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-*- text -*- Format of colon listings ======================== First an example: $ gpg --with-colons --list-keys \ --with-fingerprint --with-fingerprint wk@gnupg.org pub:f:1024:17:6C7EE1B8621CC013:899817715:1055898235::m:::scESC: fpr:::::::::ECAF7590EB3443B5C7CF3ACB6C7EE1B8621CC013: uid:f::::::::Werner Koch <wk@g10code.com>: uid:f::::::::Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>: sub:f:1536:16:06AD222CADF6A6E1:919537416:1036177416:::::e: fpr:::::::::CF8BCC4B18DE08FCD8A1615906AD222CADF6A6E1: sub:r:1536:20:5CE086B5B5A18FF4:899817788:1025961788:::::esc: fpr:::::::::AB059359A3B81F410FCFF97F5CE086B5B5A18FF4: The double --with-fingerprint prints the fingerprint for the subkeys too. --fixed-list-mode is the modern listing way printing dates in seconds since Epoch and does not merge the first userID with the pub record; gpg2 does this by default and the option is a dummy. 1. Field: Type of record pub = public key crt = X.509 certificate crs = X.509 certificate and private key available sub = subkey (secondary key) sec = secret key ssb = secret subkey (secondary key) uid = user id (only field 10 is used). uat = user attribute (same as user id except for field 10). sig = signature rev = revocation signature fpr = fingerprint: (fingerprint is in field 10) pkd = public key data (special field format, see below) grp = keygrip rvk = revocation key tru = trust database information spk = signature subpacket 2. Field: A letter describing the calculated validity. This is a single letter, but be prepared that additional information may follow in some future versions. (not used for secret keys) o = Unknown (this key is new to the system) i = The key is invalid (e.g. due to a missing self-signature) d = The key has been disabled (deprecated - use the 'D' in field 12 instead) r = The key has been revoked e = The key has expired - = Unknown validity (i.e. no value assigned) q = Undefined validity '-' and 'q' may safely be treated as the same value for most purposes n = The key is valid m = The key is marginal valid. f = The key is fully valid u = The key is ultimately valid. This often means that the secret key is available, but any key may be marked as ultimately valid. If the validity information is given for a UID or UAT record, it describes the validity calculated based on this user ID. If given for a key record it describes the best validity taken from the best rated user ID. For X.509 certificates a 'u' is used for a trusted root certificate (i.e. for the trust anchor) and an 'f' for all other valid certificates. 3. Field: length of key in bits. 4. Field: Algorithm: 1 = RSA 16 = Elgamal (encrypt only) 17 = DSA (sometimes called DH, sign only) 20 = Elgamal (sign and encrypt - don't use them!) (for other id's see include/cipher.h) 5. Field: KeyID 6. Field: Creation Date (in UTC). For UID and UAT records, this is the self-signature date. Note that the date is usally printed in seconds since epoch, however, we are migrating to an ISO 8601 format (e.g. "19660205T091500"). This is currently only relevant for X.509. A simple way to detect the new format is to scan for the 'T'. 7. Field: Key or user ID/user attribute expiration date or empty if none. 8. Field: Used for serial number in crt records (used to be the Local-ID). For UID and UAT records, this is a hash of the user ID contents used to represent that exact user ID. For trust signatures, this is the trust depth seperated by the trust value by a space. 9. Field: Ownertrust (primary public keys only) This is a single letter, but be prepared that additional information may follow in some future versions. For trust signatures with a regular expression, this is the regular expression value, quoted as in field 10. 10. Field: User-ID. The value is quoted like a C string to avoid control characters (the colon is quoted "\x3a"). For a "pub" record this field is not used on --fixed-list-mode. A UAT record puts the attribute subpacket count here, a space, and then the total attribute subpacket size. In gpgsm the issuer name comes here An FPR record stores the fingerprint here. The fingerprint of an revocation key is stored here. 11. Field: Signature class as per RFC-4880. This is a 2 digit hexnumber followed by either the letter 'x' for an exportable signature or the letter 'l' for a local-only signature. The class byte of an revocation key is also given here, 'x' and 'l' is used the same way. IT is not used for X.509. 12. Field: Key capabilities: e = encrypt s = sign c = certify a = authentication A key may have any combination of them in any order. In addition to these letters, the primary key has uppercase versions of the letters to denote the _usable_ capabilities of the entire key, and a potential letter 'D' to indicate a disabled key. 13. Field: Used in FPR records for S/MIME keys to store the fingerprint of the issuer certificate. This is useful to build the certificate path based on certificates stored in the local keyDB; it is only filled if the issuer certificate is available. The root has been reached if this is the same string as the fingerprint. The advantage of using this value is that it is guaranteed to have been been build by the same lookup algorithm as gpgsm uses. For "uid" records this lists the preferences in the same way the gpg's --edit-key menu does. For "sig" records, this is the fingerprint of the key that issued the signature. Note that this is only filled in if the signature verified correctly. Note also that for various technical reasons, this fingerprint is only available if --no-sig-cache is used. 14. Field Flag field used in the --edit menu output: 15. Field Used in sec/sbb to print the serial number of a token (internal protect mode 1002) or a '#' if that key is a simple stub (internal protect mode 1001) 16. Field: For sig records, this is the used hash algorithm: 2 = SHA-1 8 = SHA-256 (for other id's see include/cipher.h) All dates are displayed in the format yyyy-mm-dd unless you use the option --fixed-list-mode in which case they are displayed as seconds since Epoch. More fields may be added later, so parsers should be prepared for this. When parsing a number the parser should stop at the first non-number character so that additional information can later be added. If field 1 has the tag "pkd", a listing looks like this: pkd:0:1024:B665B1435F4C2 .... FF26ABB: ! ! !-- the value ! !------ for information number of bits in the value !--------- index (eg. DSA goes from 0 to 3: p,q,g,y) Example for a "tru" trust base record: tru:o:0:1166697654:1:3:1:5 The fields are: 2: Reason for staleness of trust. If this field is empty, then the trustdb is not stale. This field may have multiple flags in it: o: Trustdb is old t: Trustdb was built with a different trust model than the one we are using now. 3: Trust model: 0: Classic trust model, as used in PGP 2.x. 1: PGP trust model, as used in PGP 6 and later. This is the same as the classic trust model, except for the addition of trust signatures. GnuPG before version 1.4 used the classic trust model by default. GnuPG 1.4 and later uses the PGP trust model by default. 4: Date trustdb was created in seconds since 1970-01-01. 5: Date trustdb will expire in seconds since 1970-01-01. 6: Number of marginally trusted users to introduce a new key signer (gpg's option --marginals-needed) 7: Number of completely trusted users to introduce a new key signer. (gpg's option --completes-needed) 8: Maximum depth of a certification chain. *gpg's option --max-cert-depth) The "spk" signature subpacket records have the fields: 2: Subpacket number as per RFC-4880 and later. 3: Flags in hex. Currently the only two bits assigned are 1, to indicate that the subpacket came from the hashed part of the signature, and 2, to indicate the subpacket was marked critical. 4: Length of the subpacket. Note that this is the length of the subpacket, and not the length of field 5 below. Due to the need for %-encoding, the length of field 5 may be up to 3x this value. 5: The subpacket data. Printable ASCII is shown as ASCII, but other values are rendered as %XX where XX is the hex value for the byte. Format of the "--status-fd" output ================================== Every line is prefixed with "[GNUPG:] ", followed by a keyword with the type of the status line and a some arguments depending on the type (maybe none); an application should always be prepared to see more arguments in future versions. NEWSIG May be issued right before a signature verification starts. This is useful to define a context for parsing ERROR status messages. No arguments are currently defined. GOODSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <username> The signature with the keyid is good. For each signature only one of the codes GOODSIG, BADSIG, EXPSIG, EXPKEYSIG, REVKEYSIG or ERRSIG will be emitted. In the past they were used as a marker for a new signature; new code should use the NEWSIG status instead. The username is the primary one encoded in UTF-8 and %XX escaped. The fingerprint may be used instead of the long keyid if it is available. This is the case with CMS and might eventually also be available for OpenPGP. EXPSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <username> The signature with the keyid is good, but the signature is expired. The username is the primary one encoded in UTF-8 and %XX escaped. The fingerprint may be used instead of the long keyid if it is available. This is the case with CMS and might eventually also be available for OpenPGP. EXPKEYSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <username> The signature with the keyid is good, but the signature was made by an expired key. The username is the primary one encoded in UTF-8 and %XX escaped. The fingerprint may be used instead of the long keyid if it is available. This is the case with CMS and might eventually also be available for OpenPGP. REVKEYSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <username> The signature with the keyid is good, but the signature was made by a revoked key. The username is the primary one encoded in UTF-8 and %XX escaped. The fingerprint may be used instead of the long keyid if it is available. This is the case with CMS and might eventually also be available for OpenPGP. BADSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <username> The signature with the keyid has not been verified okay. The username is the primary one encoded in UTF-8 and %XX escaped. The fingerprint may be used instead of the long keyid if it is available. This is the case with CMS and might eventually also be available for OpenPGP. ERRSIG <long_keyid_or_fpr> <pubkey_algo> <hash_algo> \ <sig_class> <timestamp> <rc> It was not possible to check the signature. This may be caused by a missing public key or an unsupported algorithm. A RC of 4 indicates unknown algorithm, a 9 indicates a missing public key. The other fields give more information about this signature. sig_class is a 2 byte hex-value. The fingerprint may be used instead of the long keyid if it is available. This is the case with CMS and might eventually also be available for OpenPGP. Note, that TIMESTAMP may either be a number with seconds since epoch or an ISO 8601 string which can be detected by the presence of the letter 'T' inside. VALIDSIG <fingerprint in hex> <sig_creation_date> <sig-timestamp> <expire-timestamp> <sig-version> <reserved> <pubkey-algo> <hash-algo> <sig-class> [ <primary-key-fpr> ] The signature with the keyid is good. This is the same as GOODSIG but has the fingerprint as the argument. Both status lines are emitted for a good signature. All arguments here are on one long line. sig-timestamp is the signature creation time in seconds after the epoch. expire-timestamp is the signature expiration time in seconds after the epoch (zero means "does not expire"). sig-version, pubkey-algo, hash-algo, and sig-class (a 2-byte hex value) are all straight from the signature packet. PRIMARY-KEY-FPR is the fingerprint of the primary key or identical to the first argument. This is useful to get back to the primary key without running gpg again for this purpose. The primary-key-fpr parameter is used for OpenPGP and not available for CMS signatures. The sig-version as well as the sig class is not defined for CMS and currently set to 0 and 00. Note, that *-TIMESTAMP may either be a number with seconds since epoch or an ISO 8601 string which can be detected by the presence of the letter 'T' inside. SIG_ID <radix64_string> <sig_creation_date> <sig-timestamp> This is emitted only for signatures of class 0 or 1 which have been verified okay. The string is a signature id and may be used in applications to detect replay attacks of signed messages. Note that only DLP algorithms give unique ids - others may yield duplicated ones when they have been created in the same second. Note, that SIG-TIMESTAMP may either be a number with seconds since epoch or an ISO 8601 string which can be detected by the presence of the letter 'T' inside. ENC_TO <long_keyid> <keytype> <keylength> The message is encrypted to this LONG_KEYID. KEYTYPE is the numerical value of the public key algorithm or 0 if it is not known, KEYLENGTH is the length of the key or 0 if it is not known (which is currently always the case). Gpg prints this line always; Gpgsm only if it knows the certificate. NODATA <what> No data has been found. Codes for what are: 1 - No armored data. 2 - Expected a packet but did not found one. 3 - Invalid packet found, this may indicate a non OpenPGP message. 4 - signature expected but not found You may see more than one of these status lines. UNEXPECTED <what> Unexpected data has been encountered 0 - not further specified 1 TRUST_UNDEFINED <error token> TRUST_NEVER <error token> TRUST_MARGINAL [0 [<validation_model>]] TRUST_FULLY [0 [<validation_model>]] TRUST_ULTIMATE [0 [<validation_model>]] For good signatures one of these status lines are emitted to indicate the validity of the key used to create the signature. The error token values are currently only emitted by gpgsm. VALIDATION_MODEL describes the algorithm used to check the validity of the key. The defaults are the standard Web of Trust model for gpg and the the standard X.509 model for gpgsm. The defined values are "pgp" for the standard PGP WoT. "shell" for the standard X.509 model. "chain" for the chain model. Note that we use the term "TRUST_" in the status names for historic reasons; we now speak of validity. PKA_TRUST_GOOD <mailbox> PKA_TRUST_BAD <mailbox> Depending on the outcome of the PKA check one of the above status codes is emitted in addition to a TRUST_* status. Without PKA info available or SIGEXPIRED This is deprecated in favor of KEYEXPIRED. KEYEXPIRED <expire-timestamp> The key has expired. expire-timestamp is the expiration time in seconds since Epoch. This status line is not very useful because it will also be emitted for expired subkeys even if this subkey is not used. To check whether a key used to sign a message has expired, the EXPKEYSIG status line is to be used. Note, that TIMESTAMP may either be a number with seconds since epoch or an ISO 8601 string which can be detected by the presence of the letter 'T' inside. KEYREVOKED The used key has been revoked by its owner. No arguments yet. BADARMOR The ASCII armor is corrupted. No arguments yet. RSA_OR_IDEA The IDEA algorithms has been used in the data. A program might want to fallback to another program to handle the data if GnuPG failed. This status message used to be emitted also for RSA but this has been dropped after the RSA patent expired. However we can't change the name of the message. SHM_INFO SHM_GET SHM_GET_BOOL SHM_GET_HIDDEN GET_BOOL GET_LINE GET_HIDDEN GOT_IT NEED_PASSPHRASE <long main keyid> <long keyid> <keytype> <keylength> Issued whenever a passphrase is needed. keytype is the numerical value of the public key algorithm or 0 if this is not applicable, keylength is the length of the key or 0 if it is not known (this is currently always the case). NEED_PASSPHRASE_SYM <cipher_algo> <s2k_mode> <s2k_hash> Issued whenever a passphrase for symmetric encryption is needed. NEED_PASSPHRASE_PIN <card_type> <chvno> [<serialno>] Issued whenever a PIN is requested to unlock a card. MISSING_PASSPHRASE No passphrase was supplied. An application which encounters this message may want to stop parsing immediately because the next message will probably be a BAD_PASSPHRASE. However, if the application is a wrapper around the key edit menu functionality it might not make sense to stop parsing but simply ignoring the following BAD_PASSPHRASE. BAD_PASSPHRASE <long keyid> The supplied passphrase was wrong or not given. In the latter case you may have seen a MISSING_PASSPHRASE. GOOD_PASSPHRASE The supplied passphrase was good and the secret key material is therefore usable. DECRYPTION_FAILED The symmetric decryption failed - one reason could be a wrong passphrase for a symmetrical encrypted message. DECRYPTION_OKAY The decryption process succeeded. This means, that either the correct secret key has been used or the correct passphrase for a conventional encrypted message was given. The program itself may return an errorcode because it may not be possible to verify a signature for some reasons. NO_PUBKEY <long keyid> NO_SECKEY <long keyid> The key is not available IMPORT_CHECK <long keyid> <fingerprint> <user ID> This status is emitted in interactive mode right before the "import.okay" prompt. IMPORTED <long keyid> <username> The keyid and name of the signature just imported IMPORT_OK <reason> [<fingerprint>] The key with the primary key's FINGERPRINT has been imported. Reason flags: 0 := Not actually changed 1 := Entirely new key. 2 := New user IDs 4 := New signatures 8 := New subkeys 16 := Contains private key. The flags may be ORed. IMPORT_PROBLEM <reason> [<fingerprint>] Issued for each import failure. Reason codes are: 0 := "No specific reason given". 1 := "Invalid Certificate". 2 := "Issuer Certificate missing". 3 := "Certificate Chain too long". 4 := "Error storing certificate". IMPORT_RES <count> <no_user_id> <imported> <imported_rsa> <unchanged> <n_uids> <n_subk> <n_sigs> <n_revoc> <sec_read> <sec_imported> <sec_dups> <skipped_new_keys> <not_imported> Final statistics on import process (this is one long line) FILE_START <what> <filename> Start processing a file <filename>. <what> indicates the performed operation: 1 - verify 2 - encrypt 3 - decrypt FILE_DONE Marks the end of a file processing which has been started by FILE_START. BEGIN_DECRYPTION END_DECRYPTION Mark the start and end of the actual decryption process. These are also emitted when in --list-only mode. BEGIN_ENCRYPTION <mdc_method> <sym_algo> END_ENCRYPTION Mark the start and end of the actual encryption process. BEGIN_SIGNING Mark the start of the actual signing process. This may be used as an indication that all requested secret keys are ready for use. DELETE_PROBLEM reason_code Deleting a key failed. Reason codes are: 1 - No such key 2 - Must delete secret key first 3 - Ambigious specification PROGRESS what char cur total Used by the primegen and Public key functions to indicate progress. "char" is the character displayed with no --status-fd enabled, with the linefeed replaced by an 'X'. "cur" is the current amount done and "total" is amount to be done; a "total" of 0 indicates that the total amount is not known. The condition TOATL && CUR == TOTAL may be used to detect the end of an operation. Well known values for WHAT: "pk_dsa" - DSA key generation "pk_elg" - Elgamal key generation "primegen" - Prime generation "need_entropy" - Waiting for new entropy in the RNG "file:XXX" - processing file XXX (note that current gpg versions leave out the "file:" prefix). "tick" - generic tick without any special meaning - useful for letting clients know that the server is still working. "starting_agent" - A gpg-agent was started because it is not running as a daemon. "learncard" Send by the agent and gpgsm while learing the data of a smartcard. "card_busy" A smartcard is still working SIG_CREATED <type> <pubkey algo> <hash algo> <class> <timestamp> <key fpr> A signature has been created using these parameters. type: 'D' = detached 'C' = cleartext 'S' = standard (only the first character should be checked) class: 2 hex digits with the signature class Note, that TIMESTAMP may either be a number with seconds since epoch or an ISO 8601 string which can be detected by the presence of the letter 'T' inside. KEY_CREATED <type> <fingerprint> [<handle>] A key has been created type: 'B' = primary and subkey 'P' = primary 'S' = subkey The fingerprint is one of the primary key for type B and P and the one of the subkey for S. Handle is an arbitrary non-whitespace string used to match key parameters from batch key creation run. KEY_NOT_CREATED [<handle>] The key from batch run has not been created due to errors. SESSION_KEY <algo>:<hexdigits> The session key used to decrypt the message. This message will only be emitted when the special option --show-session-key is used. The format is suitable to be passed to the option --override-session-key NOTATION_NAME <name> NOTATION_DATA <string> name and string are %XX escaped; the data may be split among several NOTATION_DATA lines. USERID_HINT <long main keyid> <string> Give a hint about the user ID for a certain keyID. POLICY_URL <string> string is %XX escaped BEGIN_STREAM END_STREAM Issued by pipemode. INV_RECP <reason> <requested_recipient> INV_SGNR <reason> <requested_sender> Issued for each unusable recipient/sender. The reasons codes currently in use are: 0 := "No specific reason given". 1 := "Not Found" 2 := "Ambigious specification" 3 := "Wrong key usage" 4 := "Key revoked" 5 := "Key expired" 6 := "No CRL known" 7 := "CRL too old" 8 := "Policy mismatch" 9 := "Not a secret key" 10 := "Key not trusted" 11 := "Missing certificate" 12 := "Missing issuer certificate" Note that for historical reasons the INV_RECP status is also used for gpgsm's SIGNER command where it relates to signer's of course. Newer GnuPG versions are using INV_SGNR; applications should ignore the INV_RECP during the sender's command processing once they have seen an INV_SGNR. We use different code so that we can distinguish them while doing an encrypt+sign. NO_RECP <reserved> NO_SGNR <reserved> Issued when no recipients/senders are usable. ALREADY_SIGNED <long-keyid> Warning: This is experimental and might be removed at any time. TRUNCATED <maxno> The output was truncated to MAXNO items. This status code is issued for certain external requests ERROR <error location> <error code> [<more>] This is a generic error status message, it might be followed by error location specific data. <error code> and <error_location> should not contain spaces. The error code is a either a string commencing with a letter or such a string prefixed with a numerical error code and an underscore; e.g.: "151011327_EOF". SUCCESS [<location>] Postive confirimation that an operation succeeded. <location> is optional but if given should not contain spaces. Used only with a few commands. ATTRIBUTE <fpr> <octets> <type> <index> <count> <timestamp> <expiredate> <flags> This is one long line issued for each attribute subpacket when an attribute packet is seen during key listing. <fpr> is the fingerprint of the key. <octets> is the length of the attribute subpacket. <type> is the attribute type (1==image). <index>/<count> indicates that this is the Nth indexed subpacket of count total subpackets in this attribute packet. <timestamp> and <expiredate> are from the self-signature on the attribute packet. If the attribute packet does not have a valid self-signature, then the timestamp is 0. <flags> are a bitwise OR of: 0x01 = this attribute packet is a primary uid 0x02 = this attribute packet is revoked 0x04 = this attribute packet is expired CARDCTRL <what> [<serialno>] This is used to control smartcard operations. Defined values for WHAT are: 1 = Request insertion of a card. Serialnumber may be given to request a specific card. Used by gpg 1.4 w/o scdaemon. 2 = Request removal of a card. Used by gpg 1.4 w/o scdaemon. 3 = Card with serialnumber detected 4 = No card available. 5 = No card reader available 6 = No card support available PLAINTEXT <format> <timestamp> <filename> This indicates the format of the plaintext that is about to be written. The format is a 1 byte hex code that shows the format of the plaintext: 62 ('b') is binary data, 74 ('t') is text data with no character set specified, and 75 ('u') is text data encoded in the UTF-8 character set. The timestamp is in seconds since the epoch. If a filename is available it gets printed as the third argument, percent-escaped as usual. PLAINTEXT_LENGTH <length> This indicates the length of the plaintext that is about to be written. Note that if the plaintext packet has partial length encoding it is not possible to know the length ahead of time. In that case, this status tag does not appear. SIG_SUBPACKET <type> <flags> <len> <data> This indicates that a signature subpacket was seen. The format is the same as the "spk" record above. SC_OP_FAILURE [<code>] An operation on a smartcard definitely failed. Currently there is no indication of the actual error code, but application should be prepared to later accept more arguments. Defined values for CODE are: 0 - unspecified error (identically to a missing CODE) 1 - canceled 2 - bad PIN SC_OP_SUCCESS A smart card operaion succeeded. This status is only printed for certain operation and is mostly useful to check whether a PIN change really worked. BACKUP_KEY_CREATED fingerprint fname A backup key named FNAME has been created for the key with KEYID. MOUNTPOINT <name> NAME is a percent-plus escaped filename describing the mountpoint for the current operation (e.g. g13 --mount). This may either be the specified mountpoint or one randomly choosen by g13. DECRYPTION_INFO <mdc_method> <sym_algo> Print information about the symmetric encryption algorithm and the MDC method. This will be emitted even if the decryption fails. Format of the "--attribute-fd" output ===================================== When --attribute-fd is set, during key listings (--list-keys, --list-secret-keys) GnuPG dumps each attribute packet to the file descriptor specified. --attribute-fd is intended for use with --status-fd as part of the required information is carried on the ATTRIBUTE status tag (see above). The contents of the attribute data is specified by RFC 4880. For convenience, here is the Photo ID format, as it is currently the only attribute defined: Byte 0-1: The length of the image header. Due to a historical accident (i.e. oops!) back in the NAI PGP days, this is a little-endian number. Currently 16 (0x10 0x00). Byte 2: The image header version. Currently 0x01. Byte 3: Encoding format. 0x01 == JPEG. Byte 4-15: Reserved, and currently unused. All other data after this header is raw image (JPEG) data. Format of the "--list-config" output ==================================== --list-config outputs information about the GnuPG configuration for the benefit of frontends or other programs that call GnuPG. There are several list-config items, all colon delimited like the rest of the --with-colons output. The first field is always "cfg" to indicate configuration information. The second field is one of (with examples): version: the third field contains the version of GnuPG. cfg:version:1.3.5 pubkey: the third field contains the public key algorithmdcaiphers this version of GnuPG supports, separated by semicolons. The algorithm numbers are as specified in RFC-4880. Note that in contrast to the --status-fd interface these are _not_ the Libgcrypt identifiers. cfg:pubkey:1;2;3;16;17 cipher: the third field contains the symmetric ciphers this version of GnuPG supports, separated by semicolons. The cipher numbers are as specified in RFC-4880. cfg:cipher:2;3;4;7;8;9;10 digest: the third field contains the digest (hash) algorithms this version of GnuPG supports, separated by semicolons. The digest numbers are as specified in RFC-4880. cfg:digest:1;2;3;8;9;10 compress: the third field contains the compression algorithms this version of GnuPG supports, separated by semicolons. The algorithm numbers are as specified in RFC-4880. cfg:compress:0;1;2;3 group: the third field contains the name of the group, and the fourth field contains the values that the group expands to, separated by semicolons. For example, a group of: group mynames = paige 0x12345678 joe patti would result in: cfg:group:mynames:patti;joe;0x12345678;paige Key generation ============== See the Libcrypt manual. Unattended key generation ========================= This feature allows unattended generation of keys controlled by a parameter file. To use this feature, you use --gen-key together with --batch and feed the parameters either from stdin or from a file given on the commandline. The format of this file is as follows: o Text only, line length is limited to about 1000 chars. o You must use UTF-8 encoding to specify non-ascii characters. o Empty lines are ignored. o Leading and trailing spaces are ignored. o A hash sign as the first non white space character indicates a comment line. o Control statements are indicated by a leading percent sign, the arguments are separated by white space from the keyword. o Parameters are specified by a keyword, followed by a colon. Arguments are separated by white space. o The first parameter must be "Key-Type", control statements may be placed anywhere. o Key generation takes place when either the end of the parameter file is reached, the next "Key-Type" parameter is encountered or at the control statement "%commit" o Control statements: %echo <text> Print <text>. %dry-run Suppress actual key generation (useful for syntax checking). %commit Perform the key generation. An implicit commit is done at the next "Key-Type" parameter. %pubring <filename> %secring <filename> Do not write the key to the default or commandline given keyring but to <filename>. This must be given before the first commit to take place, duplicate specification of the same filename is ignored, the last filename before a commit is used. The filename is used until a new filename is used (at commit points) and all keys are written to that file. If a new filename is given, this file is created (and overwrites an existing one). GnuPG < 2.1: Both control statements must be given. GnuPG >= 2.1: "%secring" is now a no-op. %ask-passphrase Enable a mode where the command "passphrase" is ignored and instead the usual passphrase dialog is used. This does not make sense for batch key generation; however the unattended key generation feature is also used by GUIs and this feature relinquishes the GUI from implementing its own passphrase entry code. This is a global option. %no-ask-passphrase Disable the ask-passphrase mode. %no-protection With GnuPG 2.1 it is not anymore possible to specify a passphrase for unattended key generation. The passphrase command is simply ignored and %ask-passpharse is thus implicitly enabled. Using this option allows to the creation of keys without any passphrases. This option is mainly intended for regression tests. %transient-key If given the keys are created using a faster and a somewhat less secure random number generator. This option may be used for keys which are only used for a short time and do not require full cryptographic strength. It takes only effect if used together with the option no-protection. o The order of the parameters does not matter except for "Key-Type" which must be the first parameter. The parameters are only for the generated keyblock and parameters from previous key generations are not used. Some syntactically checks may be performed. The currently defined parameters are: Key-Type: <algo-number>|<algo-string> Starts a new parameter block by giving the type of the primary key. The algorithm must be capable of signing. This is a required parameter. It may be "default" to use the default one; in this case don't give a Key-Usage and use "default" for the Subkey-Type. Key-Length: <length-in-bits> Length of the key in bits. The default is returned by running the command "gpg --gpgconf-list". Key-Usage: <usage-list> Space or comma delimited list of key usage, allowed values are "encrypt", "sign", and "auth". This is used to generate the key flags. Please make sure that the algorithm is capable of this usage. Note that OpenPGP requires that all primary keys are capable of certification, so no matter what usage is given here, the "cert" flag will be on. If no Key-Usage is specified and the key-type is not "default", all allowed usages for that particular algorithm are used; if it is not given but "default" is used the usage will be "sign". Subkey-Type: <algo-number>|<algo-string> This generates a secondary key. Currently only one subkey can be handled. "default" is also supported. Subkey-Length: <length-in-bits> Length of the subkey in bits. The default is returned by running the command "gpg --gpgconf-list". Subkey-Usage: <usage-list> Similar to Key-Usage. Passphrase: <string> If you want to specify a passphrase for the secret key, enter it here. Default is not to use any passphrase. Name-Real: <string> Name-Comment: <string> Name-Email: <string> The 3 parts of a key. Remember to use UTF-8 here. If you don't give any of them, no user ID is created. Expire-Date: <iso-date>|(<number>[d|w|m|y]) Set the expiration date for the key (and the subkey). It may either be entered in ISO date format (2000-08-15) or as number of days, weeks, month or years. The special notation "seconds=N" is also allowed to directly give an Epoch value. Without a letter days are assumed. Note that there is no check done on the overflow of the type used by OpenPGP for timestamps. Thus you better make sure that the given value make sense. Although OpenPGP works with time intervals, GnuPG uses an absolute value internally and thus the last year we can represent is 2105. Creation-Date: <iso-date> Set the creation date of the key as stored in the key information and which is also part of the fingerprint calculation. Either a date like "1986-04-26" or a full timestamp like "19860426T042640" may be used. The time is considered to be UTC. If it is not given the current time is used. Preferences: <string> Set the cipher, hash, and compression preference values for this key. This expects the same type of string as "setpref" in the --edit menu. Revoker: <algo>:<fpr> [sensitive] Add a designated revoker to the generated key. Algo is the public key algorithm of the designated revoker (i.e. RSA=1, DSA=17, etc.) Fpr is the fingerprint of the designated revoker. The optional "sensitive" flag marks the designated revoker as sensitive information. Only v4 keys may be designated revokers. Handle: <string> This is an optional parameter only used with the status lines KEY_CREATED and KEY_NOT_CREATED. STRING may be up to 100 characters and should not contain spaces. It is useful for batch key generation to associate a key parameter block with a status line. Keyserver: <string> This is an optional parameter that specifies the preferred keyserver URL for the key. Here is an example on how to create a key: $ cat >foo <<EOF %echo Generating a basic OpenPGP key Key-Type: DSA Key-Length: 1024 Subkey-Type: ELG-E Subkey-Length: 1024 Name-Real: Joe Tester Name-Comment: with stupid passphrase Name-Email: joe@foo.bar Expire-Date: 0 Passphrase: abc %pubring foo.pub %secring foo.sec # Do a commit here, so that we can later print "done" :-) %commit %echo done EOF $ gpg --batch --gen-key foo [...] $ gpg --no-default-keyring --secret-keyring ./foo.sec \ --keyring ./foo.pub --list-secret-keys /home/wk/work/gnupg-stable/scratch/foo.sec ------------------------------------------ sec 1024D/915A878D 2000-03-09 Joe Tester (with stupid passphrase) <joe@foo.bar> ssb 1024g/8F70E2C0 2000-03-09 If you want to create a key with the default algorithms you would use these parameters: %echo Generating a default key Key-Type: default Subkey-Type: default Name-Real: Joe Tester Name-Comment: with stupid passphrase Name-Email: joe@foo.bar Expire-Date: 0 Passphrase: abc %pubring foo.pub %secring foo.sec # Do a commit here, so that we can later print "done" :-) %commit %echo done Layout of the TrustDB ===================== The TrustDB is built from fixed length records, where the first byte describes the record type. All numeric values are stored in network byte order. The length of each record is 40 bytes. The first record of the DB is always of type 1 and this is the only record of this type. FIXME: The layout changed, document it here. Record type 0: -------------- Unused record, can be reused for any purpose. Record type 1: -------------- Version information for this TrustDB. This is always the first record of the DB and the only one with type 1. 1 byte value 1 3 bytes 'gpg' magic value 1 byte Version of the TrustDB (2) 1 byte marginals needed 1 byte completes needed 1 byte max_cert_depth The three items are used to check whether the cached validity value from the dir record can be used. 1 u32 locked flags [not used] 1 u32 timestamp of trustdb creation 1 u32 timestamp of last modification which may affect the validity of keys in the trustdb. This value is checked against the validity timestamp in the dir records. 1 u32 timestamp of last validation [currently not used] (Used to keep track of the time, when this TrustDB was checked against the pubring) 1 u32 record number of keyhashtable [currently not used] 1 u32 first free record 1 u32 record number of shadow directory hash table [currently not used] It does not make sense to combine this table with the key table because the keyid is not in every case a part of the fingerprint. 1 u32 record number of the trusthashtbale Record type 2: (directory record) -------------- Informations about a public key certificate. These are static values which are never changed without user interaction. 1 byte value 2 1 byte reserved 1 u32 LID . (This is simply the record number of this record.) 1 u32 List of key-records (the first one is the primary key) 1 u32 List of uid-records 1 u32 cache record 1 byte ownertrust 1 byte dirflag 1 byte maximum validity of all the user ids 1 u32 time of last validity check. 1 u32 Must check when this time has been reached. (0 = no check required) Record type 3: (key record) -------------- Informations about a primary public key. (This is mainly used to lookup a trust record) 1 byte value 3 1 byte reserved 1 u32 LID 1 u32 next - next key record 7 bytes reserved 1 byte keyflags 1 byte pubkey algorithm 1 byte length of the fingerprint (in bytes) 20 bytes fingerprint of the public key (This is the value we use to identify a key) Record type 4: (uid record) -------------- Informations about a userid We do not store the userid but the hash value of the userid because that is sufficient. 1 byte value 4 1 byte reserved 1 u32 LID points to the directory record. 1 u32 next next userid 1 u32 pointer to preference record 1 u32 siglist list of valid signatures 1 byte uidflags 1 byte validity of the key calculated over this user id 20 bytes ripemd160 hash of the username. Record type 5: (pref record) -------------- This record type is not anymore used. 1 byte value 5 1 byte reserved 1 u32 LID; points to the directory record (and not to the uid record!). (or 0 for standard preference record) 1 u32 next 30 byte preference data Record type 6 (sigrec) ------------- Used to keep track of key signatures. Self-signatures are not stored. If a public key is not in the DB, the signature points to a shadow dir record, which in turn has a list of records which might be interested in this key (and the signature record here is one). 1 byte value 6 1 byte reserved 1 u32 LID points back to the dir record 1 u32 next next sigrec of this uid or 0 to indicate the last sigrec. 6 times 1 u32 Local_id of signatures dir or shadow dir record 1 byte Flag: Bit 0 = checked: Bit 1 is valid (we have a real directory record for this) 1 = valid is set (but may be revoked) Record type 8: (shadow directory record) -------------- This record is used to reserve a LID for a public key. We need this to create the sig records of other keys, even if we do not yet have the public key of the signature. This record (the record number to be more precise) will be reused as the dir record when we import the real public key. 1 byte value 8 1 byte reserved 1 u32 LID (This is simply the record number of this record.) 2 u32 keyid 1 byte pubkey algorithm 3 byte reserved 1 u32 hintlist A list of records which have references to this key. This is used for fast access to signature records which are not yet checked. Note, that this is only a hint and the actual records may not anymore hold signature records for that key but that the code cares about this. 18 byte reserved Record Type 10 (hash table) -------------- Due to the fact that we use fingerprints to lookup keys, we can implement quick access by some simple hash methods, and avoid the overhead of gdbm. A property of fingerprints is that they can be used directly as hash values. (They can be considered as strong random numbers.) What we use is a dynamic multilevel architecture, which combines hashtables, record lists, and linked lists. This record is a hashtable of 256 entries; a special property is that all these records are stored consecutively to make one big table. The hash value is simple the 1st, 2nd, ... byte of the fingerprint (depending on the indirection level). When used to hash shadow directory records, a different table is used and indexed by the keyid. 1 byte value 10 1 byte reserved n u32 recnum; n depends on the record length: n = (reclen-2)/4 which yields 9 for the current record length of 40 bytes. the total number of such record which makes up the table is: m = (256+n-1) / n which is 29 for a record length of 40. To look up a key we use the first byte of the fingerprint to get the recnum from this hashtable and look up the addressed record: - If this record is another hashtable, we use 2nd byte to index this hash table and so on. - if this record is a hashlist, we walk all entries until we found one a matching one. - if this record is a key record, we compare the fingerprint and to decide whether it is the requested key; Record type 11 (hash list) -------------- see hash table for an explanation. This is also used for other purposes. 1 byte value 11 1 byte reserved 1 u32 next next hash list record n times n = (reclen-5)/5 1 u32 recnum For the current record length of 40, n is 7 Record type 254 (free record) --------------- All these records form a linked list of unused records. 1 byte value 254 1 byte reserved (0) 1 u32 next_free GNU extensions to the S2K algorithm =================================== S2K mode 101 is used to identify these extensions. After the hash algorithm the 3 bytes "GNU" are used to make clear that these are extensions for GNU, the next bytes gives the GNU protection mode - 1000. Defined modes are: 1001 - do not store the secret part at all 1002 - a stub to access smartcards (not used in 1.2.x) Other Notes =========== * For packet version 3 we calculate the keyids this way: RSA := low 64 bits of n ELGAMAL := build a v3 pubkey packet (with CTB 0x99) and calculate a rmd160 hash value from it. This is used as the fingerprint and the low 64 bits are the keyid. * Revocation certificates consist only of the signature packet; "import" knows how to handle this. The rationale behind it is to keep them small. OIDs below the GnuPG arc: ========================= 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2 GnuPG 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2.1 notation 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2.1.1 pkaAddress 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2.12242973 invalid encoded OID Keyserver Message Format ========================= The keyserver may be contacted by a Unix Domain socket or via TCP. The format of a request is: ==== command-tag "Content-length:" digits CRLF ======= Where command-tag is NOOP GET <user-name> PUT DELETE <user-name> The format of a response is: ====== "GNUPG/1.0" status-code status-text "Content-length:" digits CRLF ============ followed by <digits> bytes of data Status codes are: o 1xx: Informational - Request received, continuing process o 2xx: Success - The action was successfully received, understood, and accepted o 4xx: Client Error - The request contains bad syntax or cannot be fulfilled o 5xx: Server Error - The server failed to fulfill an apparently valid request Documentation on HKP (the http keyserver protocol): A minimalistic HTTP server on port 11371 recognizes a GET for /pks/lookup. The standard http URL encoded query parameters are this (always key=value): - op=index (like pgp -kv), op=vindex (like pgp -kvv) and op=get (like pgp -kxa) - search=<stringlist>. This is a list of words that must occur in the key. The words are delimited with space, points, @ and so on. The delimiters are not searched for and the order of the words doesn't matter (but see next option). - exact=on. This switch tells the hkp server to only report exact matching keys back. In this case the order and the "delimiters" are important. - fingerprint=on. Also reports the fingerprints when used with 'index' or 'vindex' The keyserver also recognizes http-POSTs to /pks/add. Use this to upload keys. A better way to do this would be a request like: /pks/lookup/<gnupg_formatierte_user_id>?op=<operation> This can be implemented using Hurd's translator mechanism. However, I think the whole key server stuff has to be re-thought; I have some ideas and probably create a white paper.