Provided by: gpgconf_2.2.4-1ubuntu1.6_amd64 bug

NAME

       gpgconf - Modify .gnupg home directories

SYNOPSIS

       gpgconf [options] --list-components
       gpgconf [options] --list-options component
       gpgconf [options] --change-options component

DESCRIPTION

       The  gpgconf  is a utility to automatically and reasonable safely query and modify configuration files in
       the ‘.gnupg’ home directory.  It is designed not to be invoked manually by the user, but automatically by
       graphical  user  interfaces  (GUI). ([Please note that currently no locking is done, so concurrent access
       should be avoided.  There are some precautions to avoid corruption with concurrent usage, but results may
       be  inconsistent  and some changes may get lost.  The stateless design makes it difficult to provide more
       guarantees.])

       gpgconf provides access to the configuration of one or  more  components  of  the  GnuPG  system.   These
       components  correspond  more  or less to the programs that exist in the GnuPG framework, like GPG, GPGSM,
       DirMngr, etc.  But this is not a strict one-to-one  relationship.   Not  all  configuration  options  are
       available  through  gpgconf.  gpgconf provides a generic and abstract method to access the most important
       configuration options that can feasibly be controlled via such a mechanism.

       gpgconf can be used to gather and change the options available in each component, and  can  also  provide
       their  default  values.   gpgconf  will  give  detailed type information that can be used to restrict the
       user's input without making an attempt to commit the changes.

       gpgconf provides the backend of a configuration editor.  The configuration  editor  would  usually  be  a
       graphical  user interface program that displays the current options, their default values, and allows the
       user to make changes to the options.  These changes can then be made active with gpgconf again.   Such  a
       program that uses gpgconf in this way will be called GUI throughout this section.

COMMANDS

       One of the following commands must be given:

       --list-components
              List all components.  This is the default command used if none is specified.

       --check-programs
              List all available backend programs and test whether they are runnable.

       --list-options component
              List all options of the component component.

       --change-options component
              Change the options of the component component.

       --check-options component
              Check the options for the component component.

       --apply-profile file
              Apply the configuration settings listed in file to the configuration files.  If file has no suffix
              and no slashes the command first tries to read a file with the  suffix  .prf  from  the  the  data
              directory  (gpgconf  --list-dirs datadir) before it reads the file verbatim.  A profile is divided
              into sections using the bracketed  component name.  Each section then lists the option which shall
              go into the respective configuration file.

       --apply-defaults
              Update  all  configuration  files  with  values  taken from the global configuration file (usually
              ‘/etc/gnupg/gpgconf.conf’).

       --list-dirs [names]
              Lists the directories used by gpgconf.  One directory is listed per line, and each  line  consists
              of  a colon-separated list where the first field names the directory type (for example sysconfdir)
              and the second field contains the percent-escaped directory.  Although they are  not  directories,
              the  socket  file  names  used by gpg-agent and dirmngr are printed as well.  Note that the socket
              file names and the homedir lines are the default names and they may be overridden by command  line
              switches.   If  names are given only the directories or file names specified by the list names are
              printed without any escaping.

       --list-config [filename]
              List the global configuration file in a colon separated format.  If filename is given, check  that
              file instead.

       --check-config [filename]
              Run  a  syntax  check  on  the  global  configuration file.  If filename is given, check that file
              instead.

       --query-swdb package_name [version_string]
              Returns the current version for package_name and if version_string is given also an  indicator  on
              whether  an  update  is  available.   The  actual  file with the software version is automatically
              downloaded and checked by dirmngr.  dirmngr uses a thresholds to avoid download the file too often
              and  it does this by default only if it can be done via Tor.  To force an update of that file this
              command can be used:

                gpg-connect-agent --dirmngr 'loadswdb --force' /bye

       --reload [component]
              Reload all or the given component. This  is  basically  the  same  as  sending  a  SIGHUP  to  the
              component.   Components  which don't support reloading are ignored.  Without component or by using
              "all" for component all components which are daemons are reloaded.

       --launch [component]
              If the component is not already running, start it.  component  must  be  a  daemon.   This  is  in
              general  not  required  because  the  system  starts  these  daemons as needed.  However, external
              software making direct use of gpg-agent or dirmngr may use this command to ensure  that  they  are
              started.  Using "all" for component launches all components which are daemons.

       --kill [component]
              Kill  the  given  component.   Components  which  support  killing  are  gpg-agent  and  scdaemon.
              Components which don't support reloading  are  ignored.   Using  "all"  for  component  kills  all
              components  running  as  daemons.   Note  that  as of now reload and kill have the same effect for
              scdaemon.

       --create-socketdir
              Create a directory for sockets below /run/user or /var/run/user.  This is command is only required
              if a non default home directory is used and the /run based sockets shall be used.  For the default
              home directory GnUPG creates a directory on the fly.

       --remove-socketdir
              Remove a directory created with command --create-socketdir.

OPTIONS

       The following options may be used:

       -o file
       --output file
              Write output to file.  Default is to write to stdout.

       -v
       --verbose
              Outputs additional information while running.  Specifically, this extends numerical  field  values
              by human-readable descriptions.

       -q
       --quiet
              Try to be as quiet as possible.

       -n
       --dry-run
              Do  not actually change anything.  This is currently only implemented for --change-options and can
              be used for testing purposes.

       -r
       --runtime
              Only used together with --change-options.  If one of the modified options  can  be  changed  in  a
              running  daemon  process,  signal  the  running daemon to ask it to reparse its configuration file
              after changing.

              This means that the changes will take effect at run-time, as far as this is possible.   Otherwise,
              they will take effect at the next start of the respective backend programs.

       --status-fd n
              Write  special  status strings to the file descriptor n.  This program returns the status messages
              SUCCESS or FAILURE which are helpful when the caller uses a double fork approach and can't  easily
              get the return code of the process.

USAGE

       The command --list-components will list all components that can be configured with gpgconf.  Usually, one
       component will correspond to one  GnuPG-related  program  and  contain  the  options  of  that  program's
       configuration  file  that  can  be modified using gpgconf.  However, this is not necessarily the case.  A
       component might also be a group of selected options from several programs, or  contain  entirely  virtual
       options that have a special effect rather than changing exactly one option in one configuration file.

       A  component  is  a set of configuration options that semantically belong together.  Furthermore, several
       changes to a component can be made in an atomic way with a single operation.  The GUI could  for  example
       provide a menu with one entry for each component, or a window with one tabulator sheet per component.

       The command --list-components lists all available components, one per line.  The format of each line is:

       name:description:pgmname:

       name   This field contains a name tag of the component.  The name tag is used to specify the component in
              all communication with gpgconf.  The name tag is to be used verbatim.   It  is  thus  not  in  any
              escaped format.

       description
              The  string  in  this  field  contains  a  human-readable description of the component.  It can be
              displayed to the user of the GUI for informational purposes.  It is percent-escaped and localized.

       pgmname
              The string in this field contains the absolute name of the program's file.   It  can  be  used  to
              unambiguously invoke that program.  It is percent-escaped.

       Example:
         $ gpgconf --list-components
         gpg:GPG for OpenPGP:/usr/local/bin/gpg2:
         gpg-agent:GPG Agent:/usr/local/bin/gpg-agent:
         scdaemon:Smartcard Daemon:/usr/local/bin/scdaemon:
         gpgsm:GPG for S/MIME:/usr/local/bin/gpgsm:
         dirmngr:Directory Manager:/usr/local/bin/dirmngr:

   Checking programs

       The  command  --check-programs  is  similar to --list-components but works on backend programs and not on
       components.  It runs each program to test whether it is installed and runnable.   This  also  includes  a
       syntax check of all config file options of the program.

       The command --check-programs lists all available programs, one per line.  The format of each line is:

       name:description:pgmname:avail:okay:cfgfile:line:error:

       name   This  field  contains  a  name tag of the program which is identical to the name of the component.
              The name tag is to be used verbatim.  It is thus not in any escaped format.   This  field  may  be
              empty  to  indicate  a  continuation of error descriptions for the last name.  The description and
              pgmname fields are then also empty.

       description
              The string in this field contains a human-readable  description  of  the  component.   It  can  be
              displayed to the user of the GUI for informational purposes.  It is percent-escaped and localized.

       pgmname
              The  string  in  this  field  contains the absolute name of the program's file.  It can be used to
              unambiguously invoke that program.  It is percent-escaped.

       avail  The boolean value in this field indicates whether the program is installed and runnable.

       okay   The boolean value in this field indicates whether the program's config file is syntactically okay.

       cfgfile
              If an error occurred in the configuration file (as indicated by a false value in the field  okay),
              this field has the name of the failing configuration file.  It is percent-escaped.

       line   If  an  error  occurred  in  the configuration file, this field has the line number of the failing
              statement in the configuration file.  It is an unsigned number.

       error  If an error occurred in the configuration file, this field has  the  error  text  of  the  failing
              statement in the configuration file.  It is percent-escaped and localized.

       In the following example the dirmngr is not runnable and the configuration file of scdaemon is not okay.

         $ gpgconf --check-programs
         gpg:GPG for OpenPGP:/usr/local/bin/gpg2:1:1:
         gpg-agent:GPG Agent:/usr/local/bin/gpg-agent:1:1:
         scdaemon:Smartcard Daemon:/usr/local/bin/scdaemon:1:0:
         gpgsm:GPG for S/MIME:/usr/local/bin/gpgsm:1:1:
         dirmngr:Directory Manager:/usr/local/bin/dirmngr:0:0:

       The  command  configuration  file  in  the  same  manner  as --check-programs, but only for the component
       component.

   Listing options

       Every component contains one or more options.  Options may be gathered into option groups  to  allow  the
       GUI to give visual hints to the user about which options are related.

       The  command  lists all options (and the groups they belong to) in the component component, one per line.
       component must be the string in the field name in the output of the --list-components command.

       There is one line for each option and each group.  First come all options that  are  not  in  any  group.
       Then comes a line describing a group.  Then come all options that belong into each group.  Then comes the
       next group and so on.  There does not need to be any group (and in this case the output will  stop  after
       the last non-grouped option).

       The format of each line is:

       name:flags:level:description:type:alt-type:argname:default:argdef:value

       name   This field contains a name tag for the group or option.  The name tag is used to specify the group
              or option in all communication with gpgconf.  The name tag is to be used verbatim.  It is thus not
              in any escaped format.

       flags  The  flags  field  contains  an  unsigned  number.   Its  value  is the OR-wise combination of the
              following flag values:

              group (1)
                     If this flag is set, this is a line describing a group and not an option.

       The following flag values are only defined for options (that is, if the group flag is not used).

              optional arg (2)
                     If this flag is set, the argument is optional.   This  is  never  set  for  type  0  (none)
                     options.

              list (4)
                     If this flag is set, the option can be given multiple times.

              runtime (8)
                     If this flag is set, the option can be changed at runtime.

              default (16)
                     If this flag is set, a default value is available.

              default desc (32)
                     If  this  flag  is  set,  a  (runtime) default is available.  This and the default flag are
                     mutually exclusive.

              no arg desc (64)
                     If this flag is set, and the optional arg flag is  set,  then  the  option  has  a  special
                     meaning if no argument is given.

              no change (128)
                     If  this  flag  is set, gpgconf ignores requests to change the value.  GUI frontends should
                     grey out this option.  Note, that manual changes  of  the  configuration  files  are  still
                     possible.

       level  This  field  is defined for options and for groups.  It contains an unsigned number that specifies
              the expert level under which this group or option  should  be  displayed.   The  following  expert
              levels are defined for options (they have analogous meaning for groups):

              basic (0)
                     This option should always be offered to the user.

              advanced (1)
                     This option may be offered to advanced users.

              expert (2)
                     This option should only be offered to expert users.

              invisible (3)
                     This option should normally never be displayed, not even to expert users.

              internal (4)
                     This option is for internal use only.  Ignore it.

       The level of a group will always be the lowest level of all options it contains.

       description
              This  field is defined for options and groups.  The string in this field contains a human-readable
              description of the option or group.  It can be displayed to the user of the GUI for  informational
              purposes.  It is percent-escaped and localized.

       type   This field is only defined for options.  It contains an unsigned number that specifies the type of
              the option's argument, if any.  The following types are defined:

              Basic types:

              none (0)
                     No argument allowed.

              string (1)
                     An unformatted string.

              int32 (2)
                     A signed number.

              uint32 (3)
                     An unsigned number.

       Complex types:

              pathname (32)
                     A string that describes the pathname of a file.  The file  does  not  necessarily  need  to
                     exist.

              ldap server (33)
                     A string that describes an LDAP server in the format:

                     hostname:port:username:password:base_dn

              key fingerprint (34)
                     A string with a 40 digit fingerprint specifying a certificate.

              pub key (35)
                     A string that describes a certificate by user ID, key ID or fingerprint.

              sec key (36)
                     A string that describes a certificate with a key by user ID, key ID or fingerprint.

              alias list (37)
                     A string that describes an alias list, like the one used with gpg's group option.  The list
                     consists of a key, an equal sign and space separated values.

       More types will be added in the future.  Please see the alt-type field for information  on  how  to  cope
       with unknown types.

       alt-type
              This  field  is  identical  to  type,  except that only the types 0 to 31 are allowed.  The GUI is
              expected to present the user the option in the format specified by type.  But if the argument type
              type  is  not supported by the GUI, it can still display the option in the more generic basic type
              alt-type.  The GUI must support all the defined basic types to be able  to  display  all  options.
              More  basic  types may be added in future versions.  If the GUI encounters a basic type it doesn't
              support, it should report an error and abort the operation.

       argname
              This field is only defined for options with an argument type type that is not 0.  In this case  it
              may  contain a percent-escaped and localized string that gives a short name for the argument.  The
              field may also be empty, though, in which case a short name is not known.

       default
              This field is defined only for options for which the default or default desc flag is set.  If  the
              default  flag  is  set,  its  format is that of an option argument (see: [Format conventions], for
              details).  If the default value is  empty,  then  no  default  is  known.   Otherwise,  the  value
              specifies the default value for this option.  If the default desc flag is set, the field is either
              empty or contains a description of the effect if the option is not given.

       argdef This field is defined only for options for which the optional arg flag is set.  If the no arg desc
              flag  is  not  set,  its  format  is  that  of  an option argument (see: [Format conventions], for
              details).  If the default value is  empty,  then  no  default  is  known.   Otherwise,  the  value
              specifies  the  default  argument  for  this option.  If the no arg desc flag is set, the field is
              either empty or contains a description of the effect of this option if no argument is given.

       value  This field is defined only for options.  Its format is that of  an  option  argument.   If  it  is
              empty, then the option is not explicitly set in the current configuration, and the default applies
              (if any).  Otherwise, it contains the current value of the option.  Note that this field  is  also
              meaningful  if  the  option  itself  does  not take a real argument (in this case, it contains the
              number of times the option appears).

   Changing options

       The command to change the options of the component component to the specified values.  component must  be
       the  string  in  the  field name in the output of the --list-components command.  You have to provide the
       options that shall be changed in the following format on standard input:

       name:flags:new-value

       name   This is the name of the option to change.  name must be the string in the field name in the output
              of the --list-options command.

       flags  The  flags  field  contains  an  unsigned  number.   Its  value  is the OR-wise combination of the
              following flag values:

              default (16)
                     If this flag is set, the option is deleted and  the  default  value  is  used  instead  (if
                     applicable).

       new-value
              The  new  value  for  the option.  This field is only defined if the default flag is not set.  The
              format is that of an option argument.  If it is empty (or  the  field  is  omitted),  the  default
              argument  is  used  (only  allowed  if  the argument is optional for this option).  Otherwise, the
              option will be set to the specified value.

       The output of the command is the same as that of --check-options for the modified configuration file.

       Examples:

       To set the force option, which is of basic type none (0):

         $ echo 'force:0:1' | gpgconf --change-options dirmngr

       To delete the force option:

         $ echo 'force:16:' | gpgconf --change-options dirmngr

       The --runtime option can influence when the changes take effect.

   Listing global options

       Sometimes it is useful for applications to look at the global options  file  ‘gpgconf.conf’.   The  colon
       separated listing format is record oriented and uses the first field to identify the record type:

       k      This describes a key record to start the definition of a new ruleset for a user/group.  The format
              of a key record is:

                k:user:group:

              user   This is the user field of the key.  It is percent  escaped.   See  the  definition  of  the
                     gpgconf.conf format for details.

              group  This is the group field of the key.  It is percent escaped.

       r      This  describes  a  rule record. All rule records up to the next key record make up a rule set for
              that key.  The format of a rule record is:

                r:::component:option:flag:value:

              component
                     This is the component part of a rule.  It is a plain string.

              option This is the option part of a rule.  It is a plain string.

              flag   This is the flags part of a rule.  There may be only one flag per rule  but  by  using  the
                     same  component  and  option,  several  flags  may be assigned to an option.  It is a plain
                     string.

              value  This is the optional value for the option.  It is a percent escaped string  with  a  single
                     quotation  mark  to  indicate a string.  The quotation mark is only required to distinguish
                     between no value specified and an empty string.

       Unknown record types should be ignored.  Note that there is intentionally no feature to change the global
       option file through gpgconf.

   Get and compare software versions.

       The  GnuPG Project operates a server to query the current versions of software packages related to GnuPG.
       gpgconf can be used to access this online database.  To allow for offline operations, this feature  works
       by  having  dirmngr  download a file from https://versions.gnupg.org, checking the signature of that file
       and storing the file in the GnuPG home directory.  If gpgconf is used and dirmngr is running, it may  ask
       dirmngr to refresh that file before itself uses the file.

       The command --query-swdb returns information for the given package in a colon delimited format:

       name   This  is  the  name  of  the  package  as requested.  Note that "gnupg" is a special name which is
              replaced by the actual package implementing this version of GnuPG.  For this name it is  also  not
              required to specify a version because gpgconf takes its own version in this case.

       iversion
              The  currently  installed  version  or  an empty string.  The value is taken from the command line
              argument but may be provided by gpg if not given.

       status The status of the software package according to this table:

              -      No information available.  This is either because no current version has been specified  or
                     due to an error.

              ?      The given name is not known in the online database.

              u      An update of the software is available.

              c      The installed version of the software is current.

              n      The installed version is already newer than the released version.

       urgency
              If  the  value  (the  empty string should be considered as zero) is greater than zero an important
              update is available.

       error  This returns an gpg-error error code to distinguish between various failure modes.

       filedate
              This gives the date of the file with the version numbers in standard ISO format (yyyymmddThhmmss).
              The date has been extracted by dirmngr from the signature of the file.

       verified
              This gives the date in ISO format the file was downloaded.  This value can be used to evaluate the
              freshness of the information.

       version
              This returns the version string for the requested software from the file.

       reldate
              This returns the release date in ISO format.

       size   This returns the size of the package as decimal number of bytes.

       hash   This returns a hexified SHA-2 hash of the package.

       More fields may be added in future to the output.

FILES

       /etc/gnupg/gpgconf.conf
                If this file exists, it is processed as a global configuration file.
                A commented example can be found in the ‘examples’ directory of
                the distribution.

       GNUPGHOME/swdb.lst
                A file with current software versions.  dirmngr creates
                this file on demand from an online resource.

SEE ALSO

       gpg(1), gpgsm(1), gpg-agent(1), scdaemon(1), dirmngr(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.