change how the CMS is created.
523
524
525
526       --include-certs n
527              Using n of -2 includes all certificate except for the root cert,
528              -1  includes all certs, 0 does not include any certs, 1 includes
529              only the signers cert and all other positive values  include  up
530              to n certificates starting with the signer cert.  The default is
531              -2.
532
533
534       --cipher-algo oid
535              Use the cipher algorithm with the ASN.1  object  identifier  oid
536              for  encryption.   For  convenience  the  strings  3DES, AES and
537              AES256 may be used instead of their OIDs.  The default  is  3DES
538              (1.2.840.113549.3.7).
539
540
541       --digest-algo name
542              Use  name  as  the message digest algorithm.  Usually this algo‐
543              rithm is deduced from the respective signing certificate.   This
544              option  forces  the  use  of the given algorithm and may lead to
545              severe interoperability problems.
546
547
548
549
550
551
552   Doing things one usually don't want to do.
553
554
555
556
557
558       --extra-digest-algo name
559              Sometimes signatures are broken in that they announce a  differ‐
560              ent  digest algorithm than actually used.  gpgsm uses a one-pass
561              data processing model and thus needs to rely  on  the  announced
562              digest  algorithms  to  properly hash the data.  As a workaround
563              this option may be used to tell gpg to also hash the data  using
564              the  algorithm name; this slows processing down a little bit but
565              allows to verify such broken signatures.   If  gpgsm  prints  an
566              error  like  ``digest algo 8 has not been enabled'' you may want
567              to try this option, with 'SHA256' for name.
568
569
570
571       --faked-system-time epoch
572              This option is only useful for testing; it sets the system  time
573              back  or  forth  to epoch which is the number of seconds elapsed
574              since the year 1970.  Alternatively epoch may be given as a full
575              ISO time string (e.g. "20070924T154812").
576
577
578       --with-ephemeral-keys
579              Include  ephemeral  flagged  keys in the output of key listings.
580              Note that they are included anyway if the key specification  for
581              a listing is given as fingerprint or keygrip.
582
583
584       --debug-level level
585              Select  the debug level for investigating problems. level may be
586              a numeric value or by a keyword:
587
588
589              none   No debugging at all.  A value of less than 1 may be  used
590                     instead of the keyword.
591
592              basic  Some  basic  debug messages.  A value between 1 and 2 may
593                     be used instead of the keyword.
594
595              advanced
596                     More verbose debug messages.  A value between 3 and 5 may
597                     be used instead of the keyword.
598
599              expert Even more detailed messages.  A value between 6 and 8 may
600                     be used instead of the keyword.
601
602              guru   All of the debug messages you can get.  A  value  greater
603                     than  8 may be used instead of the keyword.  The creation
604                     of hash tracing files is only enabled if the  keyword  is
605                     used.
606
607       How  these  messages  are  mapped  to the actual debugging flags is not
608       specified and may change with newer releases of this program. They  are
609       however carefully selected to best aid in debugging.
610
611
612       --debug flags
613              This  option  is only useful for debugging and the behaviour may
614              change at any time without notice; using --debug-levels  is  the
615              preferred  method  to select the debug verbosity.  FLAGS are bit
616              encoded and may  be  given  in  usual  C-Syntax.  The  currently
617              defined bits are:
618
619
620              0 (1)  X.509 or OpenPGP protocol related data
621
622              1 (2)  values of big number integers
623
624              2 (4)  low level crypto operations
625
626              5 (32) memory allocation
627
628              6 (64) caching
629
630              7 (128)
631                     show memory statistics.
632
633              9 (512)
634                     write hashed data to files named dbgmd-000*
635
636              10 (1024)
637                     trace Assuan protocol
638
639       Note,  that  all  flags  set  using  this  option may get overridden by
640       --debug-level.
641
642
643       --debug-all
644              Same as --debug=0xffffffff
645
646
647       --debug-allow-core-dump
648              Usually gpgsm tries to avoid dumping core by well  written  code
649              and by disabling core dumps for security reasons.  However, bugs
650              are pretty durable beasts and to squash  them  it  is  sometimes
651              useful  to  have  a  core  dump.  This option enables core dumps
652              unless the Bad Thing happened before the option parsing.
653
654
655       --debug-no-chain-validation
656              This is actually not a debugging option but only useful as such.
657              It lets gpgsm bypass all certificate chain validation checks.
658
659
660       --debug-ignore-expiration
661              This is actually not a debugging option but only useful as such.
662              It lets gpgsm ignore all notAfter dates, this  is  used  by  the
663              regression tests.
664
665
666       --fixed-passphrase string
667              Supply  the  passphrase  string  to  the gpg-protect-tool.  This
668              option is only useful for the  regression  tests  included  with
669              this  package  and may be revised or removed at any time without
670              notice.
671
672
673       --no-common-certs-import
674              Suppress the import of common certificates on keybox creation.
675
676
677              All the long options may also be given in the configuration file
678              after stripping off the two leading dashes.
679
680
681

HOW TO SPECIFY A USER ID

683       There  are  different ways to specify a user ID to GnuPG.  Some of them
684       are only valid for gpg others are only good for  gpgsm.   Here  is  the
685       entire list of ways to specify a key:
686
687
688
689       By key Id.
690              This  format  is  deduced  from the length of the string and its
691              content or 0x prefix. The key Id of an X.509 certificate are the
692              low  64  bits  of  its SHA-1 fingerprint.  The use of key Ids is
693              just a shortcut, for all automated  processing  the  fingerprint
694              should be used.
695
696              When  using gpg an exclamation mark (!) may be appended to force
697              using the specified primary or secondary key and not to try  and
698              calculate which primary or secondary key to use.
699
700              The last four lines of the example give the key ID in their long
701              form as internally used by the OpenPGP protocol. You can see the
702              long key ID using the option --with-colons.
703
704         234567C4
705         0F34E556E
706         01347A56A
707         0xAB123456
708
709         234AABBCC34567C4
710         0F323456784E56EAB
711         01AB3FED1347A5612
712         0x234AABBCC34567C4
713
714
715
716
717       By fingerprint.
718              This  format  is  deduced  from the length of the string and its
719              content or the 0x prefix.  Note, that only the 20  byte  version
720              fingerprint  is available with gpgsm (i.e. the SHA-1 hash of the
721              certificate).
722
723              When using gpg an exclamation mark (!) may be appended to  force
724              using  the specified primary or secondary key and not to try and
725              calculate which primary or secondary key to use.
726
727              The best way to specify a key Id is by  using  the  fingerprint.
728              This  avoids  any  ambiguities in case that there are duplicated
729              key IDs.
730
731         1234343434343434C434343434343434
732         123434343434343C3434343434343734349A3434
733         0E12343434343434343434EAB3484343434343434
734         0xE12343434343434343434EAB3484343434343434
735
736
737       (gpgsm also accepts colons between  each  pair  of  hexadecimal  digits
738       because  this  is the de-facto standard on how to present X.509 finger‐
739       prints.)
740
741
742       By exact match on OpenPGP user ID.
743              This is denoted by a leading equal sign. It does not make  sense
744              for X.509 certificates.
745
746         =Heinrich Heine <heinrichh@uni-duesseldorf.de>
747
748
749       By exact match on an email address.
750              This  is  indicated  by enclosing the email address in the usual
751              way with left and right angles.
752
753         <heinrichh@uni-duesseldorf.de>
754
755
756
757       By word match.
758              All words must match exactly (not case sensitive) but can appear
759              in  any  order in the user ID or a subjects name.  Words are any
760              sequences of letters, digits, the underscore and all  characters
761              with bit 7 set.
762
763         +Heinrich Heine duesseldorf
764
765
766       By exact match on the subject's DN.
767              This  is  indicated by a leading slash, directly followed by the
768              RFC-2253 encoded DN of the subject.  Note that you can't use the
769              string  printed  by "gpgsm --list-keys" because that one as been
770              reordered and modified for better readability; use --with-colons
771              to print the raw (but standard escaped) RFC-2253 string
772
773         /CN=Heinrich Heine,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR
774
775
776       By exact match on the issuer's DN.
777              This is indicated by a leading hash mark, directly followed by a
778              slash and then directly followed by the rfc2253  encoded  DN  of
779              the  issuer.   This  should  return the Root cert of the issuer.
780              See note above.
781
782         #/CN=Root Cert,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR
783
784
785
786       By exact match on serial number and issuer's DN.
787              This is indicated by a hash mark, followed  by  the  hexadecimal
788              representation  of  the  serial number, then followed by a slash
789              and the RFC-2253 encoded DN of the issuer. See note above.
790
791         #4F03/CN=Root Cert,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR
792
793
794       By keygrip
795              This is indicated by an ampersand followed by the 40 hex  digits
796              of  a  keygrip.  gpgsm prints the keygrip when using the command
797              --dump-cert.  It does not yet work for OpenPGP keys.
798
799         &D75F22C3F86E355877348498CDC92BD21010A480
800
801
802
803       By substring match.
804              This is the default mode but applications may want to explicitly
805              indicate  this  by  putting the asterisk in front.  Match is not
806              case sensitive.
807
808         Heine
809         *Heine
810
811
812
813       Please note that we have reused the hash mark identifier which was used
814       in  old  GnuPG  versions to indicate the so called local-id.  It is not
815       anymore used and there should be  no  conflict  when  used  with  X.509
816       stuff.
817
818       Using the RFC-2253 format of DNs has the drawback that it is not possi‐
819       ble to map them back to the original encoding, however we don't have to
820       do this because our key database stores this encoding as meta data.
821
822
823
824
825
826

EXAMPLES

828         $ gpgsm -er goo@bar.net <plaintext >ciphertext
829
830
831
832

FILES

834       There  are  a  few  configuration  files  to control certain aspects of
835       gpgsm's operation. Unless noted, they are expected in the current  home
836       directory (see: [option --homedir]).
837
838
839
840       gpgsm.conf
841              This  is  the  standard  configuration  file  read  by  gpgsm on
842              startup.  It may contain any valid long option; the leading  two
843              dashes may not be entered and the option may not be abbreviated.
844              This default name may be  changed  on  the  command  line  (see:
845              [option
846                --options]).  You should backup this file.
847
848
849
850       policies.txt
851              This  is  a  list of allowed CA policies.  This file should list
852              the object identifiers of the  policies  line  by  line.   Empty
853              lines and lines starting with a hash mark are ignored.  Policies
854              missing in this file and not marked as critical in the  certifi‐
855              cate  will  print  only  a  warning;  certificates with policies
856              marked as critical and not listed in this  file  will  fail  the
857              signature verification.  You should backup this file.
858
859              For example, to allow only the policy 2.289.9.9, the file should
860              look like this:
861
862                # Allowed policies
863                2.289.9.9
864
865
866       qualified.txt
867              This is the list of root certificates used  for  qualified  cer‐
868              tificates.  They are defined as certificates capable of creating
869              legally binding signatures in the same way as handwritten signa‐
870              tures  are.  Comments start with a hash mark and empty lines are
871              ignored.  Lines do have a length limit but this is not a serious
872              limitation  as the format of the entries is fixed and checked by
873              gpgsm: A non-comment line starts with optional whitespace,  fol‐
874              lowed  by exactly 40 hex character, white space and a lowercased
875              2 letter country code.  Additional  data  delimited  with  by  a
876              white  space is current ignored but might late be used for other
877              purposes.
878
879              Note that even if a certificate is listed  in  this  file,  this
880              does  not  mean  that the certificate is trusted; in general the
881              certificates listed in this file  need  to  be  listed  also  in
882trustlist.txt’.
883
884              This  is  a global file an installed in the data directory (e.g.
885/usr/share/gnupg/qualified.txt’).  GnuPG  installs  a  suitable
886              file  with root certificates as used in Germany.  As new Root-CA
887              certificates may be issued over time, these entries may need  to
888              be  updated; new distributions of this software should come with
889              an updated list but it is still the responsibility of the Admin‐
890              istrator to check that this list is correct.
891
892              Everytime  gpgsm  uses a certificate for signing or verification
893              this file will be consulted to  check  whether  the  certificate
894              under  question  has ultimately been issued by one of these CAs.
895              If this is the case the user will be informed that the  verified
896              signature  represents  a  legally binding (``qualified'') signa‐
897              ture.  When creating a signature using  such  a  certificate  an
898              extra  prompt will be issued to let the user confirm that such a
899              legally binding signature shall really be created.
900
901              Because this software has not yet been  approved  for  use  with
902              such certificates, appropriate notices will be shown to indicate
903              this fact.
904
905
906       help.txt
907              This is plain text file with a few help entries used with pinen‐
908              try  as  well  as  a large list of help items for gpg and gpgsm.
909              The standard file has English help texts; to  install  localized
910              versions  use  filenames like ‘help.LL.txt’ with LL denoting the
911              locale.  GnuPG comes with a set of predefined help files in  the
912              data  directory (e.g. ‘/usr/share/gnupg/help.de.txt’) and allows
913              overriding of any help item by help files stored in  the  system
914              configuration  directory (e.g. ‘/etc/gnupg/help.de.txt’).  For a
915              reference of the help file's syntax, please  see  the  installed
916help.txt’ file.
917
918
919
920       com-certs.pem
921              This  file  is a collection of common certificates used to popu‐
922              lated a  newly  created  ‘pubring.kbx’.   An  administrator  may
923              replace this file with a custom one.  The format is a concatena‐
924              tion of PEM encoded X.509 certificates.   This  global  file  is
925              installed  in  the  data  directory (e.g. ‘/usr/share/gnupg/com-
926              certs.pem’).
927
928
929       Note that on larger installations, it is useful to put predefined files
930       into  the  directory  ‘/etc/skel/.gnupg/’  so  that newly created users
931       start up with a working configuration.   For  existing  users  a  small
932       helper script is provided to create these files (see: [addgnupghome]).
933
934       For  internal  purposes  gpgsm creates and maintains a few other files;
935       they all live in in the current home directory  (see:  [option  --home‐
936       dir]).  Only gpgsm may modify these files.
937
938
939
940       pubring.kbx
941              This  a  database  file storing the certificates as well as meta
942              information.  For debugging purposes the  tool  kbxutil  may  be
943              used  to  show  the internal structure of this file.  You should
944              backup this file.
945
946
947       random_seed
948              This content of this file is used to maintain the internal state
949              of  the  random  number  generator across invocations.  The same
950              file is used by other programs of this software too.
951
952
953       S.gpg-agent
954              If   this   file   exists   and   the    environment    variable
955GPG_AGENT_INFO’  is not set, gpgsm will first try to connect to
956              this socket for accessing gpg-agent before starting a  new  gpg-
957              agent  instance.  Under Windows this socket (which in reality be
958              a plain file describing a regular TCP  listening  port)  is  the
959              standard way of connecting the gpg-agent.
960
961
962
963
964

SEE ALSO

966       gpg2(1), gpg-agent(1)
967
968       The full documentation for this tool is maintained as a Texinfo manual.
969       If GnuPG and the info program are properly installed at your site,  the
970       command
971
972         info gnupg
973
974       should  give  you access to the complete manual including a menu struc‐
975       ture and an index.
976
977
978
979GnuPG 2.0.18                      2011-09-20                          GPGSM(1)
Impressum