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RNPKEYS(1) RNP Manual RNPKEYS(1)

NAME

RNPKEYS - OpenPGP key management utility.

SYNOPSIS

rnpkeys [--homedir dir] [OPTIONS] COMMAND

DESCRIPTION

The rnpkeys command-line utility is part of the RNP suite and provides OpenPGP key management functionality, including:

•key listing;

•key generation;

•key import/export; and

•key editing.

BASICS

By default, rnp will apply a COMMAND, additionally configured with OPTIONS, to all INPUT_FILE(s) or stdin if no INPUT_FILE is given. There are some special cases for INPUT_FILE :

- (dash) substitutes to stdin

•env:VARIABLE_NAME substitutes to the contents of environment variable VARIABLE_NAME

Depending on the input, output may be written:

•to the specified file with a removed or added file extension (.pgp, .asc, .sig); or

•to stdout.

Without the --armor option, output will be in binary.

If COMMAND requires public or private keys, rnp will look for the keyrings in ~/.rnp. The options --homedir and --keyfile override this (see below).

If COMMAND needs a password, rnp will ask for it via stdin or tty, unless the --password or --pass-fd option was specified.

By default, rnpkeys will use keyrings stored in the ~/.rnp directory.

This behavior may be overridden with the --homedir option.

If COMMAND needs a password, the command will prompt the caller via stdin or tty, unless the --password or --pass-fd options were also used.

SPECIFYING KEYS

Most rnpkeys commands require a key locator or a filter, representing one or more keys.

It may be specified in one of the following ways:

userid

Or just part of the userid. For "Alice <alice@rnpgp.com> the following methods are considered identical:

alice

alice@rnpgp

rnpgp.com

keyid

Or its right-most 8 characters. With or without 0x at the beginning and spaces/tabs inside. Such as:

0x725F6F2D6D5F6120

"725F6F2D 6D5F6120"

0x6D5F6120

key fingerprint: The 40-character key fingerprint, such as:

"0x416E746F 6E537669 72696465 6E6B6F20"

COMMANDS

INFORMATIONAL

-h, --help

Displays a short help message. No options are expected.

-V, --version

Displays version information. No options are expected.

-l, --list-keys

List out keys and some brief information about each.

Additional options:

--with-sigs

Additionally display signatures of listed keys.

KEY GENERATION

-g, --generate-key

Generate a new keypair.

Without additional options, an RSA primary key pair with an RSA sub-key pair will be generated, and prompting for the encryption password afterwards.

Additional options:

--numbits

Overrides the default RSA key size of 2048 bits.

--expiration TIME

Set key and subkey expiration time, counting from the creation time.

By default generated keys do not expire.

Expiration time can be specified as:

•expiration date in the ISO 8601:2019 date format (yyyy-mm-dd); or

•hours/days/months/years since creation time with the syntax of 20h/30d/1m/1y;

•number of seconds.

--expert

Select key algorithms interactively and override default settings.

--userid

Specifies the userid to be used in generation.

--hash

Specify the hash algorithm used in generation.

--cipher

Specify the encryption algorithm used in generation.

--s2k-iterations

Specify the number of iterations for the S2K (string-to-key) process.

This is used during the derivation of the symmetric key, which encrypts a secret key from the password.

--s2k-msec

Specify that rnpkeys should automatically pick a --s2k-iterations value such that the single key derivation operation would take NUMBER of milliseconds on the current system.

For example, setting it to 2000 would mean that each secret key decryption operation would take around 2 seconds (on the current machine).

KEY/SIGNATURE IMPORT

--import, --import-keys, --import-sigs

Import keys or signatures.

While rnpkeys automatically detects the input data format, one may still wish to specify whether the input provides keys or signatures.

By default, the import process will stop on the first discovered erroneous key or signature.

Additional options:

--permissive

Skip errored or unsupported packets during the import process.

KEY/SIGNATURE EXPORT

--export-key [--userid=FILTER] [FILTER]

Export key(s). Only export keys that match FILTER if FILTER is given.

If filter matches a primary key, the subkeys of the primary key are also exported.

By default, key data is written to stdout in ASCII-armored format.

Additional options:

--output PATH

Specifies output to be written to a file name instead of stdout.

--secret

Without this option specified, the command will only export public key(s). This option must be provided to export secret key(s).

--export-rev KEY

Export the revocation signature for a specified secret key.

The revocation signature can be used later in a case of key loss or compromise.

Additional options:

--rev-type

Specifies type of key revocation.

--rev-reason

Specifies reason for key revocation.

KEY MANIPULATION

--revoke-key KEY

Issue revocation signature for the secret key, and save it in the keyring.

Revoked keys cannot be used further.

Additional options:

--rev-type

Specifies type of key revocation, see options section for the available values.

--rev-reason

Specifies reason for key revocation.

--remove-key KEY

Remove the specified key.

If a primary key is specified, then all of its subkeys are also removed.

If the specified key is a secret key, then it will not be deleted without confirmation.

Additional options:

--force

Forces removal of a secret key without prompting the user.

--edit-key KEY

Edit or update information, associated with a key. Should be accompanied with editing option.

Currently the following options are available:

--add-subkey

Generate and add a new subkey to the existing primary key. All additional options for the --generate-key command apply for subkey generation as well, except --userid.

--check-cv25519-bits

Check whether least significant/most significant bits of Curve25519 ECDH subkey are correctly set. RNP internally sets those bits to required values (3 least significant bits and most significant bit must be zero) during decryption, however other implementations (GnuPG) may require those bits to be set in key material. KEY must specify the exact subkey via keyid or fingerprint.

--fix-cv25519-bits

Set least significant/most significant bits of Curve25519 ECDH subkey to the correct values, and save a key. So later export of the key would ensure compatibility with other implementations (like GnuPG). This operation would require the password for your secret key. Since version 0.16.0 of RNP generated secret key is stored with bits set to a needed value, however, this may be needed to fix older keys or keys generated by other implementations. KEY must specify the exact subkey via keyid or fingerprint.

--set-expire TIME

Set key expiration time. See the description of the --expiration option for possible time formats. Setting argument to 0 removes key expiration, the key would never expire. It is not recommended due to security reasons.

OPTIONS

--homedir DIR

Change homedir (where RNP looks for keyrings) to the specified value.

The default homedir is ~/.rnp .

--output PATH

Write data processing related output to the file specified.

Combine it with --overwrite to overwrite file if it already exists.

--overwrite

Overwrite output file if it already exists.

--userid USERID

Use the specified userid during key generation and in some key-searching operations.

--numbits BITS

Specify size in bits for the generated key and subkey.

bits may be in range 1024-16384, as long as the public key algorithm does not place additional limits.

--cipher ALGORITHM

Set the key encryption algorithm. This is only used in key generation.

The default value is AES256.

--hash ALGORITHM

Use the specified hash algorithm for signatures and derivation of the encrypting key from password for secret key encryption.

The default value is SHA256.

--expert

Use the expert key generation mode, allowing the selection of key/subkey algorithms.

The following types of keys can be generated in this mode:

DSA key with ElGamal encryption subkey

DSA key with RSA subkey

ECDSA key with ECDH subkey

EdDSA key with x25519 subkey

SM2 key with subkey

Specifically, for ECDSA and ECDH the underlying curve can also be specified:

NIST P-256, NIST P-384, NIST P-521

brainpoolP256r1, brainpoolP384r1, brainpoolP512r1

secp256k1

--pass-fd FD

Specify a file descriptor to read passwords from instead of from stdin/tty.

Useful for automated or non-interactive sessions.

--password PASSWORD

Use the specified password when it is needed.


Warning

Not recommended for production use due to potential security issues.
Use --pass-fd for batch operations instead.

--with-sigs

Print signature information when listing keys via the -l command.

--force

Force actions to happen without prompting the user.

This applies to cases such as secret key removal, revoking an already revoked key and so on.

--permissive

Skip malformed or unknown keys/signatures during key import.

By default, rnpkeys will stop on the first erroring packet and exit with an error.

--rev-type TYPE

Use the specified type during revocation signature generation instead of the default 0.

The following values are supported:

•0, or "no": no revocation type specified.

•1, or "superseded": key was superseded with another key.

•2, or "compromised": key was compromised and no longer valid.

•3, or "retired": key is retired.

Please refer to IETF RFC 4880 for details.

--rev-reason REASON

Add the specified human-readable revocation REASON to the signature instead of an empty string.

--s2k-iterations NUMBER

Specify the number of iterations for the S2K (string-to-key) process.

This is used during the derivation of the symmetric key, which encrypts a secret key from the password.

Please refer to IETF RFC 4880 for further details.

--s2k-msec NUMBER

Specify that rnpkeys should automatically pick a --s2k-iterations value such that the single key derivation operation would take NUMBER of milliseconds on the current system.

For example, setting it to 2000 would mean that each secret key decryption operation would take around 2 seconds (on the current machine).

--notty

Disable use of tty.

By default RNP would detect whether TTY is attached and use it for user prompts.

This option overrides default behaviour so user input may be passed in batch mode.

--current-time TIME

Override system’s time with a specified value.

By default RNP uses system’s time in all signature/key checks, however in some scenarios it could be needed to override this.

TIME could be specified in the ISO 8601-1:2019 date format (yyyy-mm-dd), or in the UNIX timestamp format.

EXIT STATUS

0

Success.

Non-zero

Failure.

EXAMPLES

The following examples demonstrate method of usage of the rnpkeys command.

EXAMPLE 1: IMPORT EXISTING KEYS FROM THE GNUPG

Following oneliner may be used to import all public keys from the GnuPG:

gpg -a --export | rnpkeys --import -

To import all secret keys the following command should be used (please note, that you’ll be asked for secret key password(s)):

gpg -a --export-secret-keys | rnpkeys --import -

EXAMPLE 2: GENERATE A NEW KEY

This example generates a new key with specified userid and expiration. Also it enables "expert" mode, allowing the selection of key/subkey algorithms.

rnpkeys --generate --userid " <john@doe.com> --expert --expiration 1y

BUGS

Please report issues via the RNP public issue tracker at: <https://github.com/rnpgp/rnp/issues>.

Security reports or security-sensitive feedback should be reported according to the instructions at: <https://www.rnpgp.org/feedback>.

AUTHORS

RNP is an open source project led by Ribose and has received contributions from numerous individuals and organizations.

RESOURCES

Web site: <https://www.rnpgp.org>

Source repository: <https://github.com/rnpgp/rnp>

COPYING

Copyright (C) 2017-2021 Ribose. The RNP software suite is freely licensed: please refer to the LICENSE file for details.

SEE ALSO

rnp(1), librnp(3)

AUTHOR

RNP

2024-05-10 RNP 0.17.1