Basics
Exporting keys
gpg -o key.gpg --export <KEY ID>
Export key in ASCII:
gpg -o key.asc --armor --export <KEY ID>
Note: Omitting the -o|--output
option will print the key to stdout
.
Importing keys
gpg --import key.gpg
gpg --import key.asc
Only merge updates for keys already in key-ring:
gpg --import key.asc --merge-options merge-only
Managing your keyring
Generate a new key:
gpg --gen-key
# or, generate a new key with dialogs for all options
gpg --full-gen-key
List public keys:
gpg -k
gpg --list-keys
List secret keys:
gpg -K
gpg --list-secret-keys
Using a keyserver
Import keys from keyserver:
gpg --receive-keys <KEY IDS>
Upload keys to keyserver:
gpg --send-keys <KEY IDS>
Request updates from keyserver for keys already in your keyring:
gpg --refresh-keys
Search keys from keyserver:
gpg --search-keys "<SEARCH STRING>"
Override keyserver from ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf
gpg --keyserver <URL> ...
Trusting a key
gpg --edit-key <KEY ID>
# In the interactive prompt:
gpg> sign
gpg> save
NOTE: You can use the owner’s email or name (or part thereof) instead of the key ID for --edit-key
Encrypting
Public key encryption
This will produce an encrypted file, secret.txt.gpg
, that can only be decrypted by the recipient:
gpg -e -o secret.txt.gpg -r <RECIPIENT> secret.txt
For <RECIPIENT>
you can use their key ID, their email, or their name (or part thereof).
gpg -e -r <KEY ID> ...
gpg -e -r "Bez" ...
gpg -e -r "[email protected]" ...
Specifying multiple recipients
gpg -e -r <RECIPIENT> -r <ANOTHER RECIPIENT> ... secret.txt
NOTE: Omitting -o|--output
will produce an encrypted file named <ORIGINAL FILENAME>.gpg
by default.
Symmetric encryption
Encrypt file using a shared key. You will be prompted for a passphrase.
gpg --symmetric secret.txt
# or
gpg -c secret.txt
Decrypting
Decrypting a file
gpg -d -o secret.txt secret.txt.gpg
If the file is encrypted via symmetric encryption, you will be prompted for the passphrase.
NOTE: Omitting -o|--output
will print the unencrypted contents to stdout
Signing & Verifying
Signing
gpg -o signed-file.txt.gpg -s file.txt
This can be used during encryption to also sign encrypted files:
gpg -s -o secret.txt.gpg \
-r <RECIPIENT> secret.txt
Verifying a signature
gpg --verify file.txt.gpg
Viewing content of signed file
gpg -d signed-file.txt.gpg
Miscellaneous
Components
List all components:
gpgconf --list-components
Kill a component:
gpgconf --kill <COMPONENT> # i.e. gpgconf --kill dirmngr
Kill all components:
gpgconf --kill all
Parsing keyring data
Use --with-colons
to produce an output that can easily be parsed i.e. with awk
, grep
. Fields are colon-separated.
gpg -k --with-colons
Field Quick Reference:
Field # | Description |
1 | Record type |
2 | Validity |
3 | Key length in bits |
4 | Public key algorithm |
5 | Key ID |
6 | Creation date |
7 | Expiry date |
8 | Certificate S/N, UID hash, trust signature info |
9 | Ownertrust |
10 | User ID |
11 | Signature class |
12 | Key capabilities |
13 | Issuer fingerprint |
14 | Flag field |
15 | S/N of token |
16 | Hash algorithm |
17 | Curve name |
18 | Compliance flags |
19 | Last update timestamp |
20 | Origin |
See GnuPG Details for more details.
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