gpg

GPG(1) GNU Privacy Guard 2.4 GPG(1)

NAME

   gpg - OpenPGP encryption and signing tool

SYNOPSIS

   gpg [--homedir dir] [--options file] [options] command [args]

DESCRIPTION

   gpg is the OpenPGP part of the GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG). It is a tool to provide digital encryption and signing services using the OpenPGP standard. gpg features complete key manage
   ment and all the bells and whistles you would expect from a full OpenPGP implementation.

   There  are  two  main  versions  of GnuPG: GnuPG 1.x and GnuPG 2.x.  GnuPG 2.x supports modern encryption algorithms and thus should be preferred over GnuPG 1.x.  You only need to use
   GnuPG 1.x if your platform doesn't support GnuPG 2.x, or you need support for some features that GnuPG 2.x has deprecated, e.g., decrypting data created with PGP-2 keys.

   If you are looking for version 1 of GnuPG, you may find that version installed under the name gpg1.

RETURN VALUE

   The program returns 0 if there are no severe errors, 1 if at least a signature was bad, and other error codes for fatal errors.

   Note that signature verification requires exact knowledge of what has been signed and by whom it has been signed.  Using only the return code is thus not an appropriate way to  verify
   a signature by a script.  Either make proper use or the status codes or use the gpgv tool which has been designed to make signature verification easy for scripts.

WARNINGS

   Use a good password for your user account and make sure that all security issues are always fixed on your machine.  Also employ diligent physical protection to your machine.  Consider
   to  use a good passphrase as a last resort protection to your secret key in the case your machine gets stolen.  It is important that your secret key is never leaked.  Using an easy to
   carry around token or smartcard with the secret key is often a advisable.

   If you are going to verify detached signatures, make sure that the program knows about it; either give both filenames on the command line or use - to specify STDIN.

   For scripted or other unattended use of gpg make sure to use the machine-parseable interface and not the default interface which is intended for direct use by  humans.   The  machine-
   parseable  interface  provides  a stable and well documented API independent of the locale or future changes of gpg.  To enable this interface use the options --with-colons and --sta
   tus-fd.  For certain operations the option --command-fd may come handy too.  See this man page and the file DETAILS for the specification of the  interface.   Note  that  the  GnuPG
   ``info''  pages as well as the PDF version of the GnuPG manual features a chapter on unattended use of GnuPG.  As an alternative the library GPGME can be used as a high-level abstrac
   tion on top of that interface.

INTEROPERABILITY

   GnuPG tries to be a very flexible implementation of the OpenPGP standard. In particular, GnuPG implements many of the optional parts of the standard, such as the SHA-512 hash, and the
   ZLIB and BZIP2 compression algorithms. It is important to be aware that not all OpenPGP programs implement these optional algorithms and that  by  forcing  their  use  via  the  --ci
   pher-algo,  --digest-algo,  --cert-digest-algo, or --compress-algo options in GnuPG, it is possible to create a perfectly valid OpenPGP message, but one that cannot be read by the in
   tended recipient.

   There are dozens of variations of OpenPGP programs available, and each supports a slightly different subset of these optional algorithms.  For example, until recently,  no  (unhacked)
   version of PGP supported the BLOWFISH cipher algorithm. A message using BLOWFISH simply could not be read by a PGP user. By default, GnuPG uses the standard OpenPGP preferences system
   that  will always do the right thing and create messages that are usable by all recipients, regardless of which OpenPGP program they use. Only override this safe default if you really
   know what you are doing.

   If you absolutely must override the safe default, or if the preferences on a given key are invalid for some reason, you are far better off using the --pgp6, --pgp7, or --pgp8 options.
   These options are safe as they do not force any particular algorithms in violation of OpenPGP, but rather reduce the available algorithms to a "PGP-safe" list.

COMMANDS

   Commands are not distinguished from options except for the fact that only one command is allowed.  Generally speaking, irrelevant options are silently ignored, and may not be  checked
   for correctness.

   gpg  may  be  run  with  no  commands. In this case it will print a warning perform a reasonable action depending on the type of file it is given as input (an encrypted message is de
   crypted, a signature is verified, a file containing keys is listed, etc.).

   If you run into any problems, please add the option --verbose to the invocation to see more diagnostics.

Commands not specific to the function

   --version
          Print the program version and licensing information.  Note that you cannot abbreviate this command.

   --help
   -h     Print a usage message summarizing the most useful command-line options.  Note that you cannot arbitrarily abbreviate this command (though you can use its short form -h).

   --warranty
          Print warranty information.

   --dump-options
          Print a list of all available options and commands.  Note that you cannot abbreviate this command.

Commands to select the type of operation

   --sign
   -s     Sign a message. This command may be combined with --encrypt (to sign and encrypt a message), --symmetric (to sign and symmetrically encrypt a message), or  both  --encrypt  and
          --symmetric  (to  sign and encrypt a message that can be decrypted using a secret key or a passphrase).  The signing key is chosen by default or can be set explicitly using the
          --local-user and --default-key options.

   --clear-sign
   --clearsign
          Make a cleartext signature.  The content in a cleartext signature is readable without any special software. OpenPGP software is only needed to verify the signature.   cleartext
          signatures may modify end-of-line whitespace for platform independence and are not intended to be reversible.  The signing key is chosen by default or can be set explicitly us
          ing the --local-user and --default-key options.

   --detach-sign
   -b     Make a detached signature.

   --encrypt
   -e     Encrypt data to one or more public keys. This command may be combined with --sign (to sign and encrypt a message), --symmetric (to encrypt a message that can be decrypted using
          a  secret key or a passphrase), or --sign and --symmetric together (for a signed message that can be decrypted using a secret key or a passphrase).  --recipient and related op
          tions specify which public keys to use for encryption.

   --symmetric
   -c     Encrypt with a symmetric cipher using a passphrase. The default symmetric cipher used is AES-128, but may be chosen with the --cipher-algo option. This command may be  combined
          with  --sign  (for  a signed and symmetrically encrypted message), --encrypt (for a message that may be decrypted via a secret key or a passphrase), or --sign and --encrypt to
          gether (for a signed message that may be decrypted via a secret key or a passphrase).  gpg caches the passphrase used for symmetric encryption so that a decrypt  operation  may
          not require that the user needs to enter the passphrase.  The option --no-symkey-cache can be used to disable this feature.

   --store
          Store only (make a simple literal data packet).

   --decrypt
   -d     Decrypt the file given on the command line (or STDIN if no file is specified) and write it to STDOUT (or the file specified with --output). If the decrypted file is signed, the
          signature  is  also  verified. This command differs from the default operation, as it never writes to the filename which is included in the file and it rejects files that don't
          begin with an encrypted message.

   --verify
          Assume that the first argument is a signed file and verify it without generating any output.  With no arguments, the signature packet is read from STDIN.  If only one  argument
          is given, the specified file is expected to include a complete signature.

          With  more than one argument, the first argument should specify a file with a detached signature and the remaining files should contain the signed data. To read the signed data
          from STDIN, use ‘-’ as the second filename.  For security reasons, a detached signature will not read the signed material from STDIN if not explicitly specified.

          Note: If the option --batch is not used, gpg may assume that a single argument is a file with a detached signature, and it will try to find a matching data  file  by  stripping
          certain suffixes.  Using this historical feature to verify a detached signature is strongly discouraged; you should always specify the data file explicitly.

          Note:  When  verifying  a cleartext signature, gpg verifies only what makes up the cleartext signed data and not any extra data outside of the cleartext signature or the header
          lines directly following the dash marker line.  The option --output may be used to write out the actual signed data, but there are other pitfalls with this format as well.   It
          is suggested to avoid cleartext signatures in favor of detached signatures.

          Note:  With option --batch he verification of signatures stops at the first bad signature.  This is a safe default for unattended processing but sometimes a status for all sig‐
          natures is needed.  To override this early bailout use the option --proc-all-sigs.

          Note: To check whether a file was signed by a certain key the option --assert-signer can be used.  As an alternative the gpgv tool can be used.  gpgv  is  designed  to  compare
          signed data against a list of trusted keys and returns with success only for a good signature.  It has its own manual page.

   --multifile
          This  modifies certain other commands to accept multiple files for processing on the command line or read from STDIN with each filename on a separate line. This allows for many
          files to be processed at once. --multifile may currently be used along with --verify, --encrypt, and --decrypt. Note that --multifile --verify may not  be  used  with  detached
          signatures.

   --verify-files
          Identical to --multifile --verify.

   --encrypt-files
          Identical to --multifile --encrypt.

   --decrypt-files
          Identical to --multifile --decrypt.

   --list-keys
   -k
   --list-public-keys
          List the specified keys.  If no keys are specified, then all keys from the configured public keyrings are listed.

          Never  use  the output of this command in scripts or other programs.  The output is intended only for humans and its format is likely to change.  The --with-colons option emits
          the output in a stable, machine-parseable format, which is intended for use by scripts and other programs.

   --list-secret-keys
   -K     List the specified secret keys.  If no keys are specified, then all known secret keys are listed.  A # after the initial tags sec or ssb means that the secret key or subkey  is
          currently  not  usable.   We  also say that this key has been taken offline (for example, a primary key can be taken offline by exporting the key using the command --export-se‐
          cret-subkeys).  A > after these tags indicate that the key is stored on a smartcard.  See also --list-keys.

   --check-signatures
   --check-sigs
          Same as --list-keys, but the key signatures are verified and listed too.  Note that for performance reasons the revocation status of a signing key is not shown.   This  command
          has the same effect as using --list-keys with --with-sig-check.

          The  status of the verification is indicated by a flag directly following the "sig" tag (and thus before the flags described below.  A "!" indicates that the signature has been
          successfully verified, a "-" denotes a bad signature and a "%" is used if an error occurred while checking the signature (e.g. a non supported algorithm).  Signatures where the
          public key is not available are not listed; to see their keyids the command --list-sigs can be used.

          For each signature listed, there are several flags in between the signature status flag and keyid.  These flags give additional information about each key signature.  From left
          to right, they are the numbers 1-3 for certificate check level (see --ask-cert-level), "L" for a local or non-exportable signature (see --lsign-key),  "R"  for  a  nonRevocable
          signature  (see  the  --edit-key  command  "nrsign"),  "P" for a signature that contains a policy URL (see --cert-policy-url), "N" for a signature that contains a notation (see
          --cert-notation), "X" for an eXpired signature (see --ask-cert-expire), and the numbers 1-9 or "T" for 10 and above to indicate trust signature levels (see the --edit-key  com‐
          mand "tsign").

   --locate-keys
   --locate-external-keys
          Locate  the  keys  given as arguments.  This command basically uses the same algorithm as used when locating keys for encryption and may thus be used to see what keys gpg might
          use.  In particular external methods as defined by --auto-key-locate are used to locate a key if the arguments comain valid mail addresses.  Only public keys are listed.

          The variant --locate-external-keys does not consider a locally existing key and can thus be used to force the refresh of a key via the defined external methods.  If  a  finger‐
          print is given and and the methods defined by --auto-key-locate define LDAP servers, the key is fetched from these resources; defined non-LDAP keyservers are skipped.

   --show-keys
          This  commands  takes OpenPGP keys as input and prints information about them in the same way the command --list-keys does for locally stored key.  In addition the list options
          show-unusable-uids, show-unusable-subkeys, show-notations and show-policy-urls are also enabled.  As usual for automated processing, this command should be  combined  with  the
          option --with-colons.

   --fingerprint
          List  all  keys (or the specified ones) along with their fingerprints. This is the same output as --list-keys but with the additional output of a line with the fingerprint. May
          also be combined with --check-signatures.  If this command is given twice, the fingerprints of all secondary keys are listed too.  This command also forces pretty  printing  of
          fingerprints if the keyid format has been set to "none".

   --list-packets
          List  only  the  sequence  of packets.  This command is only useful for debugging.  When used with option --verbose the actual MPI values are dumped and not only their lengths.
          Note that the output of this command may change with new releases.

   --edit-card
   --card-edit
          Present a menu to work with a smartcard. The subcommand "help" provides an overview  on  available  commands.  For  a  detailed  description,  please  see  the  Card  HOWTO  at
          https://gnupg.org/documentation/howtos.html#GnuPG-cardHOWTO .  Please note that the command "openpgp" can be used to switch to the OpenPGP application of cards which by default
          are presenting another application (e.g. PIV).

   --card-status
          Show the content of the smart card.

   --change-pin
          Present a menu to allow changing the PIN of a smartcard. This functionality is also available as the subcommand "passwd" with the --edit-card command.

   --delete-keys name
          Remove  key from the public keyring. In batch mode either --yes is required or the key must be specified by fingerprint. This is a safeguard against accidental deletion of mul‐
          tiple keys.  If the exclamation mark syntax is used with the fingerprint of a subkey only that subkey is deleted; if the exclamation mark is used with the  fingerprint  of  the
          primary key the entire public key is deleted.

   --delete-secret-keys name
          Remove  key  from  the  secret keyring. In batch mode the key must be specified by fingerprint.  The option --yes can be used to advise gpg-agent not to request a confirmation.
          This extra pre-caution is done because gpg can't be sure that the secret key (as controlled by gpg-agent) is only used for the given OpenPGP public  key.   If  the  exclamation
          mark  syntax  is  used  with the fingerprint of a subkey only the secret part of that subkey is deleted; if the exclamation mark is used with the fingerprint of the primary key
          only the secret part of the primary key is deleted.

   --delete-secret-and-public-key name
          Same as --delete-key, but if a secret key exists, it will be removed first. In batch mode the key must be specified by fingerprint.  The option --yes can be used to advise gpg-
          agent not to request a confirmation.

   --export
          Either export all keys from all keyrings (default keyring and those registered via option --keyring), or if at least one name is given, those of the given  name.  The  exported
          keys are written to STDOUT or to the file given with option --output.  Use together with --armor to mail those keys.

   --send-keys keyIDs
          Similar to --export but sends the keys to a keyserver.  Fingerprints may be used instead of key IDs.  Don't send your complete keyring to a keyserver --- select only those keys
          which are new or changed by you.  If no keyIDs are given, gpg does nothing.

          Take care: Keyservers are by design write only systems and thus it is not possible to ever delete keys once they have been send to a keyserver.

   --export-secret-keys
   --export-secret-subkeys
          Same  as  --export,  but  exports the secret keys instead.  The exported keys are written to STDOUT or to the file given with option --output.  This command is often used along
          with the option --armor to allow for easy printing of the key for paper backup; however the external tool paperkey does a better job of creating backups on  paper.   Note  that
          exporting a secret key can be a security risk if the exported keys are sent over an insecure channel.

          The  second  form of the command has the special property to render the secret part of the primary key useless; this is a GNU extension to OpenPGP and other implementations can
          not be expected to successfully import such a key.  Its intended use is in generating a full key with an additional signing subkey on a dedicated machine.   This  command  then
          exports the key without the primary key to the main machine.

          GnuPG  may  ask  you to enter the passphrase for the key.  This is required, because the internal protection method of the secret key is different from the one specified by the
          OpenPGP protocol.

   --export-ssh-key
          This command is used to export a key in the OpenSSH public key format.  It requires the specification of one key by the usual means and exports the latest  valid  subkey  which
          has an authentication capability to STDOUT or to the file given with option --output.  That output can directly be added to ssh's authorized_key file.

          By specifying the key to export using a key ID or a fingerprint suffixed with an exclamation mark (!), a specific subkey or the primary key can be exported.  This does not even
          require that the key has the authentication capability flag set.

   --import
   --fast-import
          Import/merge keys. This adds the given keys to the keyring. The fast version is currently just a synonym.

          There  are  a  few other options which control how this command works.  Most notable here is the --import-options merge-only option which does not insert new keys but does only
          the merging of new signatures, user-IDs and subkeys.

   --receive-keys keyIDs
   --recv-keys keyIDs
          Import the keys with the given keyIDs from a keyserver.

   --refresh-keys
          Request updates from a keyserver for keys that already exist on the local keyring. This is useful for updating a key with the latest signatures, user  IDs,  etc.  Calling  this
          with no arguments will refresh the entire keyring.

   --search-keys names
          Search  the  keyserver  for  the  given names. Multiple names given here will be joined together to create the search string for the keyserver.  Note that keyservers search for
          names in a different and simpler way than gpg does.  The best choice is to use a mail address.  Due to data privacy reasons keyservers may even not even allow searching by user
          id or mail address and thus may only return results when being used with the --recv-key command to search by key fingerprint or keyid.

   --fetch-keys URIs
          Retrieve keys located at the specified URIs. Note that different installations of GnuPG may support different protocols (HTTP, FTP, LDAP, etc.).  When using  HTTPS  the  system
          provided root certificates are used by this command.

   --update-trustdb
          Do  trust  database maintenance. This command iterates over all keys and builds the Web of Trust. This is an interactive command because it may have to ask for the "ownertrust"
          values for keys. The user has to give an estimation of how far she trusts the owner of the displayed key to correctly certify (sign) other keys. GnuPG only asks  for  the  own
          ertrust value if it has not yet been assigned to a key. Using the --edit-key menu, the assigned value can be changed at any time.

   --check-trustdb
          Do trust database maintenance without user interaction. From time to time the trust database must be updated so that expired keys or signatures and the resulting changes in the
          Web  of  Trust  can  be tracked. Normally, GnuPG will calculate when this is required and do it automatically unless --no-auto-check-trustdb is set. This command can be used to
          force a trust database check at any time. The processing is identical to that of --update-trustdb but it skips keys with a not yet defined "ownertrust".

          For use with cron jobs, this command can be used together with --batch in which case the trust database check is done only if a check is needed. To force a run  even  in  batch
          mode add the option --yes.

   --export-ownertrust
          Send the ownertrust values to STDOUT. This is useful for backup purposes as these values are the only ones which can't be re-created from a corrupted trustdb.  Example:
              gpg --export-ownertrust > otrust.txt

   --import-ownertrust
          Update  the  trustdb  with the ownertrust values stored in files (or STDIN if not given); existing values will be overwritten.  In case of a severely damaged trustdb and if you
          have a recent backup of the ownertrust values (e.g. in the file otrust.txt), you may re-create the trustdb using these commands:
              cd ~/.gnupg
              rm trustdb.gpg
              gpg --import-ownertrust < otrust.txt

   --rebuild-keydb-caches
          When updating from version 1.0.6 to 1.0.7 this command should be used to create signature caches in the keyring. It might be handy in other situations too.

   --print-md algo
   --print-mds
          Print message digest of algorithm algo for all given files or STDIN.  With the second form (or a deprecated "*" for algo) digests for all available algorithms are printed.

   --gen-random 0|1|2|16|30 count
          Emit count random bytes of the given quality level 0, 1 or 2. If count is not given or zero, an endless sequence of random bytes will be emitted.  If used with --armor the out
          put will be base64 encoded.  The special level 16 uses a quality level of 1 and outputs an endless stream of hex-encoded octets.  The special level  30  outputs  random  as  30
          zBase-32 characters.

   --gen-prime mode bits
          Use the source, Luke :-). The output format is subject to change with any release.

   --enarmor
   --dearmor
          Pack  or  unpack  an  arbitrary input into/from an OpenPGP ASCII armor.  This is a GnuPG extension to OpenPGP and in general not very useful.  The --dearmor command can also be
          used to dearmor PEM armors.

   --unwrap
          This option modifies the command --decrypt to output the original message with the encryption layer removed.  Thus the output will be an  OpenPGP  data  structure  which  often
          means a signed OpenPGP message.  Note that this option may or may not remove a compression layer which is often found beneath the encryption layer.

   --tofu-policy {auto|good|unknown|bad|ask} keys
          Set  the TOFU policy for all the bindings associated with the specified keys.  For more information about the meaning of the policies, see: [trust-model-tofu].  The keys may be
          specified either by their fingerprint (preferred) or their keyid.

How to manage your keys

   This section explains the main commands for key management.

   --quick-generate-key user-id [algo [usage [expire]]]
   --quick-gen-key
          This is a simple command to generate a standard key with one user id.  In contrast to --generate-key the key is generated directly  without  the  need  to  answer  a  bunch  of
          prompts.  Unless the option --yes is given, the key creation will be canceled if the given user id already exists in the keyring.

          If  invoked  directly  on the console without any special options an answer to a ``Continue?'' style confirmation prompt is required.  In case the user id already exists in the
          keyring a second prompt to force the creation of the key will show up.

          If algo or usage are given, only the primary key is created and no prompts are shown.  To specify an expiration date but still create a primary and subkey  use  ``default''  or
          ``future-default''  for  algo  and  ``default''  for  usage.   For  a description of these optional arguments see the command --quick-add-key.  The usage accepts also the value
          ``cert'' which can be used to create a certification only primary key; the default is to a create certification and signing key.

          The expire argument can be used to specify an expiration date for the key.  Several formats are supported; commonly the ISO formats ``YYYY-MM-DD''  or  ``YYYYMMDDThhmmss''  are
          used.  To make the key expire in N seconds, N days, N weeks, N months, or N years use ``seconds=N'', ``Nd'', ``Nw'', ``Nm'', or ``Ny'' respectively.  Not specifying a value, or
          using ``-'' results in a key expiring in a reasonable default interval.  The values ``never'', ``none'' can be used for no expiration date.

          If this command is used with --batch, --pinentry-mode has been set to loopback, and one of the passphrase options (--passphrase, --passphrase-fd, or --passphrase-file) is used,
          the supplied passphrase is used for the new key and the agent does not ask for it.  To create a key without any protection --passphrase '' may be used.

          To  create an OpenPGP key from the keys available on the currently inserted smartcard, the special string ``card'' can be used for algo.  If the card features an encryption and
          a signing key, gpg will figure them out and creates an OpenPGP key consisting of the usual primary key and one subkey.  This works only with certain smartcards.  Note that  the
          interactive --full-gen-key command allows one to do the same but with greater flexibility in the selection of the smartcard keys.

          Note  that  it  is  possible  to  create a primary key and a subkey using non-default algorithms by using ``default'' and changing the default parameters using the option --de‐
          fault-new-key-algo.

   --quick-set-expire fpr expire [*|subfprs]
          With two arguments given, directly set the expiration time of the primary key identified by fpr to expire.  To remove the expiration time 0 can be used.  With  three  arguments
          and  the  third  given as an asterisk, the expiration time of all non-revoked and not yet expired subkeys are set to expire.  With more than two arguments and a list of finger‐
          prints given for subfprs, all non-revoked subkeys matching these fingerprints are set to expire.

   --quick-add-key fpr [algo [usage [expire]]]
          Directly add a subkey to the key identified by the fingerprint fpr.  Without the optional arguments an encryption subkey is added.  If any of the arguments  are  given  a  more
          specific subkey is added.

          algo  may  be  any  of the supported algorithms or curve names given in the format as used by key listings.  To use the default algorithm the string ``default'' or ``-'' can be
          used.  Supported algorithms are ``rsa'', ``dsa'', ``elg'', ``ed25519'', ``cv25519'', and other ECC curves.  For example the string ``rsa'' adds an RSA key with the default  key
          length;  a string ``rsa4096'' requests that the key length is 4096 bits.  The string ``future-default'' is an alias for the algorithm which will likely be used as default algo‐
          rithm in future versions of gpg.  To list the supported ECC curves the command gpg --with-colons --list-config curve can be used.

          Depending on the given algo the subkey may either be an encryption subkey or a signing subkey.  If an algorithm is capable of signing and encryption and such a  subkey  is  de‐
          sired,  a  usage string must be given.  This string is either ``default'' or ``-'' to keep the default or a comma delimited list (or space delimited list) of keywords: ``sign''
          for a signing subkey, ``auth'' for an authentication subkey, and ``encr'' for an encryption subkey (``encrypt'' can be used as alias for ``encr'').  The valid combinations  de‐
          pend on the algorithm.

          The  expire  argument  can be used to specify an expiration date for the key.  Several formats are supported; commonly the ISO formats ``YYYY-MM-DD'' or ``YYYYMMDDThhmmss'' are
          used.  To make the key expire in N seconds, N days, N weeks, N months, or N years use ``seconds=N'', ``Nd'', ``Nw'', ``Nm'', or ``Ny'' respectively.  Not specifying a value, or
          using ``-'' results in a key expiring in a reasonable default interval.  The values ``never'', ``none'' can be used for no expiration date.

   --quick-add-adsk fpr adskfpr
          Directly add an Additional Decryption Subkey to the key identified by the fingerprint fpr.  adskfpr is the fingerprint of another key's encryption subkey.  A subkey is commonly
          used here because by default a primary key has no encryption capability.  Use the option --with-subkey-fingerprint with a list command to display the subkey  fingerprints.   If
          the string "default" is used for adskfpr all missing ADSKs configured with --default-new-key-adsk are added.

   --generate-key
   --gen-key
          Generate a new key pair using the current default parameters.  This is the standard command to create a new key.  In addition to the key a revocation certificate is created and
          stored in the openpgp-revocs.d directory below the GnuPG home directory.

   --full-generate-key
   --full-gen-key
          Generate a new key pair with dialogs for all options.  This is an extended version of --generate-key.

          There is also a feature which allows you to create keys in batch mode. See the manual section ``Unattended key generation'' on how to use this.

   --generate-revocation name
   --gen-revoke name
          Generate a revocation certificate for the complete key.  To only revoke a subkey or a key signature, use the --edit command.

          This  command  merely  creates the revocation certificate so that it can be used to revoke the key if that is ever needed.  To actually revoke a key the created revocation cer
          tificate needs to be merged with the key to revoke.  This is done by importing the revocation certificate using the --import command.  Then the revoked key  needs  to  be  pub
          lished,  which  is  best done by sending the key to a keyserver (command --send-key) and by exporting (--export) it to a file which is then send to frequent communication part
          ners.

   --generate-designated-revocation name
   --desig-revoke name
          Generate a designated revocation certificate for a key. This allows a user (with the permission of the keyholder) to revoke someone else's key.

   --edit-key
          Present a menu which enables you to do most of the key management related tasks.  It expects the specification of a key on the command line.

          uid n  Toggle selection of user ID or photographic user ID with index n.  Use * to select all and 0 to deselect all.

          key n  Toggle selection of subkey with index n or key ID n.  Use * to select all and 0 to deselect all.

          sign   Make a signature on key of user name. If the key is not yet signed by the default user (or the users given with -u), the program displays  the  information  of  the  key
                 again, together with its fingerprint and asks whether it should be signed. This question is repeated for all users specified with -u.

          lsign  Same  as  "sign" but the signature is marked as non-exportable and will therefore never be used by others. This may be used to make keys valid only in the local environ‐
                 ment.

          nrsign Same as "sign" but the signature is marked as non-revocable and can therefore never be revoked.

          tsign  Make a trust signature. This is a signature that combines the notions of certification (like a regular signature), and trust (like the "trust" command). It is  generally
                 useful in distinct communities or groups to implement the concept of a Trusted Introducer.  For more information please read the sections ``Trust Signature'' and ``Regu‐
                 lar Expression'' in RFC-4880.

          Note that "l" (for local / non-exportable), "nr" (for non-revocable, and "t" (for trust) may be freely mixed and prefixed to "sign" to create a signature of any type desired.

   If the option --only-sign-text-ids is specified, then any non-text based user ids (e.g., photo IDs) will not be selected for signing.

          delsig Delete a signature. Note that it is not possible to retract a signature, once it has been send to the public (i.e. to a keyserver).  In that case you better use revsig.

          revsig Revoke a signature. For every signature which has been generated by one of the secret keys, GnuPG asks whether a revocation certificate should be generated.

          check  Check the signatures on all selected user IDs.  With the extra option selfsig only self-signatures are shown.

          adduid Create an additional user ID.

          addphoto
                 Create  a photographic user ID. This will prompt for a JPEG file that will be embedded into the user ID. Note that a very large JPEG will make for a very large key. Also
                 note that some programs will display your JPEG unchanged (GnuPG), and some programs will scale it to fit in a dialog box (PGP).

          showphoto
                 Display the selected photographic user ID.

          deluid Delete a user ID or photographic user ID.  Note that it is not possible to retract a user id, once it has been send to the public (i.e. to a keyserver).   In  that  case
                 you better use revuid.

          revuid Revoke a user ID or photographic user ID.

          primary
                 Flag  the  current user id as the primary one, removes the primary user id flag from all other user ids and sets the timestamp of all affected self-signatures one second
                 ahead. Note that setting a photo user ID as primary makes it primary over other photo user IDs, and setting a regular user ID as primary makes it primary over other reg‐
                 ular user IDs.

          keyserver
                 Set a preferred keyserver for the specified user ID(s). This allows other users to know where you prefer they get  your  key  from.  See  --keyserver-options  honor-key‐
                 server-url for more on how this works.  Setting a value of "none" removes an existing preferred keyserver.

          notation
                 Set  a name=value notation for the specified user ID(s). See --cert-notation for more on how this works. Setting a value of "none" removes all notations, setting a nota‐
                 tion prefixed with a minus sign (-) removes that notation, and setting a notation name (without the =value) prefixed with a minus sign removes all  notations  with  that
                 name.

          pref   List preferences from the selected user ID. This shows the actual preferences, without including any implied preferences.

          showpref
                 More  verbose  preferences  listing for the selected user ID. This shows the preferences in effect by including the implied preferences of 3DES (cipher), SHA-1 (digest),
                 and Uncompressed (compression) if they are not already included in the preference list. In addition, the preferred keyserver and signature notations (if any) are shown.

          setpref string
                 Set the list of user ID preferences to string for all (or just the selected) user IDs. Calling setpref with no arguments sets the preference list to the default  (either
                 built-in  or set via --default-preference-list), and calling setpref with "none" as the argument sets an empty preference list. Use gpg --version to get a list of avail‐
                 able algorithms. Note that while you can change the preferences on an attribute user ID (aka "photo ID"), GnuPG does not select keys via  attribute  user  IDs  so  these
                 preferences will not be used by GnuPG.  Note that an unattended version of this command is available as --quick-update-pref.

                 When  setting  preferences,  you should list the algorithms in the order which you'd like to see them used by someone else when encrypting a message to your key.  If you
                 don't include 3DES, it will be automatically added at the end.  Note that there are many factors that go into choosing an algorithm (for example, your key may not be the
                 only recipient), and so the remote OpenPGP application being used to send to you may or may not follow your exact chosen order for a given message.   It  will,  however,
                 only choose an algorithm that is present on the preference list of every recipient key.  See also the INTEROPERABILITY WITH OTHER OPENPGP PROGRAMS section below.

          addkey Add a subkey to this key.

          addcardkey
                 Generate a subkey on a card and add it to this key.

          keytocard
                 Transfer  the  selected secret subkey (or the primary key if no subkey has been selected) to a smartcard. The secret key in the keyring will be replaced by a stub if the
                 key could be stored successfully on the card and you use the save command later. Only certain key types may be transferred to the card. A sub menu allows you  to  select
                 on  what  card to store the key. Note that it is not possible to get that key back from the card - if the card gets broken your secret key will be lost unless you have a
                 backup somewhere.

          bkuptocard file
                 Restore the given file to a card. This command may be used to restore a backup key (as generated during card initialization) to a new card. In almost all cases this will
                 be the encryption key. You should use this command only with the corresponding public key and make sure that the file given as argument is indeed the backup to  restore.
                 You should then select 2 to restore as encryption key.  You will first be asked to enter the passphrase of the backup key and then for the Admin PIN of the card.

          keytotpm
                 Transfer the selected secret subkey (or the primary key if no subkey has been selected) to TPM form.  The secret key in the keyring will be replaced by the TPM represen‐
                 tation  of that key, which can only be read by the particular TPM that created it (so the keyfile now becomes locked to the laptop containing the TPM).  Only certain key
                 types may be transferred to the TPM (all TPM 2.0 systems are mandated to have the rsa2048 and nistp256 algorithms but newer TPMs may have more). Note that the key itself
                 is not transferred into the TPM, merely encrypted by the TPM in-place, so if the keyfile is deleted, the key will be lost.  Once transferred to TPM  representation,  the
                 key  file  can  never be converted back to non-TPM form and the key will die when the TPM does, so you should first have a backup on secure offline storage of the actual
                 secret key file before conversion.  It is essential to use the physical system TPM that you have rw permission on the TPM resource manager device (/dev/tpmrm0).  Usually
                 this means you must be a member of the tss group.

          delkey Remove a subkey (secondary key). Note that it is not possible to retract a subkey, once it has been send to the public (i.e. to a keyserver).  In that  case  you  better
                 use revkey.  Also note that this only deletes the public part of a key.

          revkey Revoke a subkey.

          expire Change  the key or subkey expiration time. If a subkey is selected, the expiration time of this subkey will be changed. With no selection, the key expiration of the pri‐
                 mary key is changed.

          trust  Change the owner trust value for the key. This updates the trust-db immediately and no save is required.

          disable
          enable Disable or enable an entire key. A disabled key can not normally be used for encryption.

          addrevoker
                 Add a designated revoker to the key. This takes one optional argument: "sensitive". If a designated revoker is marked as sensitive, it will not be  exported  by  default
                 (see export-options).

          addadsk
                 Add  an Additional Decryption Subkey.  The user is asked to enter the fingerprint of another encryption subkey.  Note that the exact fingerprint of another key's encryp
                 tion subkey needs to be entered.  This is because commonly the primary key has no encryption capability.  Use the option --with-subkey-fingerprint with a list command to
                 display the subkey fingerprints.

          passwd Change the passphrase of the secret key.

          toggle This is dummy command which exists only for backward compatibility.

          clean  Compact (by removing all signatures except the selfsig) any user ID that is no longer usable (e.g. revoked, or expired). Then, remove any signatures that are not  usable
                 by  the  trust calculations.  Specifically, this removes any signature that does not validate, any signature that is superseded by a later signature, revoked signatures,
                 and signatures issued by keys that are not present on the keyring.

          minimize
                 Make the key as small as possible. This removes all signatures from each user ID except for the most recent self-signature.

          change-usage
                 Change the usage flags (capabilities) of the primary key or of subkeys.  These usage flags (e.g. Certify, Sign, Authenticate,  Encrypt)  are  set  during  key  creation.
                 Sometimes  it is useful to have the opportunity to change them (for example to add Authenticate) after they have been created.  Please take care when doing this; the al
                 lowed usage flags depend on the key algorithm.

          cross-certify
                 Add cross-certification signatures to signing subkeys that may not currently have them. Cross-certification signatures protect against a subtle  attack  against  signing
                 subkeys. See --require-cross-certification.  All new keys generated have this signature by default, so this command is only useful to bring older keys up to date.

          save   Save all changes to the keyring and quit.

          quit   Quit the program without updating the keyring.

          The  listing shows you the key with its secondary keys and all user IDs.  The primary user ID is indicated by a dot, and selected keys or user IDs are indicated by an asterisk.
          The trust value is displayed with the primary key: "trust" is the assigned owner trust and "validity" is the calculated validity of the key.  Validity values are also displayed
          for all user IDs.  For possible values of trust, see: [trust-values].

   --sign-key name
          Signs a public key with your secret key. This is a shortcut version of the subcommand "sign" from --edit-key.

   --lsign-key name
          Signs a public key with your secret key but marks it as non-exportable. This is a shortcut version of the subcommand "lsign" from --edit-key.

   --quick-sign-key fpr [names]
   --quick-lsign-key fpr [names]
          Directly sign a key from the passphrase without any further user interaction.  The fpr must be the verified primary fingerprint of a key in the local keyring. If no  names  are
          given,  all useful user ids are signed; with given [names] only useful user ids matching one of these names are signed.  By default, or if a name is prefixed with a '*', a case
          insensitive substring match is used.  If a name is prefixed with a '=' a case sensitive exact match is done.

          The command --quick-lsign-key marks the signatures as non-exportable.  If such a non-exportable signature already exists the --quick-sign-key turns it into a exportable  signa
          ture.  If you need to update an existing signature, for example to add or change notation data, you need to use the option --force-sign-key.

          This command uses reasonable defaults and thus does not provide the full flexibility of the "sign" subcommand from --edit-key.  Its intended use is to help unattended key sign
          ing by utilizing a list of verified fingerprints.

   --quick-add-uid user-id new-user-id
          This  command  adds  a  new user id to an existing key.  In contrast to the interactive sub-command adduid of --edit-key the new-user-id is added verbatim with only leading and
          trailing white space removed, it is expected to be UTF-8 encoded, and no checks on its form are applied.

   --quick-revoke-uid user-id user-id-to-revoke
          This command revokes a user ID on an existing key.  It cannot be used to revoke the last user ID on key (some non-revoked user ID must remain), with revocation reason ``User ID
          is no longer valid''.  If you want to specify a different revocation reason, or to supply supplementary revocation text, you should use the interactive  sub-command  revuid  of
          --edit-key.

   --quick-revoke-sig fpr signing-fpr [names]
          This command revokes the key signatures made by signing-fpr from the key specified by the fingerprint fpr.  With names given only the signatures on user ids of the key matching
          any  of  the  given names are affected (see --quick-sign-key).  If a revocation already exists a notice is printed instead of creating a new revocation; no error is returned in
          this case.  Note that key signature revocations may be superseded by a newer key signature and in turn again revoked.

   --quick-set-primary-uid user-id primary-user-id
          This command sets or updates the primary user ID flag on an existing key.  user-id specifies the key and primary-user-id the user ID which shall be flagged as the primary  user
          ID.  The primary user ID flag is removed from all other user ids and the timestamp of all affected self-signatures is set one second ahead.

   --quick-update-pref user-id
          This  command updates the preference list of the key to the current default value (either built-in or set via --default-preference-list).  This is the unattended version of us
          ing "setpref" in the --key-edit menu without giving a list.  Note that you can show the preferences in a  key  listing  by  using  --list-options  show-pref  or  --list-options
          show-pref-verbose.  You should also re-distribute updated keys to your peers.

   --quick-set-ownertrust user-id value
          This command sets the ownertrust of a key and can also be used to set the disable flag of a key.  This is the unattended version of using "trust", "disable", or "enable" in the
          --key-edit menu.

   --change-passphrase user-id
   --passwd user-id
          Change  the  passphrase  of the secret key belonging to the certificate specified as user-id.  This is a shortcut for the sub-command passwd of the --edit-key menu.  When using
          together with the option --dry-run this will not actually change the passphrase but check that the current passphrase is correct.

OPTIONS

   gpg features a bunch of options to control the exact behaviour and to change the default configuration.

   Long options can be put in an options file (default "~/.gnupg/gpg.conf"). Short option names will not work - for example, "armor" is a valid option for the options file, while "a"  is
   not.  Do not write the 2 dashes, but simply the name of the option and any required arguments. Lines with a hash ('#') as the first non-white-space character are ignored. Commands may
   be put in this file too, but that is not generally useful as the command will execute automatically with every execution of gpg.

   Please remember that option parsing stops as soon as a non-option is encountered, you can explicitly stop parsing by using the special option --.

How to change the configuration

   These options are used to change the configuration and most of them are usually found in the option file.

   --default-key name
          Use name as the default key to sign with.  It is suggested to use a fingerprint or at least a long keyID for name.  If this option is not used, the default key is the first key
          found in the secret keyring.  Note that -u or --local-user overrides this option.  This option may be given multiple times.  In this case, the last key for which a  secret  key
          is available is used.  If there is no secret key available for any of the specified values, GnuPG will not emit an error message but continue as if this option wasn't given.

   --default-recipient name
          Use name as default recipient if option --recipient is not used and don't ask if this is a valid one. name must be non-empty and it is suggested to use a fingerprint for name.

   --default-recipient-self
          Use the default key as default recipient if option --recipient is not used and don't ask if this is a valid one. The default key is the first one from the secret keyring or the
          one set with --default-key.

   --no-default-recipient
          Reset --default-recipient and --default-recipient-self.  Should not be used in an option file.

   -v, --verbose
          Give more information during processing. If used twice, the input data is listed in detail.

   --no-verbose
          Reset verbose level to 0.  Should not be used in an option file.

   -q, --quiet
          Try to be as quiet as possible.  Should not be used in an option file.

   --batch
   --no-batch
          Use batch mode.  Never ask, do not allow interactive commands.  --no-batch disables this option.  Note that even with a filename given on the command line, gpg might still need
          to  read  from STDIN (in particular if gpg figures that the input is a detached signature and no data file has been specified).  Thus if you do not want to feed data via STDIN,
          you should connect STDIN to ‘/dev/null’.

          It is highly recommended to use this option along with the options --status-fd and --with-colons for any unattended use of gpg.  Should not be used in an option file.

   --no-tty
          Make sure that the TTY (terminal) is never used for any output.  This option is needed in some cases because GnuPG sometimes prints warnings to the TTY even if --batch is used.

   --yes  Assume "yes" on most questions.  Should not be used in an option file.

   --no   Assume "no" on most questions.  Should not be used in an option file.

   --proc-all-sigs
          This option overrides the behaviour of the --batch option to stop signature verification at the first bad signatures.

   --list-filter {select=expr}
          A list filter can be used to output only certain keys during key listing commands. For the available property names, see the description of --import-filter.

   --list-options parameters
          This is a space or comma delimited string that gives options used when listing keys and signatures (that is,  --list-keys,  --check-signatures,  --list-public-keys,  --list-se‐
          cret-keys, and the --edit-key functions).  Options can be prepended with a no- (after the two dashes) to give the opposite meaning.  The options are:

          show-photos
                 Causes  --list-keys,  --check-signatures,  --list-public-keys,  and  --list-secret-keys  to  display  any  photo  IDs  attached  to  the  key.   Defaults to no. See also
                 --photo-viewer.  Does not work with --with-colons: see --attribute-fd for the appropriate way to get photo data for scripts and other frontends.

          show-usage
                 Show usage information for keys and subkeys in the standard key listing.  This is a list of letters indicating the allowed usage  for  a  key  (E=encryption,  S=signing,
                 C=certification, A=authentication).  Defaults to yes.

          show-ownertrust
                 Show the ownertrust value for keys also in the standard key listing.  Defaults to no.

          show-policy-urls
                 Show policy URLs in the  --check-signatures listings.  Defaults to no.

          show-notations
          show-std-notations
          show-user-notations
                 Show all, IETF standard, or user-defined signature notations in the --check-signatures listings. Defaults to no.

          show-keyserver-urls
                 Show any preferred keyserver URL in the --check-signatures listings. Defaults to no.

          show-uid-validity
                 Display the calculated validity of user IDs during key listings.  Defaults to yes.

          show-unusable-uids
                 Show revoked and expired user IDs in key listings. Defaults to no.

          show-unusable-subkeys
                 Show revoked and expired subkeys in key listings. Defaults to no.

          show-unusable-sigs
                 Show key signature made using weak or unsupported algorithms.

          show-keyring
                 Display the keyring name at the head of key listings to show which keyring a given key resides on. Defaults to no.

          show-sig-expire
                 Show signature expiration dates (if any) during --check-signatures listings. Defaults to no.

          show-sig-subpackets
                 Include signature subpackets in the key listing. This option can take an optional argument list of the subpackets to list. If no argument is passed, list all subpackets.
                 Defaults to no. This option is only meaningful when using --with-colons along with --check-signatures.

          show-only-fpr-mbox
                 For each user-id which has a valid mail address print only the fingerprint followed by the mail address.

          sort-sigs
                 With  --list-sigs  and --check-sigs sort the signatures by keyID and creation time to make it easier to view the history of these signatures.  The self-signature is also
                 listed before other signatures. Defaults to yes.  This option has no effect in -with-colons mode.

   --verify-options parameters
          This is a space or comma delimited string that gives options used when verifying signatures. Options can be prepended with a `no-' to give the  opposite  meaning.  The  options
          are:

          show-photos
                 Display any photo IDs present on the key that issued the signature.  Defaults to no. See also --photo-viewer.

          show-policy-urls
                 Show policy URLs in the signature being verified. Defaults to yes.

          show-notations
          show-std-notations
          show-user-notations
                 Show all, IETF standard, or user-defined signature notations in the signature being verified. Defaults to IETF standard.

          show-keyserver-urls
                 Show any preferred keyserver URL in the signature being verified.  Defaults to yes.

          show-uid-validity
                 Display the calculated validity of the user IDs on the key that issued the signature. Defaults to yes.

          show-unusable-uids
                 Show revoked and expired user IDs during signature verification.  Defaults to no.

          show-primary-uid-only
                 Show only the primary user ID during signature verification.  That is all the AKA lines as well as photo Ids are not shown with the signature verification status.

   --enable-large-rsa
   --disable-large-rsa
          Enable  the creation of RSA secret keys as large as 8192 bit.  Note: 8192 bit is more than is generally recommended.  These large keys don't significantly improve security, but
          they are more expensive to use, and their signatures and certifications are larger.  This option is only available if the binary was build with large-secmem support.

   --enable-dsa2
   --disable-dsa2
          Enable hash truncation for all DSA keys even for old DSA Keys up to 1024 bit.  This is also the default with --openpgp.  Note that older versions of GnuPG  also  required  this
          flag to allow the generation of DSA larger than 1024 bit.

   --photo-viewer string
          This  is  the  command  line  that  should  be run to view a photo ID. "%i" will be expanded to a filename containing the photo. "%I" does the same, except the file will not be
          deleted once the viewer exits.  Other flags are "%k" for the key ID, "%K" for the long key ID, "%f" for the key fingerprint, "%t" for the extension  of  the  image  type  (e.g.
          "jpg"), "%T" for the MIME type of the image (e.g. "image/jpeg"), "%v" for the single-character calculated validity of the image being viewed (e.g. "f"), "%V" for the calculated
          validity as a string (e.g.  "full"), "%U" for a base32 encoded hash of the user ID, and "%%" for an actual percent sign. If neither %i or %I are present, then the photo will be
          supplied to the viewer on standard input.

          On  Unix  the  default  viewer  is  xloadimage  -fork -quiet -title 'KeyID 0x%k' STDIN with a fallback to display -title 'KeyID 0x%k' %i and finally to xdg-open %i.  On Windows
          !ShellExecute 400 %i is used; here the command is a meta command to use that API call followed by a wait time in milliseconds which is used to give the viewer time to read  the
          temporary image file before gpg deletes it again.  Note that if your image viewer program is not secure, then executing it from gpg does not make it secure.

   --exec-path string
          Sets a list of directories to search for photo viewers If not provided photo viewers use the PATH environment variable.

   --keyring file
          Add  file  to  the current list of keyrings. If file begins with a tilde and a slash, these are replaced by the $HOME directory. If the filename does not contain a slash, it is
          assumed to be in the GnuPG home directory ("~/.gnupg" unless --homedir or $GNUPGHOME is used).

          Note that this adds a keyring to the current list. If the intent is to use the specified keyring alone, use --keyring along with --no-default-keyring.

          If the option --no-keyring has been used no keyrings will be used at all.

          Note that if the option use-keyboxd is enabled in ‘common.conf’, no keyrings are used at all and keys are all maintained by the keyboxd process in its own database.

   --primary-keyring file
          This is a varian of --keyring and designates file as the primary public keyring. This means that newly imported keys (via --import or keyserver --recv-from)  will  go  to  this
          keyring.

   --secret-keyring file
          This is an obsolete option and ignored.  All secret keys are stored in the ‘private-keys-v1.d’ directory below the GnuPG home directory.

   --trustdb-name file
          Use file instead of the default trustdb. If file begins with a tilde and a slash, these are replaced by the $HOME directory. If the filename does not contain a slash, it is as‐
          sumed to be in the GnuPG home directory (‘~/.gnupg’ if --homedir or $GNUPGHOME is not used).

   --homedir dir
          Set  the  name  of  the home directory to dir. If this option is not used, the home directory defaults to ‘~/.gnupg’.  It is only recognized when given on the command line.  It
          also overrides any home directory stated through the environment variable ‘GNUPGHOME’ or (on Windows systems) by means of the Registry entry HKCU\Software\GNU\GnuPG:HomeDir.

          On Windows systems it is possible to install GnuPG as a portable application.  In this case only this command line option is considered, all other ways to set a home  directory
          are ignored.

   --display-charset name
          Set  the name of the native character set. This is used to convert some informational strings like user IDs to the proper UTF-8 encoding.  Note that this has nothing to do with
          the character set of data to be encrypted or signed; GnuPG does not recode user-supplied data. If this option is not used, the default character set is determined from the cur‐
          rent locale. A verbosity level of 3 shows the chosen set.  This option should not be used on Windows.  Valid values for name are:

          iso-8859-1
                 This is the Latin 1 set.

          iso-8859-2
                 The Latin 2 set.

          iso-8859-15
                 This is currently an alias for the Latin 1 set.

          koi8-r The usual Russian set (RFC-1489).

          utf-8  Bypass all translations and assume that the OS uses native UTF-8 encoding.

   --utf8-strings
   --no-utf8-strings
          Assume that command line arguments are given as UTF-8 strings. The default (--no-utf8-strings) is to assume that arguments are encoded in the  character  set  as  specified  by
          --display-charset. These options affect all following arguments. Both options may be used multiple times.  This option should not be used in an option file.

          This  option  has  no effect on Windows.  There the internal used UTF-8 encoding is translated for console input and output.  The command line arguments are expected as Unicode
          and translated to UTF-8.  Thus when calling this program from another, make sure to use the Unicode version of CreateProcess.

   --options file
          Read options from file and do not try to read them from the default options file in the homedir (see --homedir). This option is ignored if used in an options file.

   --no-options
          Shortcut for --options /dev/null. This option is detected before an attempt to open an option file.  Using this option will also prevent the creation of a ‘~/.gnupg’ homedir.

   -z n
   --compress-level n
   --bzip2-compress-level n
   --no-compress
          Set compression level to n for the ZIP and ZLIB compression algorithms. The default is to use the default compression level of zlib (normally  6).  --bzip2-compress-level  sets
          the  compression  level for the BZIP2 compression algorithm (defaulting to 6 as well). This is a different option from --compress-level since BZIP2 uses a significant amount of
          memory for each additional compression level.

          Option -z sets both. A value of 0 for n disables compression.  A value of -1 forces compression using the default level.  Option --no-compress is identical to -z0.

          Except for the --store command compression is always used unless gpg detects that the input is already compressed.  To inhibit the use of compression use -z0 or  --no-compress;
          to force compression use -z-1 or option z with another compression level than the default as indicated by -1.  Note that this overriding of the default deection works only with
          z and not with the long variant of this option.

   --bzip2-decompress-lowmem
          Use a different decompression method for BZIP2 compressed files. This alternate method uses a bit more than half the memory, but also runs at half the speed. This is useful un‐
          der extreme low memory circumstances when the file was originally compressed at a high --bzip2-compress-level.

   --mangle-dos-filenames
   --no-mangle-dos-filenames
          Older version of Windows cannot handle filenames with more than one dot. --mangle-dos-filenames causes GnuPG to replace (rather than add to) the extension of an output filename
          to avoid this problem. This option is off by default and has no effect on non-Windows platforms.

   --ask-cert-level
   --no-ask-cert-level
          When  making  a  key  signature,  prompt  for  a  certification  level. If this option is not specified, the certification level used is set via --default-cert-level. See --de‐
          fault-cert-level for information on the specific levels and how they are used. --no-ask-cert-level disables this option. This option defaults to no.

   --default-cert-level n
          The default to use for the check level when signing a key.

          0 means you make no particular claim as to how carefully you verified the key.

          1 means you believe the key is owned by the person who claims to own it but you could not, or did not verify the key at all. This is useful for a "persona" verification,  where
          you sign the key of a pseudonymous user.

          2 means you did casual verification of the key. For example, this could mean that you verified the key fingerprint and checked the user ID on the key against a photo ID.

          3 means you did extensive verification of the key. For example, this could mean that you verified the key fingerprint with the owner of the key in person, and that you checked,
          by  means of a hard to forge document with a photo ID (such as a passport) that the name of the key owner matches the name in the user ID on the key, and finally that you veri‐
          fied (by exchange of email) that the email address on the key belongs to the key owner.

          Note that the examples given above for levels 2 and 3 are just that: examples. In the end, it is up to you to decide just what "casual" and "extensive" mean to you.

          This option defaults to 0 (no particular claim).

   --min-cert-level
          When building the trust database, treat any signatures with a certification level below this as invalid. Defaults to 2, which disregards level 1 signatures. Note that  level  0
          "no particular claim" signatures are always accepted.

   --trusted-key long key ID or fingerprint
          Assume  that the specified key (which should be given as fingerprint) is as trustworthy as one of your own secret keys. This option is useful if you don't want to keep your se
          cret keys (or one of them) online but still want to be able to check the validity of a given recipient's or signator's key.  If the given key is not locally  available  but  an
          LDAP  keyserver is configured the missing key is imported from that server.  The value "none" is explicitly allowed to distinguish between the use of any trusted-key option and
          no use of this option at all (e.g. due to the --no-options option).

   --add-desig-revoker [sensitive:]fingerprint
          Add the key specified by fingerprint as a designated revoker to newly created keys.  If the fingerprint is prefixed with the keyword ``sensitive:'' that info  is  normally  not
          exported  with  the key.  This option may be given several times to add more than one designated revoker.  If the keyword ``clear'' is used instead of a fingerprint, all previ
          ously fiven fingerprints are discarded.  Designated revokers are marked on the key as non-revocable.  Note that a designated revoker specified using a parameter file will  also
          be added to the key.

   --default-new-key-adsk fingerprint
          Add  the  subkey specified by fingerprint as an Additional Decryption Subkey (ADSK) to newly created keys.  This option may be given several time to add more than one ADSK.  It
          is also possible to give several fingerprints delimited by space or comma as value to this option.  If the keyword ``clear'' is used instead of a  fingerprint,  all  previously
          specified  fingerprints  are discarded (useful to override options given in a config file).  The fingerprint is expected to specify a subkey and it does not need an exclamation
          mark as suffix; it must be given in cmpact format (40 or 64 hex-digits without any spaces).

   --trust-model {pgp|classic|tofu|tofu+pgp|direct|always|auto}
          Set what trust model GnuPG should follow. The models are:

          pgp    This is the Web of Trust combined with trust signatures as used in PGP 5.x and later. This is the default trust model when creating a new trust database.

          classic
                 This is the standard Web of Trust as introduced by PGP 2.

          tofu

                 TOFU stands for Trust On First Use.  In this experimental trust model, the first time a key is seen, it is memorized.  If later another key with a user id with the  same
                 email  address  is  seen, both keys are marked as suspect.  In that case, the next time either is used, a warning is displayed describing the conflict, why it might have
                 occurred (either the user generated a new key and failed to cross sign the old and new keys, the key is forgery, or a man-in-the-middle attack is being  attempted),  and
                 the user is prompted to manually confirm the validity of the key in question.

                 Because  a  potential  attacker is able to control the email address and thereby circumvent the conflict detection algorithm by using an email address that is similar in
                 appearance to a trusted email address, whenever a message is verified, statistics about the number of messages signed with the key are shown.  In this way,  a  user  can
                 easily identify attacks using fake keys for regular correspondents.

                 When  compared with the Web of Trust, TOFU offers significantly weaker security guarantees.  In particular, TOFU only helps ensure consistency (that is, that the binding
                 between a key and email address doesn't change).  A major advantage of TOFU is that it requires little maintenance to use correctly.  To use the web of  trust  properly,
                 you  need  to  actively  sign  keys and mark users as trusted introducers.  This is a time-consuming process and anecdotal evidence suggests that even security-conscious
                 users rarely take the time to do this thoroughly and instead rely on an ad-hoc TOFU process.

                 In the TOFU model, policies are associated with bindings between keys and email addresses (which are extracted from user ids and normalized).  There are  five  policies,
                 which can be set manually using the --tofu-policy option.  The default policy can be set using the --tofu-default-policy option.

                 The  TOFU policies are: auto, good, unknown, bad and ask.  The auto policy is used by default (unless overridden by --tofu-default-policy) and marks a binding as margin‐
                 ally trusted.  The good, unknown and bad policies mark a binding as fully trusted, as having unknown trust or as having trust never, respectively.  The unknown policy is
                 useful for just using TOFU to detect conflicts, but to never assign positive trust to a binding.  The final policy, ask prompts the user to indicate the binding's trust.
                 If batch mode is enabled (or input is inappropriate in the context), then the user is not prompted and the undefined trust level is returned.

          tofu+pgp
                 This experimental trust model combines TOFU with the Web of Trust.  This is done by computing the trust level for each model and then  taking  the  maximum  trust  level
                 where the trust levels are ordered as follows: unknown < undefined < marginal < fully < ultimate < expired < never.

                 By  setting  --tofu-default-policy=unknown,  this model can be used to implement the web of trust with TOFU's conflict detection algorithm, but without its assignment of
                 positive trust values, which some security-conscious users don't like.

          direct Key validity is set directly by the user and not calculated via the Web of Trust.  This model is solely based on the key and does not distinguish user  IDs.   Note  that
                 when changing to another trust model the trust values assigned to a key are transformed into ownertrust values, which also indicate how you trust the owner of the key to
                 sign other keys.

          always Skip key validation and assume that used keys are always fully valid. You generally won't use this unless you are using some external validation scheme. This option also
                 suppresses the "[uncertain]" tag printed with signature checks when there is no evidence that the user ID is bound to the key.  Note that this trust model still does not
                 allow the use of expired, revoked, or disabled keys.

          auto   Select the trust model depending on whatever the internal trust database says. This is the default model if such a database already exists.  Note that a tofu trust model
                 is not considered here and must be enabled explicitly.

   --always-trust
          Identical to --trust-model always.

   --assert-signer fpr_or_file
          This  option checks whether at least one valid signature on a file has been made with the specified key.  The key is either specified as a fingerprint or a file listing finger‐
          prints.  The fingerprint must be given or listed in compact format (no colons or spaces in between).  This option can be given multiple times and each  fingerprint  is  checked
          against  the  signing  key  as  well as the corresponding primary key.  If fpr_or_file specifies a file, empty lines are ignored as well as all lines starting with a hash sign.
          With this option gpg is guaranteed to return with an exit code of 0 if and only if a signature has been encountered, is valid, and the key matches one of the fingerprints given
          by this option.

   --assert-pubkey-algo algolist
          During data signature verification this options checks whether the used public key algorithm matches the algorithms given by algolist.  This option can be given multiple  times
          to concatenate more algorithms to the list; the delimiter of the list are either commas or spaces.

          The  algorithm  names  given in the list may either be verbatim names like "ed25519" with an optional leading single equal sign, or being prefixed with ">", ">=", "<=", or "<".
          That prefix operator is applied to the number part of the algorithm name; for example 2048 in "rsa2048" or 384 in "brainpoolP384r1".  If the the leading non-digits in the  name
          matches,  the  prefix  operator  is  used  to  compare  the  number part, a trailing suffix is ignored in this case.  For example an algorithm list ">rsa3000, >=brainpool384r1,
          =ed25519" allows RSA signatures with more that 3000 bits, Brainpool curves 384 and 512, and the ed25519 algorithm.

          With this option gpg (and also gpgv) is guaranteed to return with an exit code of 0 if and only if all valid signatures on data are made using a  matching  algorithm  from  the
          given list.

   --auto-key-locate mechanisms
   --no-auto-key-locate
          GnuPG  can automatically locate and retrieve keys as needed using this option.  This happens when encrypting to an email address (in the "user@example.com" form), and there are
          no "user@example.com" keys on the local keyring.  This option takes any number of the mechanisms listed below, in the order they are to be tried.  Instead of listing the mecha‐
          nisms as comma delimited arguments, the option may also be given several times to add more mechanism.  The option --no-auto-key-locate or the mechanism "clear" resets the list.
          The default is "local,wkd".

          cert   Locate a key using DNS CERT, as specified in RFC-4398.

          dane   Locate a key using DANE, as specified in draft-ietf-dane-openpgpkey-05.txt.

          wkd    Locate a key using the Web Key Directory protocol.

          ldap   Locate the key using the configured LDAP servers.  This method is similar to the keyserver mechanism but always uses only LDAP servers.

          ntds   Locate the key using the Active Directory (Windows only).  This method also allows one to search by fingerprint using the command --locate-external-key.  Note that  this
                 mechanism is actually a shortcut for the mechanism ‘ldap’ using only "ldap:///" as the keyserver.

          keyserver
                 Locate  a  key using a keyserver.  This method also allows one to search by fingerprint using the command --locate-external-key if any of the configured keyservers is an
                 LDAP server.

          keyserver-URL
                 In addition, a keyserver URL as used in the dirmngr configuration may be used here to query that particular keyserver.  This method also allows one to search by  finger‐
                 print using the command --locate-external-key if the URL specifies an LDAP server.

          local  Locate the key using the local keyrings.  This mechanism allows the user to select the order a local key lookup is done.  Thus using ‘--auto-key-locate local’ is identi‐
                 cal to --no-auto-key-locate.

          nodefault
                 This  flag  disables  the standard local key lookup, done before any of the mechanisms defined by the --auto-key-locate are tried.  The position of this mechanism in the
                 list does not matter.  It is not required if local is also used.

          clear  Clear all defined mechanisms.  This is useful to override mechanisms given in a config file.  Note that a nodefault in mechanisms will also be cleared unless it is given
                 after the clear.

   --auto-key-import
   --no-auto-key-import
          This is an offline mechanism to get a missing key for signature verification and for later encryption to this key.  If this option is enabled and a signature includes an embed‐
          ded key, that key is used to verify the signature and on verification success the key is imported. The default is --no-auto-key-import.

          On the sender (signing) site the option --include-key-block needs to be used to put the public part of the signing key as “Key Block subpacket” into the signature.

   --auto-key-retrieve
   --no-auto-key-retrieve
          These options enable or disable the automatic retrieving of keys from a keyserver when verifying signatures made by keys that are not on the  local  keyring.   The  default  is
          --no-auto-key-retrieve.

          The order of methods tried to lookup the key is:

          1.  If  the  option  --auto-key-import  is set and the signatures includes an embedded key, that key is used to verify the signature and on verification success that key is im‐
          ported.

          2. If a preferred keyserver is specified in the signature and the option honor-keyserver-url is active (which is not the default), that keyserver is tried.  Note that the  cre‐
          ator of the signature uses the option --sig-keyserver-url to specify the preferred keyserver for data signatures.

          3. If the signature has the Signer's UID set (e.g. using --sender while creating the signature) a Web Key Directory (WKD) lookup is done.  This is the default configuration but
          can be disabled by removing WKD from the auto-key-locate list or by using the option --disable-signer-uid.

          4. If any keyserver is configured and the Issuer Fingerprint is part of the signature (since GnuPG 2.1.16), the configured keyservers are tried.

          Note  that this option makes a "web bug" like behavior possible.  Keyserver or Web Key Directory operators can see which keys you request, so by sending you a message signed by
          a brand new key (which you naturally will not have on your local keyring), the operator can tell both your IP address and the time when you verified the signature.

   --keyid-format {none|short|0xshort|long|0xlong}
          Select how to display key IDs.  "none" does not show the key ID at all but shows the fingerprint in a separate line.  "short" is the traditional 8-character key ID.  "long"  is
          the  more accurate (but less convenient) 16-character key ID.  Add an "0x" to either to include an "0x" at the beginning of the key ID, as in 0x99242560.  Note that this option
          is ignored if the option --with-colons is used.

   --keyserver name
          This option is deprecated - please use the --keyserver in dirmngr.conf instead.

          Use name as your keyserver. This is the server that --receive-keys, --send-keys, and --search-keys will communicate with to receive keys from, send keys to, and search for keys
          on. The format of the name is a URI: `scheme:[//]keyservername[:port]' The scheme  is  the  type  of  keyserver:  "hkp"/"hkps"  for  the  HTTP  (or  compatible)  keyservers  or
          "ldap"/"ldaps"  for  the LDAP keyservers.  Note that your particular installation of GnuPG may have other keyserver types available as well. Keyserver schemes are case-insensi‐
          tive.

          Most keyservers synchronize with each other, so there is generally no need to send keys to more than one server. The keyserver hkp://keys.gnupg.net uses round robin DNS to give
          a different keyserver each time you use it.

   --keyserver-options {name=value}
          This is a space or comma delimited string that gives options for the keyserver. Options can be prefixed with a `no-' to give the opposite meaning. Valid import-options  or  ex
          port-options may be used here as well to apply to importing (--recv-key) or exporting (--send-key) a key from a keyserver. While not all options are available for all keyserver
          types, some common options are:

          include-revoked
                 When searching for a key with --search-keys, include keys that are marked on the keyserver as revoked. Note that not all keyservers differentiate between revoked and un
                 revoked  keys, and for such keyservers this option is meaningless. Note also that most keyservers do not have cryptographic verification of key revocations, and so turn
                 ing this option off may result in skipping keys that are incorrectly marked as revoked.

          include-disabled
                 When searching for a key with --search-keys, include keys that are marked on the keyserver as disabled. Note that this option is not used with HKP keyservers.

          auto-key-retrieve
                 This is an obsolete alias for the option auto-key-retrieve.  Please do not use it; it will be removed in future versions..

          honor-keyserver-url
                 When using --refresh-keys, if the key in question has a preferred keyserver URL, then use that preferred keyserver to refresh the key from. In addition, if  auto-key-re
                 trieve  is set, and the signature being verified has a preferred keyserver URL, then use that preferred keyserver to fetch the key from. Note that this option introduces
                 a "web bug": The creator of the key can see when the keys is refreshed.  Thus this option is not enabled by default.

          include-subkeys
                 When receiving a key, include subkeys as potential targets. Note that this option is not used with HKP keyservers, as they do not support retrieving keys by subkey id.

          only-pubkeys
                 Do now allow to import secret keys.

          timeout
          http-proxy=value
          verbose
          debug
          check-cert

          ca-cert-file
                 These options have no more function since GnuPG 2.1.  Use the dirmngr configuration options instead.

   The default list of options is: "self-sigs-only, repair-keys, repair-pks-subkey-bug, export-attributes". However, if the actual used source is an LDAP  server  "no-self-sigs-only"  is
   assumed unless "self-sigs-only" has been explicitly configured.

   --completes-needed n
          Number of completely trusted users to introduce a new key signer (defaults to 1).

   --marginals-needed n
          Number of marginally trusted users to introduce a new key signer (defaults to 3)

   --tofu-default-policy {auto|good|unknown|bad|ask}
          The default TOFU policy (defaults to auto).  For more information about the meaning of this option, see: [trust-model-tofu].

   --max-cert-depth n
          Maximum depth of a certification chain (default is 5).

   --no-sig-cache
          Do  not  cache the verification status of key signatures.  Caching gives a much better performance in key listings. However, if you suspect that your public keyring is not safe
          against write modifications, you can use this option to disable the caching. It probably does not make sense to disable it because all kind of damage can  be  done  if  someone
          else has write access to your public keyring.

   --auto-check-trustdb
   --no-auto-check-trustdb
          If  GnuPG  feels  that  its  information  about  the Web of Trust has to be updated, it automatically runs the --check-trustdb command internally.  This may be a time consuming
          process. --no-auto-check-trustdb disables this option.

   --use-agent
   --no-use-agent
          This is dummy option. gpg always requires the agent.

   --gpg-agent-info
          This is dummy option. It has no effect when used with gpg.

   --agent-program file
          Specify an agent program to be used for secret key operations.  The default value is determined by running gpgconf with the option --list-dirs.  Note that the pipe  symbol  (|)
          is used for a regression test suite hack and may thus not be used in the file name.

   --dirmngr-program file
          Specify a dirmngr program to be used for keyserver access.  The default value is /usr/bin/dirmngr.

   --disable-dirmngr
          Entirely disable the use of the Dirmngr.

   --no-autostart
          Do  not  start  the  gpg-agent or the dirmngr if it has not yet been started and its service is required.  This option is mostly useful on machines where the connection to gpg-
          agent has been redirected to another machines.  If dirmngr is required on the remote machine, it may be started manually using gpgconf --launch dirmngr.

   --lock-once
          Lock the databases the first time a lock is requested and do not release the lock until the process terminates.

   --lock-multiple
          Release the locks every time a lock is no longer needed. Use this to override a previous --lock-once from a config file.

   --lock-never
          Disable locking entirely. This option should be used only in very special environments, where it can be assured that only one process  is  accessing  those  files.  A  bootable
          floppy with a stand-alone encryption system will probably use this. Improper usage of this option may lead to data and key corruption.

   --exit-on-status-write-error
          This  option  will cause write errors on the status FD to immediately terminate the process. That should in fact be the default but it never worked this way and thus we need an
          option to enable this, so that the change won't break applications which close their end of a  status  fd  connected  pipe  too  early.  Using  this  option  along  with  --en‐
          able-progress-filter may be used to cleanly cancel long running gpg operations.

   --limit-card-insert-tries n
          With  n greater than 0 the number of prompts asking to insert a smartcard gets limited to N-1. Thus with a value of 1 gpg won't at all ask to insert a card if none has been in
          serted at startup. This option is useful in the configuration file in case an application does not know about the smartcard support and waits ad infinitum for an inserted card.

   --no-random-seed-file
          GnuPG uses a file to store its internal random pool over invocations.  This makes random generation faster; however sometimes write operations are not desired. This option  can
          be used to achieve that with the cost of slower random generation.

   --no-greeting
          Suppress the initial copyright message.

   --no-secmem-warning
          Suppress the warning about "using insecure memory".

   --no-permission-warning
          Suppress the warning about unsafe file and home directory (--homedir) permissions. Note that the permission checks that GnuPG performs are not intended to be authoritative, but
          rather they simply warn about certain common permission problems. Do not assume that the lack of a warning means that your system is secure.

          Note that the warning for unsafe --homedir permissions cannot be suppressed in the gpg.conf file, as this would allow an attacker to place an unsafe gpg.conf file in place, and
          use this file to suppress warnings about itself. The --homedir permissions warning may only be suppressed on the command line.

   --require-secmem
   --no-require-secmem
          Refuse to run if GnuPG cannot get secure memory. Defaults to no (i.e. run, but give a warning).

   --require-cross-certification
   --no-require-cross-certification
          When  verifying  a signature made from a subkey, ensure that the cross certification "back signature" on the subkey is present and valid.  This protects against a subtle attack
          against subkeys that can sign.  Defaults to --require-cross-certification for gpg.

   --expert
   --no-expert
          Allow the user to do certain nonsensical or "silly" things like signing an expired or revoked key, or certain potentially incompatible things like generating unusual key types.
          This also disables certain warning messages about potentially incompatible actions. As the name implies, this option is for experts only. If you don't fully understand the  im
          plications of what it allows you to do, leave this off. --no-expert disables this option.

Key related options

   --recipient name
   -r     Encrypt for user id name. If this option or --hidden-recipient is not specified, GnuPG asks for the user-id unless --default-recipient is given.

   --hidden-recipient name
   -R     Encrypt  for  user ID name, but hide the key ID of this user's key. This option helps to hide the receiver of the message and is a limited countermeasure against traffic analy‐
          sis. If this option or --recipient is not specified, GnuPG asks for the user ID unless --default-recipient is given.

   --recipient-file file
   -f     This option is similar to --recipient except that it encrypts to a key stored in the given file.  file must be the name of a file containing exactly one key.  gpg assumes  that
          the key in this file is fully valid.

   --hidden-recipient-file file
   -F     This  option  is  similar to --hidden-recipient except that it encrypts to a key stored in the given file.  file must be the name of a file containing exactly one key.  gpg as‐
          sumes that the key in this file is fully valid.

   --encrypt-to name
          Same as --recipient but this one is intended for use in the options file and may be used with your own user-id as an "encrypt-to-self".  It is suggested to use a fingerprint or
          at least a long keyID for name.  These keys are only used when there are other recipients given either by use of --recipient or by the asked user id.  No trust checking is per‐
          formed for these user ids and even disabled keys can be used.

   --hidden-encrypt-to name
          Same as --hidden-recipient but this one is intended for use in the options file and may be used with your own user-id as a hidden "encrypt-to-self".  It is suggested to  use  a
          fingerprint  or  at least a long keyID for name.  These keys are only used when there are other recipients given either by use of --recipient or by the asked user id.  No trust
          checking is performed for these user ids and even disabled keys can be used.

   --no-encrypt-to
          Disable the use of all --encrypt-to and --hidden-encrypt-to keys.

   --group {name=value}
          Sets up a named group, which is similar to aliases in email programs.  Any time the group name is a recipient (-r or --recipient), it will be expanded to the values  specified.
          Multiple groups with the same name are automatically merged into a single group.

          The  values  are  key  IDs or fingerprints, but any key description is accepted. Note that a value with spaces in it will be treated as two different values. Note also there is
          only one level of expansion --- you cannot make an group that points to another group. When used from the command line, it may be necessary to quote the argument to this option
          to prevent the shell from treating it as multiple arguments.

   --ungroup name
          Remove a given entry from the --group list.

   --no-groups
          Remove all entries from the --group list.

   --local-user name
   -u     Use name as the key to sign with. Note that this option overrides --default-key.

   --sender mbox
          This option has two purposes.  mbox must either be a complete user ID containing a proper mail address or just a plain mail address.  The option can be given multiple times.

          When creating a signature this option tells gpg the signing key's user id used to make the signature and embeds that  user  ID  into  the  created  signature  (using  OpenPGP's
          ``Signer's  User  ID''  subpacket).  If the option is given multiple times a suitable user ID is picked.  However, if the signing key was specified directly by using a mail ad
          dress (i.e. not by using a fingerprint or key ID) this option is used and the mail address is embedded in the created signature.

          When verifying a signature mbox is used to restrict the information printed by the TOFU code to matching user IDs.   If  the  option  is  used  and  the  signature  contains  a
          ``Signer's User ID'' subpacket that information is is also used to restrict the printed information.  Note that GnuPG considers only the mail address part of a User ID.

          If this option or the said subpacket is available the TRUST lines as printed by option status-fd correspond to the corresponding User ID; if no User ID is known the TRUST lines
          are computed directly on the key and do not give any information about the User ID.  In the latter case it his highly recommended to scripts and other frontends to evaluate the
          VALIDSIG line, retrieve the key and print all User IDs along with their validity (trust) information.

   --try-secret-key name
          For hidden recipients GPG needs to know the keys to use for trial decryption.  The key set with --default-key is always tried first, but this is often not sufficient.  This op‐
          tion  allows  setting more keys to be used for trial decryption.  Although any valid user-id specification may be used for name it makes sense to use at least the long keyid to
          avoid ambiguities.  Note that gpg-agent might pop up a pinentry for a lot keys to do the trial decryption.  If you want to stop all further trial decryption you may use  close-
          window button instead of the cancel button.

   --try-all-secrets
          Don't look at the key ID as stored in the message but try all secret keys in turn to find the right decryption key. This option forces the behaviour as used by anonymous recip
          ients (created by using --throw-keyids or --hidden-recipient) and might come handy in case where an encrypted message contains a bogus key ID.

   --skip-hidden-recipients
   --no-skip-hidden-recipients
          During  decryption skip all anonymous recipients.  This option helps in the case that people use the hidden recipients feature to hide their own encrypt-to key from others.  If
          one has many secret keys this may lead to a major annoyance because all keys are tried in turn to decrypt something which was not really intended for it.  The drawback of  this
          option is that it is currently not possible to decrypt a message which includes real anonymous recipients.

Input and Output

   --armor
   -a     Create ASCII armored output.  The default is to create the binary OpenPGP format.

   --no-armor
          Assume the input data is not in ASCII armored format.

   --output file
   -o file
          Write output to file.  To write to stdout use - as the filename.

   --max-output n
          This  option  sets  a  limit on the number of bytes that will be generated when processing a file. Since OpenPGP supports various levels of compression, it is possible that the
          plaintext of a given message may be significantly larger than the original OpenPGP message. While GnuPG works properly with such messages, there is often a desire to set a max
          imum file size that will be generated before processing is forced to stop by the OS limits. Defaults to 0, which means "no limit".

   --chunk-size n
          The AEAD encryption mode encrypts the data in chunks so that a receiving side can check for transmission errors or tampering at the end of each chunk and does not need to delay
          this until all data has been received.  The used chunk size is 2^n byte.  The lowest allowed value for n is 6 (64 byte) and the largest is  the  default  of  22  which  creates
          chunks not larger than 4 MiB.

   --input-size-hint n
          This  option  can  be  used  to tell GPG the size of the input data in bytes.  n must be a positive base-10 number.  This option is only useful if the input is not taken from a
          file.  GPG may use this hint to optimize its buffer allocation strategy.  It is also used by the --status-fd line ``PROGRESS'' to provide a value for ``total'' if that  is  not
          available by other means.

   --key-origin string[,url]
          gpg  can track the origin of a key. Certain origins are implicitly known (e.g. keyserver, web key directory) and set.  For a standard import the origin of the keys imported can
          be set with this option.  To list the possible values use "help" for string.  Some origins can store an optional url argument.  That URL can appended to string after a comma.

   --import-options parameters
          This is a space or comma delimited string that gives options for importing keys. Options can be prepended with a `no-' to give the opposite meaning. The options are:

          import-local-sigs
                 Allow importing key signatures marked as "local". This is not generally useful unless a shared keyring scheme is being used.  Defaults to no.

          keep-ownertrust
                 Normally possible still existing ownertrust values of a key are cleared if a key is imported.  This is in general desirable so that a formerly deleted key does not auto‐
                 matically gain an ownertrust values merely due to import.  On the other hand it is sometimes necessary to re-import a trusted set of keys again but keeping  already  as‐
                 signed ownertrust values.  This can be achieved by using this option.

          repair-pks-subkey-bug
                 During import, attempt to repair the damage caused by the PKS keyserver bug (pre version 0.9.6) that mangles keys with multiple subkeys. Note that this cannot completely
                 repair  the  damaged  key as some crucial data is removed by the keyserver, but it does at least give you back one subkey. Defaults to no for regular --import and to yes
                 for keyserver --receive-keys.

          import-show
          show-only
                 Show a listing of the key as imported right before it is stored.  This can be combined with the option --dry-run to only look at keys; the option show-only is a shortcut
                 for this combination.  The command --show-keys is another shortcut for this.  Note that suffixes like '#' for "sec" and "sbb" lines may or may not be printed.

          import-export
                 Run the entire import code but instead of storing the key to the local keyring write it to the output.  The export option export-dane affect the output.  This option can
                 for example be used to remove all invalid parts from a key without the need to store it.

          merge-only
                 During import, allow key updates to existing keys, but do not allow any new keys to be imported. Defaults to no.

          import-clean
                 After import, compact (remove all signatures except the self-signature) any user IDs from the new key that are not usable.  Then, remove any signatures from the new  key
                 that  are  not  usable.  This includes signatures that were issued by keys that are not present on the keyring. This option is the same as running the --edit-key command
                 "clean" after import. Defaults to no.

          self-sigs-only
                 Accept only self-signatures while importing a key.  All other key signatures are skipped at an early import stage.  This option can be  used  with  keyserver-options  to
                 mitigate  attempts  to flood a key with bogus signatures from a keyserver.  The drawback is that all other valid key signatures, as required by the Web of Trust are also
                 not imported.  Note that when using this option along with import-clean it suppresses the final clean step after merging the imported key into the existing key.

          ignore-attributes
                 Ignore all attribute user IDs (photo IDs) and their signatures while importing a key.

          repair-keys
                 After import, fix various problems with the keys.  For example, this reorders signatures, and strips duplicate signatures.  Defaults to yes.

          bulk-import
                 When used the keyboxd (option use-keyboxd in common.conf) does the import within a single transaction.

          import-minimal
                 Import the smallest key possible. This removes all signatures except the most recent self-signature on each user ID. This option is the same as  running  the  --edit-key
                 command "minimize" after import.  Defaults to no.

          restore
          import-restore
                 Import  in key restore mode.  This imports all data which is usually skipped during import; including all GnuPG specific data.  All other contradicting options are over
                 ridden.

   --import-filter {name=expr}
   --export-filter {name=expr}
          These options define an import/export filter which are applied to the imported/exported keyblock right before it will be stored/written.  name defines the  type  of  filter  to
          use, expr the expression to evaluate.  The option can be used several times which then appends more expression to the same name.

          The available filter types are:

          keep-uid
                 This filter will keep a user id packet and its dependent packets in the keyblock if the expression evaluates to true.

          drop-subkey
                 This filter drops the selected subkeys.  Currently only implemented for --export-filter.

          drop-sig
                 This filter drops the selected key signatures on user ids.  Self-signatures are not considered.  Currently only implemented for --import-filter.

          select This filter is only implemented by --list-filter.  All property names may be used.

   For  the syntax of the expression see the chapter "FILTER EXPRESSIONS".  The property names for the expressions depend on the actual filter type and are indicated in the following ta
   ble.  Note that all property names may also be used by --list-filter.

   Property names may be prefix with a scope delimited by a slash.  Valid scopes are "pub" for public and secret primary keys, "sub" for public and secret subkeys, "uid" for for  user-ID
   packets, and "sig" for signature packets.  Invalid scopes are currently ignored.

   The available properties are:

          uid    A string with the user id.  (keep-uid)

          mbox   The addr-spec part of a user id with mailbox or the empty string.  (keep-uid)

          algostr
                 A string with the key algorithm description.  For example "rsa3072" or "ed25519".

          key_algo
                 A number with the public key algorithm of a key or subkey packet.  (drop-subkey)

          key_size
                 A number with the effective key size of a key or subkey packet.  (drop-subkey)

          key_created
          key_created_d
                 The first is the timestamp a public key or subkey packet was created.  The second is the same but given as an ISO string, e.g. "2016-08-17". (drop-subkey)

          key_expires
          key_expires_d
                 The expiration time of a public key or subkey or 0 if it does not expire.  The second is the same but given as an ISO date string or an empty string e.g. "2038-01-19".

          fpr    The hexified fingerprint of the current subkey or primary key.  (drop-subkey)

          primary
                 Boolean indicating whether the user id is the primary one.  (keep-uid)

          expired
                 Boolean indicating whether a user id (keep-uid), a key (drop-subkey), or a signature (drop-sig) expired.

          revoked
                 Boolean indicating whether a user id (keep-uid) or a key (drop-subkey) has been revoked.

          disabled
                 Boolean indicating whether a primary key is disabled.

          secret Boolean indicating whether a key or subkey is a secret one.  (drop-subkey)

          usage  A  string  indicating  the  usage  flags for the subkey, from the sequence ``ecsa?''.  For example, a subkey capable of just signing and authentication would be an exact
                 match for ``sa''. (drop-subkey)

          sig_created
          sig_created_d
                 The first is the timestamp a signature packet was created.  The second is the same but given as an ISO date string, e.g. "2016-08-17". (drop-sig)

          sig_expires
          sig_expires_d
                 The expiration time of a signature packet or 0 if it does not expire.  The second is the same but given as an ISO date string or an empty string e.g. "2038-01-19".

          sig_algo
                 A number with the public key algorithm of a signature packet. (drop-sig)

          sig_digest_algo
                 A number with the digest algorithm of a signature packet. (drop-sig)

          origin A string with the key origin or a question mark.  For example the string ``wkd'' is used if a key originated from a Web Key Directory lookup.

          lastupd
                 The timestamp the key was last updated from a keyserver or the Web Key Directory.

          url    A string with the the URL associated wit the last key lookup.

   --export-options parameters
          This is a space or comma delimited string that gives options for exporting keys.  Options can be prepended with a `no-' to give the opposite meaning.  The options are:

          export-local-sigs
                 Allow exporting key signatures marked as "local". This is not generally useful unless a shared keyring scheme is being used.  Defaults to no.

          export-attributes
                 Include attribute user IDs (photo IDs) while exporting. Not including attribute user IDs is useful to export keys that are going to be used by an  OpenPGP  program  that
                 does not accept attribute user IDs.  Defaults to yes.

          export-sensitive-revkeys
                 Include designated revoker information that was marked as "sensitive". Defaults to no.

          backup
          export-backup
                 Export for use as a backup.  The exported data includes all data which is needed to restore the key or keys later with GnuPG.  The format is basically the OpenPGP format
                 but enhanced with GnuPG specific data.  All other contradicting options are overridden.

          export-clean
                 Compact  (remove all signatures from) user IDs on the key being exported if the user IDs are not usable. Also, do not export any signatures that are not usable. This in
                 cludes signatures that were issued by keys that are not present on the keyring. This option is the same as running the --edit-key command "clean"  before  export  except
                 that the local copy of the key is not modified. Defaults to no.

          export-minimal
                 Export  the  smallest  key possible. This removes all signatures except the most recent self-signature on each user ID. This option is the same as running the --edit-key
                 command "minimize" before export except that the local copy of the key is not modified. Defaults to no.

          export-revocs
                 Export only standalone revocation certificates of the key.  This option does not export revocations of 3rd party certificate revocations.

          export-dane
                 Instead of outputting the key material output OpenPGP DANE records suitable to put into DNS zone files.  An ORIGIN line is printed before each record to allow  diverting
                 the records to the corresponding zone file.

          mode1003
                 Enable the use of a new secret key export format.  This format avoids the re-encryption as required with the current OpenPGP format and also improves the security of the
                 secret  key if it has been protected with a passphrase.  Note that an unprotected key is exported as-is and thus not secure; the general rule to convey secret keys in an
                 OpenPGP encrypted file still applies with this mode.  Versions of GnuPG before 2.4.0 are not able to import such a secret file.

   --with-colons
          Print key listings delimited by colons. Note that the output will be encoded in UTF-8 regardless of any --display-charset setting. This format is useful when  GnuPG  is  called
          from  scripts and other programs as it is easily machine parsed. The details of this format are documented in the file doc/DETAILS, which is included in the GnuPG source dis
          tribution.

   --fixed-list-mode
          Do not merge primary user ID and primary key in --with-colon listing mode and print all timestamps as seconds since 1970-01-01.  Since GnuPG 2.0.10, this mode  is  always  used
          and thus this option is obsolete; it does not harm to use it though.

   --legacy-list-mode
          Revert  to  the pre-2.1 public key list mode.  This only affects the human readable output and not the machine interface (i.e. --with-colons).  Note that the legacy format does
          not convey suitable information for elliptic curves.

   --with-fingerprint
          Same as the command --fingerprint but changes only the format of the output and may be used together with another command.

   --with-subkey-fingerprint
          If a fingerprint is printed for the primary key, this option forces printing of the fingerprint for all subkeys.  This could also be achieved by  using  the  --with-fingerprint
          twice but by using this option along with keyid-format "none" a compact fingerprint is printed.

   --with-v5-fingerprint
          In a colon mode listing emit "fp2" lines for version 4 OpenPGP keys having a v5 style fingerprint of the key.

   --with-icao-spelling
          Print the ICAO spelling of the fingerprint in addition to the hex digits.

   --with-keygrip
          Include the keygrip in the key listings.  In --with-colons mode this is implicitly enable for secret keys.

   --with-key-origin
          Include  the locally held information on the origin and last update of a key in a key listing.  In --with-colons mode this is always printed.  This data is currently experimen
          tal and shall not be considered part of the stable API.

   --with-wkd-hash
          Print a Web Key Directory identifier along with each user ID in key listings.  This is an experimental feature and semantics may change.

   --with-secret
          Include info about the presence of a secret key in public key listings done with --with-colons.

OpenPGP protocol specific options

   --force-ocb
   --force-aead
          Force the use of AEAD encryption over MDC encryption.  AEAD is a modern and faster way to do authenticated encryption than the old MDC method.  --force-aead  is  an  alias  and
          deprecated.  See also option --chunk-size.

   --force-mdc
   --disable-mdc
          These options are obsolete and have no effect since GnuPG 2.2.8.  The MDC is always used unless the keys indicate that an AEAD algorithm can be used in which case AEAD is used.
          But note: If the creation of a legacy non-MDC message is exceptionally required, the option --rfc2440 allows for this.

   --disable-signer-uid
          By default the user ID of the signing key is embedded in the data signature.  As of now this is only done if the signing key has been specified with local-user using a mail ad
          dress, or with sender.  This information can be helpful for verifier to locate the key; see option --auto-key-retrieve.

   --include-key-block
   --no-include-key-block
          This  option  is used to embed the actual signing key into a data signature.  The embedded key is stripped down to a single user id and includes only the signing subkey used to
          create the signature as well as as valid encryption subkeys.  All other info is removed from the key to keep it and thus the signature small.  This option is the OpenPGP  coun
          terpart  to  the  gpgsm  option --include-certs and allows the recipient of a signed message to reply encrypted to the sender without using any online directories to lookup the
          key.  The default is --no-include-key-block.  See also the option --auto-key-import.

   --personal-cipher-preferences string
          Set the list of personal cipher preferences to string.  Use gpg --version to get a list of available algorithms, and use none to set no preference at all.  This allows the user
          to safely override the algorithm chosen by the recipient key preferences, as GPG will only select an algorithm that is usable by all recipients.  The most highly ranked  cipher
          in this list is also used for the --symmetric encryption command.

   --personal-digest-preferences string
          Set the list of personal digest preferences to string.  Use gpg --version to get a list of available algorithms, and use none to set no preference at all.  This allows the user
          to  safely override the algorithm chosen by the recipient key preferences, as GPG will only select an algorithm that is usable by all recipients.  The most highly ranked digest
          algorithm in this list is also used when signing without encryption (e.g. --clear-sign or --sign).

   --personal-compress-preferences string
          Set the list of personal compression preferences to string.  Use gpg --version to get a list of available algorithms, and use none to set no preference at all.  This allows the
          user to safely override the algorithm chosen by the recipient key preferences, as GPG will only select an algorithm that is usable by all recipients.  The  most  highly  ranked
          compression algorithm in this list is also used when there are no recipient keys to consider (e.g. --symmetric).

   --s2k-cipher-algo name
          Use name as the cipher algorithm for symmetric encryption with a passphrase if --personal-cipher-preferences and --cipher-algo are not given.  The default is AES-128.

   --s2k-digest-algo name
          Use name as the digest algorithm used to mangle the passphrases for symmetric encryption.  The default is SHA-1.

   --s2k-mode n
          Selects how passphrases for symmetric encryption are mangled. If n is 0 a plain passphrase (which is in general not recommended) will be used, a 1 adds a salt (which should not
          be used) to the passphrase and a 3 (the default) iterates the whole process a number of times (see --s2k-count).

   --s2k-count n
          Specify  how  many times the passphrases mangling for symmetric encryption is repeated.  This value may range between 1024 and 65011712 inclusive.  The default is inquired from
          gpg-agent.  Note that not all values in the 1024-65011712 range are legal and if an illegal value is selected, GnuPG will round up to the nearest legal value.  This  option  is
          only meaningful if --s2k-mode is set to the default of 3.

Compliance options

   These  options  control what GnuPG is compliant to. Only one of these options may be active at a time. If multiple options are given, the last one supersedes all the others. Note that
   the default setting of this is nearly always the correct one. See the INTEROPERABILITY WITH OTHER OPENPGP PROGRAMS section below before using one of these options.

   --gnupg
          Use standard GnuPG behavior. This is now LibrePGP behavior, which is a different draft protocol that overlaps in some cases with OpenPGP.

   --openpgp
          Set all packet, cipher and digest options to OpenPGP compatible (RFC-9580) behavior.  Note that not all of RFC-9580 is implemented by GnuPG. This is the default option,  so  it
          is not generally needed, but it may be useful to override a different compliance option in the gpg.conf file.

   --rfc4880
          Set all packet, cipher and digest options to strict RFC-4880 behavior.  RFC-4880 is the legacy version of the OpenPGP standard.  This option implies --allow-old-cipher-algos.

   --rfc4880bis
          This option is obsolete; it is handled as an alias for --gnupg.

   --rfc2440
          Set  all  packet, cipher and digest options to strict RFC-2440 behavior.  RFC-2440 is a very old version of OpenPGP.  Note that by using this option encryption packets are cre
          ated in a legacy mode without MDC protection.  This is dangerous and should thus only be used for experiments.  This option implies --allow-old-cipher-algos.  See  also  option
          --ignore-mdc-error.

   --pgp6 This option is obsolete; it is handled as an alias for --pgp7.

   --pgp7 Set  up  all  options to be as PGP 7 compliant as possible. This allowed the ciphers IDEA, 3DES, CAST5,AES128, AES192, AES256, and TWOFISH., the hashes MD5, SHA1 and RIPEMD160,
          and the compression algorithms none and ZIP.  This option implies --escape-from-lines and disables --throw-keyids,

   --pgp8 Set up all options to be as PGP 8 compliant as possible. PGP 8 is a lot closer to the OpenPGP standard than previous versions of PGP, so all this does is disable --throw-keyids
          and set --escape-from-lines.  All algorithms are allowed except for the SHA224, SHA384, and SHA512 digests.

   --compliance string
          This option can be used instead of one of the options above.  Valid values for string are the above option names (without the double dash) and possibly others as shown when us
          ing "help" for string.

   --min-rsa-length n
          This option adjusts the compliance mode "de-vs" for stricter key size requirements.  For example, a value of 3000 turns rsa2048 and dsa2048 keys into non-VS-NfD compliant keys.

   --require-compliance
          To check that data has been encrypted according to the rules of the current compliance mode, a gpg user needs to evaluate the status lines.  This is allows frontends to  handle
          compliance  check  in  a more flexible way.  However, for scripted use the required evaluation of the status-line requires quite some effort; this option can be used instead to
          make sure that the gpg process exits with a failure if the compliance rules are not fulfilled.  Note that this option has currently an effect only in "de-vs" mode.

Doing things one usually doesn't want to do

   -n
   --dry-run
          Don't make any changes (this is not completely implemented).

   --list-only
          Changes the behaviour of some commands. This is like --dry-run but different in some cases. The semantic of this option may be extended in the future. Currently it  only  skips
          the actual decryption pass and therefore enables a fast listing of the encryption keys.

   -i
   --interactive
          Prompt before overwriting any files.

   --compatibility-flags flags
          Set  compatibility  flags  to  work around problems due to non-compliant keys or data.  The flags are given as a comma separated list of flag names and are OR-ed together.  The
          special flag "none" clears the list and allows one to start over with an empty list.  To get a list of available flags the sole word "help" can be used.

   --debug-level level
          Select the debug level for investigating problems. level may be a numeric value or by a keyword:

          none   No debugging at all.  A value of less than 1 may be used instead of the keyword.

          basic  Some basic debug messages.  A value between 1 and 2 may be used instead of the keyword.

          advanced
                 More verbose debug messages.  A value between 3 and 5 may be used instead of the keyword.

          expert Even more detailed messages.  A value between 6 and 8 may be used instead of the keyword.

          guru   All of the debug messages you can get. A value greater than 8 may be used instead of the keyword.  The creation of hash tracing files is only enabled if the  keyword  is
                 used.

   How these messages are mapped to the actual debugging flags is not specified and may change with newer releases of this program. They are however carefully selected to best aid in de‐
   bugging.

   --debug flags
          Set  debug  flags.   All  flags are or-ed and flags may be given in C syntax (e.g. 0x0042) or as a comma separated list of flag names.  To get a list of all supported flags the
          single word "help" can be used. This option is only useful for debugging and the behavior may change at any time without notice.

   --debug-all
          Set all useful debugging flags.

   --debug-iolbf
          Set stdout into line buffered mode.  This option is only honored when given on the command line.

   --debug-set-iobuf-size n
          Change the buffer size of the IOBUFs to n kilobyte.  Using 0 prints the current size.  Note well: This is a maintainer only option and may thus be changed  or  removed  at  any
          time without notice.

   --debug-allow-large-chunks
          To facilitate software tests and experiments this option allows one to specify a limit of up to 4 EiB (--chunk-size 62).

   --debug-ignore-expiration
          This option tries to override certain key expiration dates.  It is only useful for certain regression tests.

   --faked-system-time epoch
          This  option  is only useful for testing; it sets the system time back or forth to epoch which is the number of seconds elapsed since the year 1970.  Alternatively epoch may be
          given as a full ISO time string (e.g. "20070924T154812").

          If you suffix epoch with an exclamation mark (!), the system time will appear to be frozen at the specified time.

   --full-timestrings
          Change the format of printed creation and expiration times from just the date to the date and time.  This is in general not useful and the same information is anyway  available
          in --with-colons mode.  These longer strings are also not well aligned with other printed data.

   --enable-progress-filter
          Enable  certain PROGRESS status outputs. This option allows frontends to display a progress indicator while gpg is processing larger files.  There is a slight performance over‐
          head using it.

   --status-fd n
          Write special status strings to the file descriptor n.  See the file DETAILS in the documentation for a listing of them.

   --status-file file
          Same as --status-fd, except the status data is written to file file.

   --logger-fd n
          Write log output to file descriptor n and not to STDERR.

   --log-file file
   --logger-file file
          Same as --logger-fd, except the logger data is written to file file.  Use ‘socket://’ to log to s socket.

   --log-time
          Prefix all log output with a timestamp even if no log file is used.

   --attribute-fd n
          Write attribute subpackets to the file descriptor n. This is most useful for use with --status-fd, since the status messages are needed to separate out the  various  subpackets
          from the stream delivered to the file descriptor.

   --attribute-file file
          Same as --attribute-fd, except the attribute data is written to file file.

   --comment string
   --no-comments
          Use  string  as a comment string in cleartext signatures and ASCII armored messages or keys (see --armor). The default behavior is not to use a comment string. --comment may be
          repeated multiple times to get multiple comment strings. --no-comments removes all comments.  It is a good idea to keep the length of a single comment below  60  characters  to
          avoid problems with mail programs wrapping such lines.  Note that comment lines, like all other header lines, are not protected by the signature.

   --emit-version
   --no-emit-version
          Force  inclusion of the version string in ASCII armored output.  If given once only the name of the program and the major number is emitted, given twice the minor is also emit‐
          ted, given thrice the micro is added, and given four times an operating system identification is also emitted.  --no-emit-version (default) disables the version line.

   --sig-notation {name=value}
   --cert-notation {name=value}
   -N, --set-notation {name=value}
          Put the name value pair into the signature as notation data.  name must consist only of printable characters or spaces, and must contain a '@' character in the form keyname@do‐
          main.example.com (substituting the appropriate keyname and domain name, of course).  This is to help prevent pollution of the IETF reserved  notation  namespace.  The  --expert
          flag  overrides  the  '@' check. value may be any printable string; it will be encoded in UTF-8, so you should check that your --display-charset is set correctly. If you prefix
          name with an exclamation mark (!), the notation data will be flagged as critical (rfc4880:5.2.3.16). --sig-notation sets a notation for data signatures. --cert-notation sets  a
          notation for key signatures (certifications). --set-notation sets both.

          There  are  special  codes that may be used in notation names. "%k" will be expanded into the key ID of the key being signed, "%K" into the long key ID of the key being signed,
          "%f" into the fingerprint of the key being signed, "%s" into the key ID of the key making the signature, "%S" into the long key ID of the key making the  signature,  "%g"  into
          the fingerprint of the key making the signature (which might be a subkey), "%p" into the fingerprint of the primary key of the key making the signature, "%c" into the signature
          count  from  the  OpenPGP smartcard, and "%%" results in a single "%". %k, %K, and %f are only meaningful when making a key signature (certification), and %c is only meaningful
          when using the OpenPGP smartcard.

   --known-notation name
          Adds name to a list of known critical signature notations.  The effect of this is that gpg will not mark a signature with a critical signature notation of  that  name  as  bad.
          Note that gpg already knows by default about a few critical signatures notation names.

   --sig-policy-url string
   --cert-policy-url string
   --set-policy-url string
          Use  string  as  a  Policy  URL for signatures (rfc4880:5.2.3.20).  If you prefix it with an exclamation mark (!), the policy URL packet will be flagged as critical. --sig-pol‐
          icy-url sets a policy url for data signatures. --cert-policy-url sets a policy url for key signatures (certifications). --set-policy-url sets both.

          The same %-expandos used for notation data are available here as well.

   --sig-keyserver-url string
          Use string as a preferred keyserver URL for data signatures. If you prefix it with an exclamation mark (!), the keyserver URL packet will be flagged as critical.

          The same %-expandos used for notation data are available here as well.

   --set-filename string
          Use string as the filename which is stored inside messages.  This overrides the default, which is to use the actual filename of the  file  being  encrypted.   Using  the  empty
          string for string effectively removes the filename from the output.

   --for-your-eyes-only
   --no-for-your-eyes-only
          Set  the  `for  your  eyes  only' flag in the message. This causes GnuPG to refuse to save the file unless the --output option is given, and PGP to use a "secure viewer" with a
          claimed Tempest-resistant font to display the message. This option overrides --set-filename.  --no-for-your-eyes-only disables this option.

   --use-embedded-filename
   --no-use-embedded-filename
          Try to create a file with a name as embedded in the data. This can be a dangerous option as it enables overwriting files by giving the sender control on  how  to  store  files.
          Defaults to no.  Note that the option --output overrides this option.

          A  better approach than using this option is to decrypt to a temporary filename and then rename that file to the embedded file name after checking that the embedded filename is
          harmless.  When using the --status-fd option gpg tells the filename as part of the PLAINTEXT status message.  If the filename is important, the use of gpgtar is another  option
          because gpgtar will never overwrite a file but decrypt the files to a new directory.

          Note also that unless a modern version 5 signature is used the embedded filename is not part of the signed data.

   --cipher-algo name
          Use  name  as  cipher algorithm. Running the program with the command --version yields a list of supported algorithms. If this is not used the cipher algorithm is selected from
          the preferences stored with the key. In general, you do not want to use this option as it allows you to violate the OpenPGP standard.  The option  --personal-cipher-preferences
          is the safe way to accomplish the same thing.

   --digest-algo name
          Use  name  as the message digest algorithm. Running the program with the command --version yields a list of supported algorithms. In general, you do not want to use this option
          as it allows you to violate the OpenPGP standard.  The option --personal-digest-preferences is the safe way to accomplish the same thing.

   --compress-algo name
          Use compression algorithm name. "zlib" is RFC-1950 ZLIB compression. "zip" is RFC-1951 ZIP compression which is used by PGP.  "bzip2" is a more modern compression  scheme  that
          can  compress  some  things better than zip or zlib, but at the cost of more memory used during compression and decompression. "uncompressed" or "none" disables compression. If
          this option is not used, the default behavior is to examine the recipient key preferences to see which algorithms the recipient supports. If all else fails,  ZIP  is  used  for
          maximum compatibility.

          ZLIB may give better compression results than ZIP, as the compression window size is not limited to 8k. BZIP2 may give even better compression results than that, but will use a
          significantly  larger  amount  of memory while compressing and decompressing. This may be significant in low memory situations. Note, however, that PGP (all versions) only sup
          ports ZIP compression. Using any algorithm other than ZIP or "none" will make the message unreadable with PGP. In general, you do not want to use this option as it  allows  you
          to violate the OpenPGP standard.  The option --personal-compress-preferences is the safe way to accomplish the same thing.

   --cert-digest-algo name
          Use  name  as  the message digest algorithm used when signing a key. Running the program with the command --version yields a list of supported algorithms.  Be aware that if you
          choose an algorithm that GnuPG supports but other OpenPGP implementations do not, then some users will not be able to use the key signatures you make, or  quite  possibly  your
          entire key.  Note also that a public key algorithm must be compatible with the specified digest algorithm; thus selecting an arbitrary digest algorithm may result in error mes
          sages from lower crypto layers or lead to security flaws.

   --disable-cipher-algo name
          Never allow the use of name as cipher algorithm.  The given name will not be checked so that a later loaded algorithm will still get disabled.

   --disable-pubkey-algo name
          Never allow the use of name as public key algorithm.  The given name will not be checked so that a later loaded algorithm will still get disabled.

   --throw-keyids
   --no-throw-keyids
          Do  not  put  the recipient key IDs into encrypted messages. This helps to hide the receivers of the message and is a limited countermeasure against traffic analysis. ([Using a
          little social engineering anyone who is able to decrypt the message can check whether one of the other recipients is the one he suspects.])  On the receiving side, it may  slow
          down  the decryption process because all available secret keys must be tried.  --no-throw-keyids disables this option. This option is essentially the same as using --hidden-re
          cipient for all recipients.

   --not-dash-escaped
          This option changes the behavior of cleartext signatures so that they can be used for patch files. You should not send such an armored file via email  because  all  spaces  and
          line  endings are hashed too. You can not use this option for data which has 5 dashes at the beginning of a line, patch files don't have this. A special armor header line tells
          GnuPG about this cleartext signature option.

   --escape-from-lines
   --no-escape-from-lines
          Because some mailers change lines starting with "From " to ">From " it is good to handle such lines in a special way when creating cleartext signatures to prevent the mail sys‐
          tem from breaking the signature. Note that all other PGP versions do it this way too.  Enabled by default. --no-escape-from-lines disables this option.

   --passphrase-repeat n
          Specify how many times gpg will request a new passphrase be repeated.  This is useful for helping memorize a passphrase.  Defaults to 1 repetition; can be set to 0  to  disable
          any passphrase repetition.  Note that a n greater than 1 will pop up the pinentry window n+1 times even if a modern pinentry with two entry fields is used.

   --passphrase-fd n
          Read  the  passphrase from file descriptor n. Only the first line will be read from file descriptor n. If you use 0 for n, the passphrase will be read from STDIN. This can only
          be used if only one passphrase is supplied.

          Note that since Version 2.0 this passphrase is only used if the option --batch has also been given. Since Version 2.1 the --pinentry-mode also needs to be set to loopback.

   --passphrase-file file
          Read the passphrase from file file. Only the first line will be read from file file. This can only be used if only one passphrase is supplied. Obviously, a passphrase stored in
          a file is of questionable security if other users can read this file. Don't use this option if you can avoid it.

          Note that since Version 2.0 this passphrase is only used if the option --batch has also been given. Since Version 2.1 the --pinentry-mode also needs to be set to loopback.

   --passphrase string
          Use string as the passphrase. This can only be used if only one passphrase is supplied. Obviously, this is of very questionable security on a multi-user system. Don't use  this
          option if you can avoid it.

          Note that since Version 2.0 this passphrase is only used if the option --batch has also been given. Since Version 2.1 the --pinentry-mode also needs to be set to loopback.

   --pinentry-mode mode
          Set the pinentry mode to mode.  Allowed values for mode are:

          default
                 Use the default of the agent, which is ask.

          ask    Force the use of the Pinentry.

          cancel Emulate use of Pinentry's cancel button.

          error  Return a Pinentry error (``No Pinentry'').

          loopback
                 Redirect Pinentry queries to the caller.  Note that in contrast to Pinentry the user is not prompted again if he enters a bad password.

   --no-symkey-cache
          Disable the passphrase cache used for symmetrical en- and decryption.  This cache is based on the message specific salt value (cf. --s2k-mode).

   --request-origin origin
          Tell  gpg  to assume that the operation ultimately originated at origin.  Depending on the origin certain restrictions are applied and the Pinentry may include an extra note on
          the origin.  Supported values for origin are: local which is the default, remote to indicate a remote origin or browser for an operation requested by a web browser.

   --command-fd n
          This is a replacement for the deprecated shared-memory IPC mode.  If this option is enabled, user input on questions is not expected from the TTY but from the  given  file  de
          scriptor. It should be used together with --status-fd. See the file doc/DETAILS in the source distribution for details on how to use it.

   --command-file file
          Same as --command-fd, except the commands are read out of file file

   --allow-non-selfsigned-uid
   --no-allow-non-selfsigned-uid
          Allow  the  import  and  use  of  keys  with user IDs which are not self-signed. This is not recommended, as a non self-signed user ID is trivial to forge. --no-allow-non-self
          signed-uid disables.

   --allow-freeform-uid
          Disable all checks on the form of the user ID while generating a new one. This option should only be used in very special environments as it does not ensure the de-facto  stan
          dard format of user IDs.

   --ignore-time-conflict
          GnuPG  normally checks that the timestamps associated with keys and signatures have plausible values. However, sometimes a signature seems to be older than the key due to clock
          problems. This option makes these checks just a warning. See also --ignore-valid-from for timestamp issues on subkeys.

   --ignore-valid-from
          GnuPG normally does not select and use subkeys created in the future.  This option allows the use of such keys and thus exhibits the pre-1.0.7 behaviour.  You  should  not  use
          this option unless there is some clock problem. See also --ignore-time-conflict for timestamp issues with signatures.

   --ignore-crc-error
          The  ASCII armor used by OpenPGP is protected by a CRC checksum against transmission errors. Occasionally the CRC gets mangled somewhere on the transmission channel but the ac
          tual content (which is protected by the OpenPGP protocol anyway) is still okay. This option allows GnuPG to ignore CRC errors.

   --ignore-mdc-error
          This option changes a MDC integrity protection failure into a warning.  It is required to decrypt old messages which did not use an MDC.  It may also be useful if a message  is
          partially  garbled,  but  it is necessary to get as much data as possible out of that garbled message.  Be aware that a missing or failed MDC can be an indication of an attack.
          Use with great caution; see also option --rfc2440.

   --allow-old-cipher-algos
          Old cipher algorithms like 3DES, IDEA, or CAST5 encrypt data using blocks of 64 bits; modern algorithms use blocks of 128 bit instead.  To avoid certain attack on these old al
          gorithms it is suggested not to encrypt more than 150 MiByte using the same key.  For this reason gpg does not allow the use of 64 bit block size algorithms for encryption  un
          less this option is specified.  Some compliance modes already set or clear this flag and thus this flag should be used after a compliance mode setting.

   --allow-weak-digest-algos
          Signatures  made  with  known-weak digest algorithms are normally rejected with an ``invalid digest algorithm'' message.  This option allows the verification of signatures made
          with such weak algorithms.  MD5 is the only digest algorithm considered weak by default.  See also --weak-digest to reject other digest algorithms.

   --weak-digest name
          Treat the specified digest algorithm as weak.  Signatures made over weak digests algorithms are normally rejected. This option can be supplied multiple times if multiple  algo
          rithms  should  be considered weak.  See also --allow-weak-digest-algos to disable rejection of weak digests.  MD5 is always considered weak, and does not need to be listed ex
          plicitly.

   --allow-weak-key-signatures
          To avoid a minor risk of collision attacks on third-party key signatures made using SHA-1, those key signatures are considered invalid.  This options  allows  one  to  override
          this restriction.

   --override-compliance-check
          This was a temporary introduced option and has no more effect.

   --no-default-keyring
          Do  not  add  the  default  keyring to the list of keyrings. Note that GnuPG needs for almost all operations a keyring. Thus if you use this option and do not provide alternate
          keyrings via --keyring, then GnuPG will still use the default keyring.

          Note that if the option use-keyboxd is enabled in common.conf, no keyrings are used at all and keys are all maintained by the keyboxd process in its own database.

   --no-keyring
          Do not use any keyring at all.  This overrides the default and all options which specify keyrings.

   --skip-verify
          Skip the signature verification step. This may be used to make the decryption faster if the signature verification is not needed.

   --with-key-data
          Print key listings delimited by colons (like --with-colons) and print the public key data.

   --list-signatures
   --list-sigs
          Same as --list-keys, but the signatures are listed too.  This command has the same effect as using --list-keys with --with-sig-list.  Note that in  contrast  to  --check-signa
          tures the key signatures are not verified.  This command can be used to create a list of signing keys missing in the local keyring; for example:

           gpg --list-sigs --with-colons USERID | \
             awk -F: '$1=="sig" && $2=="?" {if($13){print $13}else{print $5}}'

   --fast-list-mode
          Changes  the  output of the list commands to work faster; this is achieved by leaving some parts empty. Some applications don't need the user ID and the trust information given
          in the listings. By using this options they can get a faster listing. The exact behaviour of this option may change in future versions.  If you are  missing  some  information,
          don't use this option.

   --no-literal
          This is not for normal use. Use the source to see for what it might be useful.

   --set-filesize
          This is not for normal use. Use the source to see for what it might be useful.

   --show-session-key
          Display the session key used for one message. See --override-session-key for the counterpart of this option.

          We  think  that  Key  Escrow is a Bad Thing; however the user should have the freedom to decide whether to go to prison or to reveal the content of one specific message without
          compromising all messages ever encrypted for one secret key.

          You can also use this option if you receive an encrypted message which is abusive or offensive, to prove to the administrators of  the  messaging  system  that  the  ciphertext
          transmitted corresponds to an inappropriate plaintext so they can take action against the offending user.

   --override-session-key string
   --override-session-key-fd fd
          Don't use the public key but the session key string respective the session key taken from the first line read from file descriptor fd.  The format of this string is the same as
          the one printed by --show-session-key. This option is normally not used but comes handy in case someone forces you to reveal the content of an encrypted message; using this op‐
          tion  you  can  do  this without handing out the secret key.  Note that using --override-session-key may reveal the session key to all local users via the global process table.
          Often it is useful to combine this option with --no-keyring.

   --ask-sig-expire
   --no-ask-sig-expire
          When making a data signature, prompt for an expiration time. If this option is not specified, the expiration time set via --default-sig-expire is used. --no-ask-sig-expire dis‐
          ables this option.

   --default-sig-expire
          The default expiration time to use for signature expiration. Valid values are "0" for no expiration, a number followed by the letter  d  (for  days),  w  (for  weeks),  m  (for
          months), or y (for years) (for example "2m" for two months, or "5y" for five years), or an absolute date in the form YYYY-MM-DD. Defaults to "0".

   --ask-cert-expire
   --no-ask-cert-expire
          When  making  a  key  signature, prompt for an expiration time. If this option is not specified, the expiration time set via --default-cert-expire is used. --no-ask-cert-expire
          disables this option.

   --default-cert-expire
          The default expiration time to use for key signature expiration.  Valid values are "0" for no expiration, a number followed by the letter d (for days), w (for  weeks),  m  (for
          months), or y (for years) (for example "2m" for two months, or "5y" for five years), or an absolute date in the form YYYY-MM-DD. Defaults to "0".

   --default-new-key-algo string
          This  option  can be used to change the default algorithms for key generation. The string is similar to the arguments required for the command --quick-add-key but slightly dif‐
          ferent.  You need to consult the source code to learn the details.  Note that the advanced key generation commands can always be used to specify a key algorithm directly.  Set‐
          ting a compliance mode will set or clear this flag, so it should only be used after a compliance mode setting.

   --no-auto-trust-new-key
          When creating a new key the ownertrust of the new key is set to ultimate.  This option disables this and the user needs to manually assign an ownertrust value.

   --force-sign-key
          This option modifies the behaviour of the commands --quick-sign-key, --quick-lsign-key, and the "sign" sub-commands of --edit-key by forcing the creation of  a  key  signature,
          even if one already exists.

   --forbid-gen-key
          This option is intended for use in the global config file to disallow the use of generate key commands.  Those commands will then fail with the error code for Not Enabled.

   --allow-secret-key-import
          This is an obsolete option and is not used anywhere.

   --allow-multiple-messages

   --no-allow-multiple-messages
          These are obsolete options; they have no more effect since GnuPG 2.2.8.

   --enable-special-filenames
          This option enables a mode in which filenames of the form ‘-&n’, where n is a non-negative decimal number, refer to the file descriptor n and not to a file with that name.

   --no-expensive-trust-checks
          Experimental use only.

   --preserve-permissions
          Don't change the permissions of a secret keyring back to user read/write only. Use this option only if you really know what you are doing.

   --default-preference-list string
          Set the list of default preferences to string. This preference list is used for new keys and becomes the default for "setpref" in the --edit-key menu.

   --default-keyserver-url name
          Set  the  default keyserver URL to name. This keyserver will be used as the keyserver URL when writing a new self-signature on a key, which includes key generation and changing
          preferences.

   --list-config
          Display various internal configuration parameters of GnuPG. This option is intended for external programs that call GnuPG to perform tasks, and is thus  not  generally  useful.
          See the file doc/DETAILS in the source distribution for the details of which configuration items may be listed. --list-config is only usable with --with-colons set.

   --list-gcrypt-config
          Display various internal configuration parameters of Libgcrypt.

   --gpgconf-list
          This command is similar to --list-config but in general only internally used by the gpgconf tool.

   --gpgconf-test
          This  is more or less dummy action.  However it parses the configuration file and returns with failure if the configuration file would prevent gpg from startup.  Thus it may be
          used to run a syntax check on the configuration file.

   --chuid uid
          Change the current user to uid which may either be a number or a name.  This can be used from the root account to run gpg for another user.  If uid is not  the  current  UID  a
          standard PATH is set and the envvar GNUPGHOME is unset.  To override the latter the option --homedir can be used.  This option has only an effect when used on the command line.
          This option has currently no effect at all on Windows.

Deprecated options

   -t, --textmode
   --no-textmode
          Treat  input  files as text and store them in the OpenPGP canonical text form with standard "CRLF" line endings. This also sets the necessary flags to inform the recipient that
          the encrypted or signed data is text and may need its line endings converted back to whatever the local system uses. This option was useful when communicating between two plat
          forms with different line ending conventions (UNIX-like to Mac, Mac to Windows, etc). --no-textmode disables this option, and is the default.  Note that this is a legacy option
          which should not anymore be used by any modern software.

   --force-v3-sigs
   --no-force-v3-sigs

   --force-v4-certs
   --no-force-v4-certs
          These options are obsolete and have no effect since GnuPG 2.1.

   --show-photos
   --no-show-photos
          Causes --list-keys, --list-signatures, --list-public-keys, --list-secret-keys, and verifying a signature to also display the photo ID attached to the  key,  if  any.  See  also
          --photo-viewer. These options are deprecated. Use --list-options [no-]show-photos and/or --verify-options [no-]show-photos instead.

   --show-keyring
          Display the keyring name at the head of key listings to show which keyring a given key resides on. This option is deprecated: use --list-options [no-]show-keyring instead.

   --show-notation
   --no-show-notation
          Show  signature notations in the --list-signatures or --check-signatures listings as well as when verifying a signature with a notation in it. These options are deprecated. Use
          --list-options [no-]show-notation and/or --verify-options [no-]show-notation instead.

   --show-policy-url
   --no-show-policy-url
          Show policy URLs in the --list-signatures or --check-signatures listings as well as when verifying a signature with a policy URL  in  it.  These  options  are  deprecated.  Use
          --list-options [no-]show-policy-url and/or --verify-options [no-]show-policy-url instead.

   --personal-aead-preferences string
          This option is deprecated and has no more effect since version 2.3.9.

   --aead-algo name
          This option is deprecated and has no more effect since version 2.3.9.

EXAMPLES

   gpg -se -r Bob file
          sign and encrypt for user Bob

   gpg --clear-sign file
          make a cleartext signature

   gpg -sb file
          make a detached signature

   gpg -u 0x12345678 -sb file
          make a detached signature with the key 0x12345678

   gpg --list-keys user_ID
          show keys

   gpg --fingerprint user_ID
          show fingerprint

   gpg --verify pgpfile
   gpg --verify sigfile [datafile]
          Verify  the signature of the file but do not output the data unless requested.  The second form is used for detached signatures, where sigfile is the detached signature (either
          ASCII armored or binary) and datafile are the signed data; if this is not given, the name of the file holding the signed data  is  constructed  by  cutting  off  the  extension
          (".asc"  or ".sig") of sigfile or by asking the user for the filename.  If the option --output is also used the signed data is written to the file specified by that option; use
          - to write the signed data to stdout.

HOW TO SPECIFY A USER ID

   There are different ways to specify a user ID to GnuPG.  Some of them are only valid for gpg others are only good for gpgsm.  Here is the entire list of ways to specify a key:

   By key Id.
          This format is deduced from the length of the string and its content or 0x prefix. The key Id of an X.509 certificate are the low 64 bits of its SHA-1 fingerprint.  The use  of
          key Ids is just a shortcut, for all automated processing the fingerprint should be used.

          When using gpg an exclamation mark (!) may be appended to force using the specified primary or secondary key and not to try and calculate which primary or secondary key to use.

          The last four lines of the example give the key ID in their long form as internally used by the OpenPGP protocol. You can see the long key ID using the option --with-colons.

     234567C4
     0F34E556E
     01347A56A
     0xAB123456

     234AABBCC34567C4
     0F323456784E56EAB
     01AB3FED1347A5612
     0x234AABBCC34567C4

   By fingerprint.
          This  format is deduced from the length of the string and its content or the 0x prefix.  Note, that only the 20 byte version fingerprint is available with gpgsm (i.e. the SHA-1
          hash of the certificate).

          When using gpg an exclamation mark (!) may be appended to force using the specified primary or secondary key and not to try and calculate which primary or secondary key to use.

          The best way to specify a key Id is by using the fingerprint.  This avoids any ambiguities in case that there are duplicated key IDs.

     1234343434343434C434343434343434
     123434343434343C3434343434343734349A3434
     0E12343434343434343434EAB3484343434343434
     0xE12343434343434343434EAB3484343434343434

   gpgsm also accepts colons between each pair of hexadecimal digits because this is the de-facto standard on how to present X.509 fingerprints.  gpg also allows the  use  of  the  space
   separated SHA-1 fingerprint as printed by the key listing commands.

   By exact match on OpenPGP user ID.
          This is denoted by a leading equal sign. It does not make sense for X.509 certificates.

     =Heinrich Heine <heinrichh@uni-duesseldorf.de>

   By exact match on an email address.
          This is indicated by enclosing the email address in the usual way with left and right angles.

     <heinrichh@uni-duesseldorf.de>

   By partial match on an email address.
          This is indicated by prefixing the search string with an @.  This uses a substring search but considers only the mail address (i.e. inside the angle brackets).

     @heinrichh

   By exact match on the subject's DN.
          This is indicated by a leading slash, directly followed by the RFC-2253 encoded DN of the subject.  Note that you can't use the string printed by gpgsm --list-keys because that
          one has been reordered and modified for better readability; use --with-colons to print the raw (but standard escaped) RFC-2253 string.

     /CN=Heinrich Heine,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR

   By exact match on the issuer's DN.
          This is indicated by a leading hash mark, directly followed by a slash and then directly followed by the RFC-2253 encoded DN of the issuer.  This should return the Root cert of
          the issuer.  See note above.

     #/CN=Root Cert,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR

   By exact match on serial number and issuer's DN.
          This  is indicated by a hash mark, followed by the hexadecimal representation of the serial number, then followed by a slash and the RFC-2253 encoded DN of the issuer. See note
          above.

     #4F03/CN=Root Cert,O=Poets,L=Paris,C=FR

   By keygrip.
          This is indicated by an ampersand followed by the 40 hex digits of a keygrip.  gpgsm prints the keygrip when using the command --dump-cert.

     &D75F22C3F86E355877348498CDC92BD21010A480

   By substring match.
          This is the default mode but applications may want to explicitly indicate this by putting the asterisk in front.  Match is not case sensitive.

     Heine
     *Heine

   . and + prefixes
          These prefixes are reserved for looking up mails anchored at the end and for a word search mode.  They are not yet implemented and using them is undefined.

          Please note that we have reused the hash mark identifier which was used in old GnuPG versions to indicate the so called local-id.  It is not anymore used and there should be no
          conflict when used with X.509 stuff.

          Using the RFC-2253 format of DNs has the drawback that it is not possible to map them back to the original encoding, however we don't have to do this because our  key  database
          stores this encoding as meta data.

FILTER EXPRESSIONS

   The options --import-filter and --export-filter use expressions with this syntax (square brackets indicate an optional part and curly braces a repetition, white space between the ele
   ments are allowed):

              [lc] {[{flag}] PROPNAME op VALUE [lc]}

   The  name  of  a property (PROPNAME) may only consist of letters, digits and underscores.  The description for the filter type describes which properties are defined.  If an undefined
   property is used it evaluates to the empty string.  Unless otherwise noted, the VALUE must always be given and may not be the empty string.  No quoting is defined for the value,  thus
   the value may not contain the strings && or ||, which are used as logical connection operators.  The flag -- can be used to remove this restriction.

   Numerical  values are computed as long int; standard C notation applies.  lc is the logical connection operator; either && for a conjunction or || for a disjunction.  A conjunction is
   assumed at the begin of an expression.  Conjunctions have higher precedence than disjunctions.  If VALUE starts with one of the characters used in any op a space after the op  is  re
   quired.

   The supported operators (op) are:

   =~     Substring must match.

   !~     Substring must not match.

   =      The full string must match.

   <>     The full string must not match.

   ==     The numerical value must match.

   !=     The numerical value must not match.

   <=     The numerical value of the field must be LE than the value.

   <      The numerical value of the field must be LT than the value.

   >      The numerical value of the field must be GT than the value.

   >=     The numerical value of the field must be GE than the value.

   -le    The string value of the field must be less or equal than the value.

   -lt    The string value of the field must be less than the value.

   -gt    The string value of the field must be greater than the value.

   -ge    The string value of the field must be greater or equal than the value.

   -n     True if value is not empty (no value allowed).

   -z     True if value is empty (no value allowed).

   -t     Alias for "PROPNAME != 0" (no value allowed).

   -f     Alias for "PROPNAME == 0" (no value allowed).

   Values for flag must be space separated.  The supported flags are:

   --     VALUE spans to the end of the expression.

   -c     The string match in this part is done case-sensitive.

   -t     Leading and trailing spaces are not removed from VALUE.  The optional single space after op is here required.

   The filter options concatenate several specifications for a filter of the same type.  For example the four options in this example:

             --import-filter keep-uid="uid =~ Alfa"
             --import-filter keep-uid="&& uid !~ Test"
             --import-filter keep-uid="|| uid =~ Alpha"
             --import-filter keep-uid="uid !~ Test"

   which is equivalent to

             --import-filter \
              keep-uid="uid =~ Alfa" && uid !~ Test" || uid =~ Alpha" && "uid !~ Test"

   imports only the user ids of a key containing the strings "Alfa" or "Alpha" but not the string "test".

TRUST VALUES

   Trust values are used to indicate ownertrust and validity of keys and user IDs.  They are displayed with letters or strings:

   -
   unknown
          No ownertrust assigned / not yet calculated.

   e
   expired

          Trust calculation has failed; probably due to an expired key.

   q
   undefined, undef
          Not enough information for calculation.

   n
   never  Never trust this key.

   m
   marginal
          Marginally trusted.

   f
   full   Fully trusted.

   u
   ultimate
          Ultimately trusted.

   r
   revoked
          For validity only: the key or the user ID has been revoked.

   ?
   err    The program encountered an unknown trust value.

FILES

   There are a few configuration files to control certain aspects of gpg's operation. Unless noted, they are expected in the current home directory (see: [option --homedir]).

   gpg.conf
          This  is  the standard configuration file read by gpg on startup.  It may contain any valid long option; the leading two dashes may not be entered and the option may not be ab‐
          breviated.  This default name may be changed on the command line (see: [gpg-option --options]).  You should backup this file.

   common.conf
          This is an optional configuration file read by gpg on startup.  It may contain options pertaining to all components of GnuPG.  Its current main use is for the "use-keyboxd" op‐
          tion.  If the default home directory ‘~/.gnupg’ does not exist, GnuPG creates this directory and a ‘common.conf’ file with "use-keyboxd".

   Note that on larger installations, it is useful to put predefined files into the directory ‘/etc/skel/.gnupg’ so that newly created users start up with a working  configuration.   For
   existing users a small helper script is provided to create these files (see: [addgnupghome]).

   For internal purposes gpg creates and maintains a few other files; They all live in the current home directory (see: [option --homedir]).  Only the gpg program may modify these files.

   ~/.gnupg
          This is the default home directory which is used if neither the environment variable GNUPGHOME nor the option --homedir is given.

   ~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg
          The public keyring using a legacy format.  You should backup this file.

          If  this file is not available, gpg defaults to the new keybox format and creates a file ‘pubring.kbx’ unless that file already exists in which case that file will also be used
          for OpenPGP keys.

          Note that in the case that both files, ‘pubring.gpg’ and ‘pubring.kbx’ exists but the latter has no OpenPGP keys, the legacy file ‘pubring.gpg’ will be used.  Take care:  GnuPG
          versions  before 2.1 will always use the file ‘pubring.gpg’ because they do not know about the new keybox format. In the case that you have to use GnuPG 1.4 to decrypt archived
          data you should keep this file.

   ~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg.lock
          The lock file for the public keyring.

   ~/.gnupg/pubring.kbx
          The public keyring using the new keybox format.  This file is shared with gpgsm.  You should backup this file.  See above for the relation between this file and it predecessor.

          To convert an existing ‘pubring.gpg’ file to the keybox format, you first backup the ownertrust values, then rename ‘pubring.gpg’ to ‘publickeys.backup’, so it won’t be  recog‐
          nized by any GnuPG version, run import, and finally restore the ownertrust values:

     $ cd ~/.gnupg
     $ gpg --export-ownertrust >otrust.lst
     $ mv pubring.gpg publickeys.backup
     $ gpg --import-options restore --import publickeys.backup
     $ gpg --import-ownertrust otrust.lst

   ~/.gnupg/pubring.kbx.lock
          The lock file for ‘pubring.kbx’.

   ~/.gnupg/secring.gpg
          The  legacy  secret  keyring as used by GnuPG versions before 2.1.  It is not used by GnuPG 2.1 and later.  You may want to keep it in case you have to use GnuPG 1.4 to decrypt
          archived data.

   ~/.gnupg/secring.gpg.lock
          The lock file for the legacy secret keyring.

   ~/.gnupg/.gpg-v21-migrated
          File indicating that a migration to GnuPG 2.1 has been done.

   ~/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg
          The trust database.  There is no need to backup this file; it is better to backup the ownertrust values (see: [option --export-ownertrust]).

   ~/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg.lock
          The lock file for the trust database.

   ~/.gnupg/random_seed
          A file used to preserve the state of the internal random pool.

   ~/.gnupg/openpgp-revocs.d/
          This is the directory where gpg stores pre-generated revocation certificates.  The file name corresponds to the OpenPGP fingerprint of the respective key.  It is  suggested  to
          backup those certificates and if the primary private key is not stored on the disk to move them to an external storage device.  Anyone who can access these files is able to re‐
          voke the corresponding key.  You may want to print them out.  You should backup all files in this directory and take care to keep this backup closed away.

   Operation is further controlled by a few environment variables:

   HOME   Used to locate the default home directory.

   GNUPGHOME
          If set directory used instead of "~/.gnupg".

   GPG_AGENT_INFO
          This variable is obsolete; it was used by GnuPG versions before 2.1.

   PINENTRY_USER_DATA
          This value is passed via gpg-agent to pinentry.  It is useful to convey extra information to a custom pinentry.

   COLUMNS
   LINES  Used to size some displays to the full size of the screen.

   LANGUAGE
          Apart  from  its use by GNU, it is used in the W32 version to override the language selection done through the Registry.  If used and set to a valid and available language name
          (langid), the file with the translation is loaded from gpgdir/gnupg.nls/langid.mo.  Here gpgdir is the directory out of which the gpg binary has been loaded.  If  it  can't  be
          loaded the Registry is tried and as last resort the native Windows locale system is used.

   GNUPG_BUILD_ROOT
          This variable is only used by the regression test suite as a helper under operating systems without proper support to figure out the name of a process' text file.

   GNUPG_EXEC_DEBUG_FLAGS
          This  variable allows one to enable diagnostics for process management.  A numeric decimal value is expected.  Bit 0 enables general diagnostics, bit 1 enables certain warnings
          on Windows.

   When calling the gpg-agent component gpg sends a set of environment variables to gpg-agent.  The names of these variables can be listed using the command:

       gpg-connect-agent 'getinfo std_env_names' /bye | awk '$1=="D" {print $2}'

NOTES

   gpg is often used as a backend engine by other software.  To help with this a machine interface has been defined to have an unambiguous way to do this.  The  options  --status-fd  and
   --batch are almost always required for this.

Programmatic use of GnuPG

   Please  consider using GPGME instead of calling gpg directly.  GPGME offers a stable, backend-independent interface for many cryptographic operations.  It supports OpenPGP and S/MIME,
   and also allows interaction with various GnuPG components.

   GPGME provides a C-API, and comes with bindings for C++, Qt, and Python.  Bindings for other languages are available.

Ephemeral home directories

   Sometimes you want to contain effects of some operation, for example you want to import a key to inspect it, but you do not want this key to be added to your keyring.  In earlier ver
   sions of GnuPG, it was possible to specify alternate keyring files for both public and secret keys.  In modern GnuPG versions, however, we changed how secret keys are stored in  order
   to better protect secret key material, and it was not possible to preserve this interface.

   The preferred way to do this is to use ephemeral home directories.  This technique works across all versions of GnuPG.

   Create  a  temporary  directory,  create  (or  copy)  a configuration that meets your needs, make gpg use this directory either using the environment variable GNUPGHOME, or the option
   --homedir.  GPGME supports this too on a per-context basis, by modifying the engine info of contexts.  Now execute whatever operation you like, import and export key material as  nec
   essary.  Once finished, you can delete the directory.  All GnuPG backend services that were started will detect this and shut down.

The quick key manipulation interface

   Recent  versions of GnuPG have an interface to manipulate keys without using the interactive command --edit-key.  This interface was added mainly for the benefit of GPGME (please con
   sider using GPGME, see the manual subsection ``Programmatic use of GnuPG'').  This interface is described in the subsection ``How to manage your keys''.

Unattended key generation

   The command --generate-key may be used along with the option --batch for unattended key generation.  This is the most flexible way of generating keys, but it is also the most  complex
   one.  Consider using the quick key manipulation interface described in the previous subsection ``The quick key manipulation interface''.

   The  parameters  for  the  key are either read from stdin or given as a file on the command line.  The format of the parameter file is as follows: Text only, line length is limited to
   about 1000 characters.  UTF-8 encoding must be used to specify non-ASCII characters.  Empty lines are ignored.  Leading and trailing white space is ignored.  A hash sign as the  first
   non  white space character indicates a comment line.  Control statements are indicated by a leading percent sign, their arguments are separated by white space from the keyword.  Para
   meters are specified by a keyword, followed by a colon; arguments are separated by white space.  The first parameter must be Key-Type but control statements may be placed  anywhere.
   The  order  of  the parameters does not matter except for Key-Type.  The parameters are only used for the generated keyblock (primary and subkeys); parameters from previous sets are
   not used.  Some syntax checks may be performed.  Key commences when either the end of the parameter file is reached, the next Key-Type  parameter  is  encountered,  or  the  control
   statement %commit is encountered.

   Control statements:

   %echo text
          Print text as diagnostic.

   %dry-run
          Suppress actual key generation (useful for syntax checking).

   %commit
          Perform the key generation.  Note that an implicit commit is done at the next  parameter.

   %pubring 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).

          See the previous subsection ``Ephemeral home directories'' for a more robust way to contain side-effects.

   %secring filename
          This option is a no-op for GnuPG 2.1 and later.

          See the previous subsection ``Ephemeral home directories''.

   %ask-passphrase
   %no-ask-passphrase
          This option is a no-op since GnuPG version 2.1.

   %no-protection
          Using this option allows the creation of keys without any passphrase protection.  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 control statement %no-protection.

   General Parameters:

   Key-Type: algo
          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.  algo may either be an OpenPGP al
          gorithm number or a string with the algorithm name.  The special value default may be used for algo to create the default key type; in this case a Key-Usage  shall  not  be
          given and default also be used for Subkey-Type.

   Key-Length: nbits
          The requested length of the generated key in bits.  The default is returned by running the command gpg --gpgconf-list.  For ECC keys this parameter is ignored.

   Key-Curve: curve
          The requested elliptic curve of the generated key.  This is a required parameter for ECC keys.  It is ignored for non-ECC keys.

   Key-Grip: hexstring
          This is optional and used to generate a CSR or certificate for an already existing key.  Key-Length will be ignored when given.

   Key-Usage: usage-list
          Space or comma delimited list of key usages.  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
          This generates a secondary key (subkey).  Currently only one subkey can be handled.  See also Key-Type above.

   Subkey-Length: nbits
          Length of the secondary key (subkey) in bits.  The default is returned by running the command gpg --gpgconf-list.

   Subkey-Curve: curve
          Key curve for a subkey; similar to Key-Curve.

   Subkey-Usage: usage-list
          Key usage lists for a subkey; similar to Key-Usage.

   Passphrase: string
          If you want to specify a passphrase for the secret key, enter it here.  Default is to use the Pinentry dialog to ask for a passphrase.

   Name-Real: name
   Name-Comment: comment
   Name-Email: email
          The three parts of a user name.  Remember to use UTF-8 encoding 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 (e.g. "20000815T145012") or as number of days, weeks, month or years after
          the creation date.  The special notation "seconds=N" is also allowed to specify a number of seconds since creation.  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.  The special notation "seconds=N" may be used to directly specify a the number of seconds since Epoch
          (Unix time).  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 the sub-command setpref in the --edit-key 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.  fpr may not contain spaces or colons.  The optional sensitive flag marks the designated revoker as sensitive information.  Only v4 and v5 keys may be designated re
          vokers.

   Keyserver: string
          This is an optional parameter that specifies the preferred keyserver URL for the key.

   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.

   Here is an example on how to create a key in an ephemeral home directory:
     $ export GNUPGHOME="$(mktemp -d)"
     $ 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
          # Do a commit here, so that we can later print "done" :-)
          %commit
          %echo done
     EOF
     $ gpg --batch --generate-key foo
      [...]
     $ gpg --list-secret-keys
     /tmp/tmp.0NQxB74PEf/pubring.kbx
     -------------------------------
     sec   dsa1024 2016-12-16 [SCA]
           768E895903FC1C44045C8CB95EEBDB71E9E849D0
     uid           [ultimate] Joe Tester (with stupid passphrase) <joe@foo.bar>
     ssb   elg1024 2016-12-16 [E]

   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
          # Do a commit here, so that we can later print "done" :-)
          %commit
          %echo done

BUGS

   On older systems this program should be installed as setuid(root). This is necessary to lock memory pages. Locking memory pages prevents the operating system from writing memory pages
   (which may contain passphrases or other sensitive material) to disk. If you get no warning message about insecure memory your operating system supports locking without being root. The
   program drops root privileges as soon as locked memory is allocated.

   Note also that some systems (especially laptops) have the ability to ``suspend to disk'' (also known as ``safe sleep'' or ``hibernate'').  This writes all memory to disk before  going
   into  a  low power or even powered off mode.  Unless measures are taken in the operating system to protect the saved memory, passphrases or other sensitive material may be recoverable
   from it later.

   Before you report a bug you should first search the mailing list archives for similar problems and second check whether such a bug has already been reported  to  our  bug  tracker  at
   https://bugs.gnupg.org.

SEE ALSO

   gpgv(1), gpgsm(1), gpg-agent(1)

   The full documentation for this tool is maintained as a Texinfo manual.  If GnuPG and the info program are properly installed at your site, the command

     info gnupg

   should give you access to the complete manual including a menu structure and an index.

GnuPG 2.4.7 2024-11-22 GPG(1)