1GPGSM(1) GNU Privacy Guard 2.3 GPGSM(1)
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3
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6 gpgsm - CMS encryption and signing tool
7
9 gpgsm [--homedir dir] [--options file] [options] command [args]
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11
12
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.
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20
21
22
23
25 Commands are not distinguished from options except for the fact that
26 only one command is allowed.
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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 Commands to select the type of operation
56
57
58
59 --encrypt
60 Perform an encryption. The keys the data is encrypted to must
61 be set using the option --recipient.
62
63
64 --decrypt
65 Perform a decryption; the type of input is automatically deter‐
66 mined. It may either be in binary form or PEM encoded; auto‐
67 matic determination of base-64 encoding is not done.
68
69
70 --sign Create a digital signature. The key used is either the fist one
71 found in the keybox or those set with the --local-user option.
72
73
74 --verify
75 Check a signature file for validity. Depending on the arguments
76 a detached signature may also be checked.
77
78
79 --server
80 Run in server mode and wait for commands on the stdin.
81
82
83 --call-dirmngr command [args]
84 Behave as a Dirmngr client issuing the request command with the
85 optional list of args. The output of the Dirmngr is printed
86 stdout. Please note that file names given as arguments should
87 have an absolute file name (i.e. commencing with /) because they
88 are passed verbatim to the Dirmngr and the working directory of
89 the Dirmngr might not be the same as the one of this client.
90 Currently it is not possible to pass data via stdin to the Dirm‐
91 ngr. command should not contain spaces.
92
93 This is command is required for certain maintaining tasks of the
94 dirmngr where a dirmngr must be able to call back to gpgsm. See
95 the Dirmngr manual for details.
96
97
98 --call-protect-tool arguments
99 Certain maintenance operations are done by an external program
100 call gpg-protect-tool; this is usually not installed in a direc‐
101 tory listed in the PATH variable. This command provides a sim‐
102 ple wrapper to access this tool. arguments are passed verbatim
103 to this command; use ‘--help’ to get a list of supported opera‐
104 tions.
105
106
107
108 How to manage the certificates and keys
109
110
111
112 --generate-key
113 --gen-key
114 This command allows the creation of a certificate signing re‐
115 quest or a self-signed certificate. It is commonly used along
116 with the --output option to save the created CSR or certificate
117 into a file. If used with the --batch a parameter file is used
118 to create the CSR or certificate and it is further possible to
119 create non-self-signed certificates.
120
121
122 --list-keys
123 -k List all available certificates stored in the local key data‐
124 base. Note that the displayed data might be reformatted for
125 better human readability and illegal characters are replaced by
126 safe substitutes.
127
128
129 --list-secret-keys
130 -K List all available certificates for which a corresponding a se‐
131 cret key is available.
132
133
134 --list-external-keys pattern
135 List certificates matching pattern using an external server.
136 This utilizes the dirmngr service.
137
138
139 --list-chain
140 Same as --list-keys but also prints all keys making up the
141 chain.
142
143
144
145 --dump-cert
146 --dump-keys
147 List all available certificates stored in the local key database
148 using a format useful mainly for debugging.
149
150
151 --dump-chain
152 Same as --dump-keys but also prints all keys making up the
153 chain.
154
155
156 --dump-secret-keys
157 List all available certificates for which a corresponding a se‐
158 cret key is available using a format useful mainly for debug‐
159 ging.
160
161
162 --dump-external-keys pattern
163 List certificates matching pattern using an external server.
164 This utilizes the dirmngr service. It uses a format useful
165 mainly for debugging.
166
167
168 --show-certs [files]
169 This command takes certificate files as input and prints infor‐
170 mation about them in the same format as --dump-cert does. Each
171 file may either contain a single binary certificate or several
172 PEM encoded certificates. If no files are given, the input is
173 taken from stdin.
174
175 Please note that the listing format may be changed in future re‐
176 leases and that the option --with-colons has currently no ef‐
177 fect.
178
179
180
181 --keydb-clear-some-cert-flags
182 This is a debugging aid to reset certain flags in the key data‐
183 base which are used to cache certain certificate statuses. It
184 is especially useful if a bad CRL or a weird running OCSP re‐
185 sponder did accidentally revoke certificate. There is no secu‐
186 rity issue with this command because gpgsm always make sure that
187 the validity of a certificate is checked right before it is
188 used.
189
190
191 --delete-keys pattern
192 Delete the keys matching pattern. Note that there is no command
193 to delete the secret part of the key directly. In case you need
194 to do this, you should run the command gpgsm --dump-secret-keys
195 KEYID before you delete the key, copy the string of hex-digits
196 in the ``keygrip'' line and delete the file consisting of these
197 hex-digits and the suffix .key from the ‘private-keys-v1.d’ di‐
198 rectory below our GnuPG home directory (usually ‘~/.gnupg’).
199
200
201 --export [pattern]
202 Export all certificates stored in the Keybox or those specified
203 by the optional pattern. Those pattern consist of a list of user
204 ids (see: [how-to-specify-a-user-id]). When used along with the
205 --armor option a few informational lines are prepended before
206 each block. There is one limitation: As there is no commonly
207 agreed upon way to pack more than one certificate into an ASN.1
208 structure, the binary export (i.e. without using armor) works
209 only for the export of one certificate. Thus it is required to
210 specify a pattern which yields exactly one certificate.
211 Ephemeral certificate are only exported if all pattern are given
212 as fingerprints or keygrips.
213
214
215 --export-secret-key-p12 key-id
216 Export the private key and the certificate identified by key-id
217 using the PKCS#12 format. When used with the --armor option a
218 few informational lines are prepended to the output. Note, that
219 the PKCS#12 format is not very secure and proper transport secu‐
220 rity should be used to convey the exported key. (See: [option
221 --p12-charset].)
222
223
224 --export-secret-key-p8 key-id
225 --export-secret-key-raw key-id
226 Export the private key of the certificate identified by key-id
227 with any encryption stripped. The ...-raw command exports in
228 PKCS#1 format; the ...-p8 command exports in PKCS#8 format.
229 When used with the --armor option a few informational lines are
230 prepended to the output. These commands are useful to prepare a
231 key for use on a TLS server.
232
233
234 --import [files]
235 Import the certificates from the PEM or binary encoded files as
236 well as from signed-only messages. This command may also be
237 used to import a secret key from a PKCS#12 file.
238
239
240 --learn-card
241 Read information about the private keys from the smartcard and
242 import the certificates from there. This command utilizes the
243 gpg-agent and in turn the scdaemon.
244
245
246 --change-passphrase user_id
247 --passwd user_id
248 Change the passphrase of the private key belonging to the cer‐
249 tificate specified as user_id. Note, that changing the
250 passphrase/PIN of a smartcard is not yet supported.
251
252
254 GPGSM features a bunch of options to control the exact behaviour and to
255 change the default configuration.
256
257
258
259
260
261 How to change the configuration
262
263
264 These options are used to change the configuration and are usually
265 found in the option file.
266
267
268
269
270 --options file
271 Reads configuration from file instead of from the default per-
272 user configuration file. The default configuration file is
273 named ‘gpgsm.conf’ and expected in the ‘.gnupg’ directory di‐
274 rectly below the home directory of the user.
275
276
277 --homedir dir
278 Set the name of the home directory to dir. If this option is not
279 used, the home directory defaults to ‘~/.gnupg’. It is only
280 recognized when given on the command line. It also overrides
281 any home directory stated through the environment variable
282 ‘GNUPGHOME’ or (on Windows systems) by means of the Registry en‐
283 try HKCU\Software\GNU\GnuPG:HomeDir.
284
285 On Windows systems it is possible to install GnuPG as a portable
286 application. In this case only this command line option is con‐
287 sidered, all other ways to set a home directory are ignored.
288
289 To install GnuPG as a portable application under Windows, create
290 an empty file named ‘gpgconf.ctl’ in the same directory as the
291 tool ‘gpgconf.exe’. The root of the installation is then that
292 directory; or, if ‘gpgconf.exe’ has been installed directly be‐
293 low a directory named ‘bin’, its parent directory. You also
294 need to make sure that the following directories exist and are
295 writable: ‘ROOT/home’ for the GnuPG home and
296 ‘ROOT/var/cache/gnupg’ for internal cache files.
297
298
299
300 -v
301
302 --verbose
303 Outputs additional information while running. You can increase
304 the verbosity by giving several verbose commands to gpgsm, such
305 as ‘-vv’.
306
307
308 --keyserver string
309 This is a deprecated option. It was used to add an LDAP server
310 to use for X.509 certificate and CRL lookup. The alias
311 --ldapserver existed from version 2.2.28 to 2.2.33 and 2.3.2 to
312 2.3.4 but is now entirely ignored.
313
314 LDAP servers must be given in the configuration for dirmngr.
315
316
317 --policy-file filename
318 Change the default name of the policy file to filename. The de‐
319 fault name is ‘policies.txt’.
320
321
322 --agent-program file
323 Specify an agent program to be used for secret key operations.
324 The default value is determined by running the command gpgconf.
325 Note that the pipe symbol (|) is used for a regression test
326 suite hack and may thus not be used in the file name.
327
328
329 --dirmngr-program file
330 Specify a dirmngr program to be used for CRL checks. The de‐
331 fault value is ‘/usr/bin/dirmngr’.
332
333
334 --prefer-system-dirmngr
335 This option is obsolete and ignored.
336
337
338 --disable-dirmngr
339 Entirely disable the use of the Dirmngr.
340
341
342 --no-autostart
343 Do not start the gpg-agent or the dirmngr if it has not yet been
344 started and its service is required. This option is mostly use‐
345 ful on machines where the connection to gpg-agent has been redi‐
346 rected to another machines. If dirmngr is required on the re‐
347 mote machine, it may be started manually using gpgconf --launch
348 dirmngr.
349
350
351 --no-secmem-warning
352 Do not print a warning when the so called "secure memory" cannot
353 be used.
354
355
356 --log-file file
357 When running in server mode, append all logging output to file.
358 Use ‘socket://’ to log to socket.
359
360
361 Certificate related options
362
363
364
365
366 --enable-policy-checks
367 --disable-policy-checks
368 By default policy checks are enabled. These options may be used
369 to change it.
370
371
372 --enable-crl-checks
373 --disable-crl-checks
374 By default the CRL checks are enabled and the DirMngr is used to
375 check for revoked certificates. The disable option is most use‐
376 ful with an off-line network connection to suppress this check
377 and also to avoid that new certificates introduce a web bug by
378 including a certificate specific CRL DP. The disable option
379 also disables an issuer certificate lookup via the authorityIn‐
380 foAccess property of the certificate; the --enable-issuer-key-
381 retrieve can be used to make use of that property anyway.
382
383
384 --enable-trusted-cert-crl-check
385 --disable-trusted-cert-crl-check
386 By default the CRL for trusted root certificates are checked
387 like for any other certificates. This allows a CA to revoke its
388 own certificates voluntary without the need of putting all ever
389 issued certificates into a CRL. The disable option may be used
390 to switch this extra check off. Due to the caching done by the
391 Dirmngr, there will not be any noticeable performance gain.
392 Note, that this also disables possible OCSP checks for trusted
393 root certificates. A more specific way of disabling this check
394 is by adding the ``relax'' keyword to the root CA line of the
395 ‘trustlist.txt’
396
397
398
399 --force-crl-refresh
400 Tell the dirmngr to reload the CRL for each request. For better
401 performance, the dirmngr will actually optimize this by sup‐
402 pressing the loading for short time intervals (e.g. 30 minutes).
403 This option is useful to make sure that a fresh CRL is available
404 for certificates hold in the keybox. The suggested way of doing
405 this is by using it along with the option --with-validation for
406 a key listing command. This option should not be used in a con‐
407 figuration file.
408
409
410 --enable-issuer-based-crl-check
411 Run a CRL check even for certificates which do not have any CRL
412 distribution point. This requires that a suitable LDAP server
413 has been configured in Dirmngr and that the CRL can be found us‐
414 ing the issuer. This option reverts to what GnuPG did up to
415 version 2.2.20. This option is in general not useful.
416
417
418 --enable-ocsp
419 --disable-ocsp
420 By default OCSP checks are disabled. The enable option may be
421 used to enable OCSP checks via Dirmngr. If CRL checks are also
422 enabled, CRLs will be used as a fallback if for some reason an
423 OCSP request will not succeed. Note, that you have to allow
424 OCSP requests in Dirmngr's configuration too (option --allow-
425 ocsp) and configure Dirmngr properly. If you do not do so you
426 will get the error code ‘Not supported’.
427
428
429 --auto-issuer-key-retrieve
430 If a required certificate is missing while validating the chain
431 of certificates, try to load that certificate from an external
432 location. This usually means that Dirmngr is employed to search
433 for the certificate. Note that this option makes a "web bug"
434 like behavior possible. LDAP server operators can see which
435 keys you request, so by sending you a message signed by a brand
436 new key (which you naturally will not have on your local key‐
437 box), the operator can tell both your IP address and the time
438 when you verified the signature.
439
440
441
442
443 --validation-model name
444 This option changes the default validation model. The only pos‐
445 sible values are "shell" (which is the default), "chain" which
446 forces the use of the chain model and "steed" for a new simpli‐
447 fied model. The chain model is also used if an option in the
448 ‘trustlist.txt’ or an attribute of the certificate requests it.
449 However the standard model (shell) is in that case always tried
450 first.
451
452
453 --ignore-cert-extension oid
454 Add oid to the list of ignored certificate extensions. The oid
455 is expected to be in dotted decimal form, like 2.5.29.3. This
456 option may be used more than once. Critical flagged certificate
457 extensions matching one of the OIDs in the list are treated as
458 if they are actually handled and thus the certificate will not
459 be rejected due to an unknown critical extension. Use this op‐
460 tion with care because extensions are usually flagged as criti‐
461 cal for a reason.
462
463
464 Input and Output
465
466
467
468 --armor
469 -a Create PEM encoded output. Default is binary output.
470
471
472 --base64
473 Create Base-64 encoded output; i.e. PEM without the header
474 lines.
475
476
477 --assume-armor
478 Assume the input data is PEM encoded. Default is to autodetect
479 the encoding but this is may fail.
480
481
482 --assume-base64
483 Assume the input data is plain base-64 encoded.
484
485
486 --assume-binary
487 Assume the input data is binary encoded.
488
489
490
491 --p12-charset name
492 gpgsm uses the UTF-8 encoding when encoding passphrases for
493 PKCS#12 files. This option may be used to force the passphrase
494 to be encoded in the specified encoding name. This is useful if
495 the application used to import the key uses a different encoding
496 and thus will not be able to import a file generated by gpgsm.
497 Commonly used values for name are Latin1 and CP850. Note that
498 gpgsm itself automagically imports any file with a passphrase
499 encoded to the most commonly used encodings.
500
501
502
503 --default-key user_id
504 Use user_id as the standard key for signing. This key is used
505 if no other key has been defined as a signing key. Note, that
506 the first --local-users option also sets this key if it has not
507 yet been set; however --default-key always overrides this.
508
509
510
511 --local-user user_id
512
513 -u user_id
514 Set the user(s) to be used for signing. The default is the
515 first secret key found in the database.
516
517
518
519 --recipient name
520 -r Encrypt to the user id name. There are several ways a user id
521 may be given (see: [how-to-specify-a-user-id]).
522
523
524
525 --output file
526 -o file
527 Write output to file. The default is to write it to stdout.
528
529
530
531
532 --with-key-data
533 Displays extra information with the --list-keys commands. Espe‐
534 cially a line tagged grp is printed which tells you the keygrip
535 of a key. This string is for example used as the file name of
536 the secret key. Implies --with-colons.
537
538
539
540 --with-validation
541 When doing a key listing, do a full validation check for each
542 key and print the result. This is usually a slow operation be‐
543 cause it requires a CRL lookup and other operations.
544
545 When used along with --import, a validation of the certificate
546 to import is done and only imported if it succeeds the test.
547 Note that this does not affect an already available certificate
548 in the DB. This option is therefore useful to simply verify a
549 certificate.
550
551
552
553 --with-md5-fingerprint
554 For standard key listings, also print the MD5 fingerprint of the
555 certificate.
556
557
558 --with-keygrip
559 Include the keygrip in standard key listings. Note that the
560 keygrip is always listed in --with-colons mode.
561
562
563 --with-secret
564 Include info about the presence of a secret key in public key
565 listings done with --with-colons.
566
567
568 How to change how the CMS is created
569
570
571
572 --include-certs n
573 Using n of -2 includes all certificate except for the root cert,
574 -1 includes all certs, 0 does not include any certs, 1 includes
575 only the signers cert and all other positive values include up
576 to n certificates starting with the signer cert. The default is
577 -2.
578
579
580 --cipher-algo oid
581 Use the cipher algorithm with the ASN.1 object identifier oid
582 for encryption. For convenience the strings 3DES, AES and
583 AES256 may be used instead of their OIDs. The default is AES
584 (2.16.840.1.101.3.4.1.2).
585
586
587 --digest-algo name
588 Use name as the message digest algorithm. Usually this algo‐
589 rithm is deduced from the respective signing certificate. This
590 option forces the use of the given algorithm and may lead to se‐
591 vere interoperability problems.
592
593
594 Doing things one usually do not want to do
595
596
597
598
599
600 --chuid uid
601 Change the current user to uid which may either be a number or a
602 name. This can be used from the root account to run gpgsm for
603 another user. If uid is not the current UID a standard PATH is
604 set and the envvar GNUPGHOME is unset. To override the latter
605 the option --homedir can be used. This option has only an ef‐
606 fect when used on the command line. This option has currently
607 no effect at all on Windows.
608
609
610
611 --extra-digest-algo name
612 Sometimes signatures are broken in that they announce a differ‐
613 ent digest algorithm than actually used. gpgsm uses a one-pass
614 data processing model and thus needs to rely on the announced
615 digest algorithms to properly hash the data. As a workaround
616 this option may be used to tell gpgsm to also hash the data us‐
617 ing the algorithm name; this slows processing down a little bit
618 but allows verification of such broken signatures. If gpgsm
619 prints an error like ``digest algo 8 has not been enabled'' you
620 may want to try this option, with ‘SHA256’ for name.
621
622
623 --compliance string
624 Set the compliance mode. Valid values are shown when using
625 "help" for string.
626
627
628 --min-rsa-length n
629 This option adjusts the compliance mode "de-vs" for stricter key
630 size requirements. For example, a value of 3000 turns rsa2048
631 and dsa2048 keys into non-VS-NfD compliant keys.
632
633
634 --require-compliance
635 To check that data has been encrypted according to the rules of
636 the current compliance mode, a gpgsm user needs to evaluate the
637 status lines. This is allows frontends to handle compliance
638 check in a more flexible way. However, for scripted use the re‐
639 quired evaluation of the status-line requires quite some effort;
640 this option can be used instead to make sure that the gpgsm
641 process exits with a failure if the compliance rules are not
642 fulfilled. Note that this option has currently an effect only
643 in "de-vs" mode.
644
645
646 --ignore-cert-with-oid oid
647 Add oid to the list of OIDs to be checked while reading certifi‐
648 cates from smartcards. The oid is expected to be in dotted deci‐
649 mal form, like 2.5.29.3. This option may be used more than
650 once. As of now certificates with an extended key usage match‐
651 ing one of those OIDs are ignored during a --learn-card opera‐
652 tion and not imported. This option can help to keep the local
653 key database clear of unneeded certificates stored on smart‐
654 cards.
655
656
657 --faked-system-time epoch
658 This option is only useful for testing; it sets the system time
659 back or forth to epoch which is the number of seconds elapsed
660 since the year 1970. Alternatively epoch may be given as a full
661 ISO time string (e.g. "20070924T154812").
662
663
664 --with-ephemeral-keys
665 Include ephemeral flagged keys in the output of key listings.
666 Note that they are included anyway if the key specification for
667 a listing is given as fingerprint or keygrip.
668
669
670 --compatibility-flags flags
671 Set compatibility flags to work around problems due to non-com‐
672 pliant certificates or data. The flags are given as a comma
673 separated list of flag names and are OR-ed together. The spe‐
674 cial flag "none" clears the list and allows to start over with
675 an empty list. To get a list of available flags the sole word
676 "help" can be used.
677
678
679 --debug-level level
680 Select the debug level for investigating problems. level may be
681 a numeric value or by a keyword:
682
683
684 none No debugging at all. A value of less than 1 may be used
685 instead of the keyword.
686
687 basic Some basic debug messages. A value between 1 and 2 may
688 be used instead of the keyword.
689
690 advanced
691 More verbose debug messages. A value between 3 and 5 may
692 be used instead of the keyword.
693
694 expert Even more detailed messages. A value between 6 and 8 may
695 be used instead of the keyword.
696
697 guru All of the debug messages you can get. A value greater
698 than 8 may be used instead of the keyword. The creation
699 of hash tracing files is only enabled if the keyword is
700 used.
701
702 How these messages are mapped to the actual debugging flags is not
703 specified and may change with newer releases of this program. They are
704 however carefully selected to best aid in debugging.
705
706
707 --debug flags
708 Set debug flags. All flags are or-ed and flags may be given in
709 C syntax (e.g. 0x0042) or as a comma separated list of flag
710 names. To get a list of all supported flags the single word
711 "help" can be used. This option is only useful for debugging and
712 the behavior may change at any time without notice.
713
714 Note, that all flags set using this option may get overridden by
715 --debug-level.
716
717
718 --debug-all
719 Same as --debug=0xffffffff
720
721
722 --debug-allow-core-dump
723 Usually gpgsm tries to avoid dumping core by well written code
724 and by disabling core dumps for security reasons. However, bugs
725 are pretty durable beasts and to squash them it is sometimes
726 useful to have a core dump. This option enables core dumps un‐
727 less the Bad Thing happened before the option parsing.
728
729
730 --debug-no-chain-validation
731 This is actually not a debugging option but only useful as such.
732 It lets gpgsm bypass all certificate chain validation checks.
733
734
735 --debug-ignore-expiration
736 This is actually not a debugging option but only useful as such.
737 It lets gpgsm ignore all notAfter dates, this is used by the re‐
738 gression tests.
739
740
741 --passphrase-fd n
742 Read the passphrase from file descriptor n. Only the first line
743 will be read from file descriptor n. If you use 0 for n, the
744 passphrase will be read from STDIN. This can only be used if
745 only one passphrase is supplied.
746
747 Note that this passphrase is only used if the option --batch has
748 also been given.
749
750
751 --pinentry-mode mode
752 Set the pinentry mode to mode. Allowed values for mode are:
753
754 default
755 Use the default of the agent, which is ask.
756
757 ask Force the use of the Pinentry.
758
759 cancel Emulate use of Pinentry's cancel button.
760
761 error Return a Pinentry error (``No Pinentry'').
762
763 loopback
764 Redirect Pinentry queries to the caller. Note that in
765 contrast to Pinentry the user is not prompted again if he
766 enters a bad password.
767
768
769 --request-origin origin
770 Tell gpgsm to assume that the operation ultimately originated at
771 origin. Depending on the origin certain restrictions are ap‐
772 plied and the Pinentry may include an extra note on the origin.
773 Supported values for origin are: local which is the default, re‐
774 mote to indicate a remote origin or browser for an operation re‐
775 quested by a web browser.
776
777
778 --no-common-certs-import
779 Suppress the import of common certificates on keybox creation.
780
781
782 All the long options may also be given in the configuration file after
783 stripping off the two leading dashes.
784
785
786
788 There are different ways to specify a user ID to GnuPG. Some of them
789 are only valid for gpg others are only good for gpgsm. Here is the en‐
790 tire list of ways to specify a key:
791
792
793
794 By key Id.
795 This format is deduced from the length of the string and its
796 content or 0x prefix. The key Id of an X.509 certificate are the
797 low 64 bits of its SHA-1 fingerprint. The use of key Ids is
798 just a shortcut, for all automated processing the fingerprint
799 should be used.
800
801 When using gpg an exclamation mark (!) may be appended to force
802 using the specified primary or secondary key and not to try and
803 calculate which primary or secondary key to use.
804
805 The last four lines of the example give the key ID in their long
806 form as internally used by the OpenPGP protocol. You can see the
807 long key ID using the option --with-colons.
808
809 234567C4
810 0F34E556E
811 01347A56A
812 0xAB123456
813
814 234AABBCC34567C4
815 0F323456784E56EAB
816 01AB3FED1347A5612
817 0x234AABBCC34567C4
818
819
820
821
822 By fingerprint.
823 This format is deduced from the length of the string and its
824 content or the 0x prefix. Note, that only the 20 byte version
825 fingerprint is available with gpgsm (i.e. the SHA-1 hash of the
826 certificate).
827
828 When using gpg an exclamation mark (!) may be appended to force
829 using the specified primary or secondary key and not to try and
830 calculate which primary or secondary key to use.
831
832 The best way to specify a key Id is by using the fingerprint.
833 This avoids any ambiguities in case that there are duplicated
834 key IDs.
835
836 1234343434343434C434343434343434
837 123434343434343C3434343434343734349A3434
838 0E12343434343434343434EAB3484343434343434
839 0xE12343434343434343434EAB3484343434343434
840
841
842 gpgsm also accepts colons between each pair of hexadecimal digits be‐
843 cause this is the de-facto standard on how to present X.509 finger‐
844 prints. gpg also allows the use of the space separated SHA-1 finger‐
845 print as printed by the key listing commands.
846
847
848 By exact match on OpenPGP user ID.
849 This is denoted by a leading equal sign. It does not make sense
850 for X.509 certificates.
851
852 =Heinrich Heine <heinrichh@uni-duesseldorf.de>
853
854
855 By exact match on an email address.
856 This is indicated by enclosing the email address in the usual
857 way with left and right angles.
858
859 <heinrichh@uni-duesseldorf.de>
860
861
862
863 By partial match on an email address.
864 This is indicated by prefixing the search string with an @.
865 This uses a substring search but considers only the mail address
866 (i.e. inside the angle brackets).
867
868 @heinrichh
869
870
871 By exact match on the subject's DN.
872 This is indicated by a leading slash, directly followed by the
873 RFC-2253 encoded DN of the subject. Note that you can't use the
874 string printed by gpgsm --list-keys because that one has been
875 reordered and modified for better readability; use --with-colons
876 to print the raw (but standard escaped) RFC-2253 string.
877
878 /CN=Heinrich Heine,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR
879
880
881 By exact match on the issuer's DN.
882 This is indicated by a leading hash mark, directly followed by a
883 slash and then directly followed by the RFC-2253 encoded DN of
884 the issuer. This should return the Root cert of the issuer.
885 See note above.
886
887 #/CN=Root Cert,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR
888
889
890
891 By exact match on serial number and issuer's DN.
892 This is indicated by a hash mark, followed by the hexadecimal
893 representation of the serial number, then followed by a slash
894 and the RFC-2253 encoded DN of the issuer. See note above.
895
896 #4F03/CN=Root Cert,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR
897
898
899 By keygrip.
900 This is indicated by an ampersand followed by the 40 hex digits
901 of a keygrip. gpgsm prints the keygrip when using the command
902 --dump-cert.
903
904 &D75F22C3F86E355877348498CDC92BD21010A480
905
906
907
908 By substring match.
909 This is the default mode but applications may want to explicitly
910 indicate this by putting the asterisk in front. Match is not
911 case sensitive.
912
913 Heine
914 *Heine
915
916
917 . and + prefixes
918 These prefixes are reserved for looking up mails anchored at the
919 end and for a word search mode. They are not yet implemented
920 and using them is undefined.
921
922
923 Please note that we have reused the hash mark identifier which
924 was used in old GnuPG versions to indicate the so called local-
925 id. It is not anymore used and there should be no conflict when
926 used with X.509 stuff.
927
928 Using the RFC-2253 format of DNs has the drawback that it is not
929 possible to map them back to the original encoding, however we
930 don't have to do this because our key database stores this en‐
931 coding as meta data.
932
933
934
936 $ gpgsm -er goo@bar.net <plaintext >ciphertext
937
938
939
940
942 There are a few configuration files to control certain aspects of
943 gpgsm's operation. Unless noted, they are expected in the current home
944 directory (see: [option --homedir]).
945
946
947
948 gpgsm.conf
949 This is the standard configuration file read by gpgsm on
950 startup. It may contain any valid long option; the leading two
951 dashes may not be entered and the option may not be abbreviated.
952 This default name may be changed on the command line (see:
953 [gpgsm-option --options]). You should backup this file.
954
955
956 common.conf
957 This is an optional configuration file read by gpgsm on startup.
958 It may contain options pertaining to all components of GnuPG.
959 Its current main use is for the "use-keyboxd" option.
960
961
962 policies.txt
963 This is a list of allowed CA policies. This file should list
964 the object identifiers of the policies line by line. Empty
965 lines and lines starting with a hash mark are ignored. Policies
966 missing in this file and not marked as critical in the certifi‐
967 cate will print only a warning; certificates with policies
968 marked as critical and not listed in this file will fail the
969 signature verification. You should backup this file.
970
971 For example, to allow only the policy 2.289.9.9, the file should
972 look like this:
973
974 # Allowed policies
975 2.289.9.9
976
977
978 qualified.txt
979 This is the list of root certificates used for qualified cer‐
980 tificates. They are defined as certificates capable of creating
981 legally binding signatures in the same way as handwritten signa‐
982 tures are. Comments start with a hash mark and empty lines are
983 ignored. Lines do have a length limit but this is not a serious
984 limitation as the format of the entries is fixed and checked by
985 gpgsm: A non-comment line starts with optional whitespace, fol‐
986 lowed by exactly 40 hex characters, white space and a lowercased
987 2 letter country code. Additional data delimited with by a
988 white space is current ignored but might late be used for other
989 purposes.
990
991 Note that even if a certificate is listed in this file, this
992 does not mean that the certificate is trusted; in general the
993 certificates listed in this file need to be listed also in
994 ‘trustlist.txt’. This is a global file an installed in the
995 sysconf directory (e.g. ‘/etc/gnupg/qualified.txt’).
996
997 Every time gpgsm uses a certificate for signing or verification
998 this file will be consulted to check whether the certificate un‐
999 der question has ultimately been issued by one of these CAs. If
1000 this is the case the user will be informed that the verified
1001 signature represents a legally binding (``qualified'') signa‐
1002 ture. When creating a signature using such a certificate an ex‐
1003 tra prompt will be issued to let the user confirm that such a
1004 legally binding signature shall really be created.
1005
1006 Because this software has not yet been approved for use with
1007 such certificates, appropriate notices will be shown to indicate
1008 this fact.
1009
1010
1011 help.txt
1012 This is plain text file with a few help entries used with pinen‐
1013 try as well as a large list of help items for gpg and gpgsm.
1014 The standard file has English help texts; to install localized
1015 versions use filenames like ‘help.LL.txt’ with LL denoting the
1016 locale. GnuPG comes with a set of predefined help files in the
1017 data directory (e.g. ‘/usr/share/gnupg/gnupg/help.de.txt’) and
1018 allows overriding of any help item by help files stored in the
1019 system configuration directory (e.g. ‘/etc/gnupg/help.de.txt’).
1020 For a reference of the help file's syntax, please see the in‐
1021 stalled ‘help.txt’ file.
1022
1023
1024
1025 com-certs.pem
1026 This file is a collection of common certificates used to popu‐
1027 lated a newly created ‘pubring.kbx’. An administrator may re‐
1028 place this file with a custom one. The format is a concatena‐
1029 tion of PEM encoded X.509 certificates. This global file is in‐
1030 stalled in the data directory (e.g. ‘/usr/share/gnupg/com-
1031 certs.pem’).
1032
1033
1034 Note that on larger installations, it is useful to put predefined files
1035 into the directory ‘/etc/skel/.gnupg/’ so that newly created users
1036 start up with a working configuration. For existing users a small
1037 helper script is provided to create these files (see: [addgnupghome]).
1038
1039 For internal purposes gpgsm creates and maintains a few other files;
1040 they all live in the current home directory (see: [option --homedir]).
1041 Only gpgsm may modify these files.
1042
1043
1044
1045 pubring.kbx
1046 This a database file storing the certificates as well as meta
1047 information. For debugging purposes the tool kbxutil may be
1048 used to show the internal structure of this file. You should
1049 backup this file.
1050
1051
1052 random_seed
1053 This content of this file is used to maintain the internal state
1054 of the random number generator across invocations. The same
1055 file is used by other programs of this software too.
1056
1057
1058 S.gpg-agent
1059 If this file exists gpgsm will first try to connect to this
1060 socket for accessing gpg-agent before starting a new gpg-agent
1061 instance. Under Windows this socket (which in reality be a
1062 plain file describing a regular TCP listening port) is the stan‐
1063 dard way of connecting the gpg-agent.
1064
1065
1067 gpg2(1), gpg-agent(1)
1068
1069 The full documentation for this tool is maintained as a Texinfo manual.
1070 If GnuPG and the info program are properly installed at your site, the
1071 command
1072
1073 info gnupg
1074
1075 should give you access to the complete manual including a menu struc‐
1076 ture and an index.
1077
1078
1079
1080GnuPG 2.3.8 2022-10-07 GPGSM(1)