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.TH KEYRINGER 1 "Oct 25, 2013" "Keyringer User Manual"
.SH NAME
.PP
keyringer - encrypted and distributed secret sharing software
.SH SYNOPSIS
.PP
keyringer <\f[I]keyring\f[]> <\f[I]action\f[]> [\f[I]options\f[]]...
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
Keyringer lets you manage and share secrets using GnuPG and Git in a
distributed fashion.
.PP
It has custom commands to encrypt, decrypt and recrypt secrets as well
as create key pairs and supports encryption to multiple recipients and
groups of different recipients to ensure the same repository can be
shared with a workgroup but allowing to keep some secrets available just
to subsets of that group.
.PP
Secrets are encrypted using GPG and added to a git tree so later then
can be synced with remote branches.
.SH ACTIONS
.PP
Keyringer has three types of actions:
.IP "1." 3
Repository lookup and manipulation actions, which handles repository
initialization, content tracking and navigation.
.IP "2." 3
Secret manipulation actions, which takes care of encrypting, decrypting
and other read/write operations on secrets.
.IP "3." 3
Configuration actions, handling repository metadata.
.SH REPOSITORY LOOKUP AND MANIPULATION ACTIONS
.TP
.B init <\f[I]path\f[]> [\f[I]remote\f[]]
Initialize a new keyringer repository.
If a \f[I]remote\f[] URL is specified, keyringer will clone an existing
repository.
.RS
.PP
After initialization, \f[I]path\f[] will contain a folder structure for
storing secrets and metadata (user aka recipients, groups of recipients,
etc).
.PP
Also, an entry on \f[C]$HOME/.keyringer/config\f[] will be added
allowing keyringer to find the keyring by it\[aq]s alias.
.RE
.TP
.B git <\f[I]action\f[]> <\f[I]options\f[]>
Git wrapper that operates from the toplevel keyring repository.
You can issue any \f[I]GIT(1)\f[] subcommand with this action that it
will be applied into the keyring repository.
.RS
.RE
.TP
.B ls <\f[I]path\f[]>
List contents from the toplevel repository \f[I]keys\f[] folder or from
relative paths if \f[I]path\f[] is specified.
Like the git wrapper, this is a wrapper around the \f[I]LS(1)\f[]
command.
.RS
.RE
.SH SECRET MANIPULATION ACTIONS
.PP
All secret manipulation actions operates upon a \f[I]secret\f[] which is
the pathname of an encrypted file relative to keyring with optional
\f[C]\&.asc\f[] extension.
.PP
If the \f[C]\&.asc\f[] extension is ommited, keyringer will add it in
the end of the pathname.
.PP
No spaces are allowed in the secret name.
.PP
Secret manipulation actions do not commit changes into the secret
repository.
Instead, the user has to manually commit the changes using the git
wrapper action.
.TP
.B append <\f[I]secret\f[]>
Append contents into a secret by decrypting the secret, appending lines
read from the standard input and encrypting again.
.RS
.RE
.TP
.B append-batch <\f[I]secret\f[]>
Append contents into a secret, batch mode.
.RS
.RE
.TP
.B decrypt <\f[I]secret\f[]>
Decrypts a secret into standard output.
.RS
.RE
.TP
.B del <\f[I]secret\f[]>
Removes a secret using git.
After deleting a secret a git commit and push is still needed to update
remote repositories.
.RS
.PP
Please note that this command \f[B]does not remove the secret from the
git history.\f[] To completely remove a file from a keyring, you should
also rewrite the git history by yourself.
.RE
.TP
.B edit <\f[I]secret\f[]>
Edit a secret by temporarily decrypting it, opening the decrypted copy
into the text editor defined by the \f[I]$EDITOR\f[] environment
variable and then recrypting it again.
.RS
.RE
.TP
.B encrypt [\f[I]file\f[]] <\f[I]secret\f[]>
Encrypts content from standard input or \f[I]file\f[] into
\f[I]secret\f[] pathname.
No spaces are supported in the \f[I]file\f[] name.
.RS
.RE
.TP
.B encrypt-batch <\f[I]secret\f[]>
Encrypt content, batch mode.
.RS
.RE
.TP
.B genpair <\f[I]ssh\f[]|\f[I]gpg\f[]|\f[I]ssl\f[]|\f[I]ssl-self\f[]>
[\f[I]options\f[]]
Wrapper to generete encryption keypairs, useful for automated key
deployment.
.RS
.RE
.TP
.B open <\f[I]secret\f[]>
Decrypt a secret into a temporary folder and opening it using xdg-open
which then tries to figure out the file type and calling the associated
application.
.RS
.PP
After the application exits, keyringer encrypts the temporary decrypted
file again into the secret file.
.RE
.TP
.B recrypt <\f[I]secret\f[]>
Recrypts a secret by decrypting it and recrypting again.
Useful when users are added into recipient configuration.
If no \f[I]secret\f[] is given, all secrets in the repository are
re-encrypted.
.RS
.RE
.SH CONFIGURATION ACTIONS
.TP
.B commands
List available actions, useful for shell completion and syntax check.
.RS
.RE
.TP
.B options <\f[I]ls\f[]|\f[I]edit\f[]|\f[I]add\f[]>
List, edit or add miscelaneous \f[I]repository\f[] options.
.RS
.PP
Repository options are specific configurations for the keyring which are
saved into the repository, making it available for all users with access
to the repository and hence is a \f[I]global\f[] configuration stanza
for a given keyring.
.PP
Options are written using the \f[I]KEY=VALUE\f[] syntax.
All lines starting with the hash (#) character are interpreted as
comments.
.RE
.TP
.B preferences <\f[I]ls\f[]|\f[I]edit\f[]|\f[I]add\f[]>
List, edit or add \f[I]user\f[] preferences for a given repository.
.RS
.PP
User preferences are specific configurations for the keyring which are
saved into the user\[aq]s keyringer folder (\f[C]$HOME/.keyringer/\f[])
hence not shared with the other users.
.PP
Preferences are written using the \f[I]KEY=VALUE\f[] syntax.
All lines starting with the hash (#) character are interpreted as
comments.
.RE
.TP
.B usage
Show keyringer usage information.
.RS
.RE
.TP
.B recipients <\f[I]ls\f[]|\f[I]edit\f[]> <\f[I]recipient-file\f[]>
List, create or edit recipient configuration.
.RS
.PP
Recipient files are lists of OpenPGP public key fingerprints which are
used by keyringer when encrypting secrets and associated with email
aliases.
.PP
Keyringer uses a default recipient file and supports custom
\f[I]recipient-files\f[] which overrides the default recipient file
according to it\[aq]s matching pathname.
.PP
For instance, a the \f[I]recipient-file\f[] called \f[I]accounting\f[]
will be used wherever a user encrypts a secret to a file residing from
the \f[I]accounting\f[] folder in the keyring repository.
In that case, encrypting a secret into \f[I]accounting/bank-accounts\f[]
will result in a file
\f[C]$KEYRING_FOLDER/keys/accounting/bank-accounts.asc\f[] encrypted
using the public keys listed in
\f[C]$KEYRING_FOLDER/config/recipients/accounting\f[] config file.
.PP
Each line in a recipients file has entries in the form of
\[aq]john\@doe.com XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX\[aq], where
\f[I]john\@doe.com\f[] is an alias for the GPG public key whose
fingerprint is \f[I]XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX.\f[]
.PP
All lines starting with the hash (#) character are interpreted as
comments.
.PP
Parameters to the \f[I]recipients\f[] action are:
.TP
.B \f[I]ls\f[]
List all existing recipient files.
.RS
.RE
.TP
.B \f[I]edit\f[]
Create or edit a recipient-file.
.RS
.PP
Editing happens using the editor specified by the \f[C]$EDITOR\f[]
environment variable.
.PP
The required parameter \f[I]recipient-file\f[] is taken relativelly from
the \f[C]$KEYRING_FOLDER/config/recipients/\f[] folder.
.RE
.RE
.SH FILES
.PP
$HOME/.keyringer/config : User\[aq]s main configuration file used to map
alias names to keyrings.
.PP
$HOME/.keyringer/\f[I]keyring\f[] : User preferences for the keyringer
aliased \f[I]keyring\f[] keyring.
.PP
$KEYRING_FOLDER/config/options : Custom keyring options which will be
applied for all users that use the keyringer repository.
.SH LIMITATIONS
.PP
Keyringer currently has the following limitations:
.IP "1." 3
Metadata is not encrypted, meaning that an attacker with access to a
keyringer repository knows all public key IDs are used for encryption
and which secrets are encrypted to which keys.
This can be improved in the future by encrypting the repository
configuration with support for \f[I]--hidden-recipient\f[] GnuPG option.
.IP "2." 3
History is not rewritten by default when secrets are removed from a
keyringer repository.
After a secret is removed with \f[I]del\f[] action, it will still be
available in the repository history even after a commit.
This is by design due to the following reasons:
.IP \[bu] 2
It\[aq]s the default behavior of the Git content tracker.
Forcing the deletion by default could break the expected behavior and
hence limit the repository\[aq]s backup features, which can be helpful
is someone mistakenly overwrites a secret.
.IP \[bu] 2
History rewriting cannot be considered a security measure against the
unauthorized access to a secret as it doesn\[aq]t automatically update
all working copies of the repository.
.RS 2
.PP
In the case that the secret is a passphrase, the recommended measure
against such attack is to change the passphrase, making useless the
knowledge of the previous secret.
.PP
Users wishing to edit their repository history should proceed manually
using the \f[I]git\f[] action.
.RE
.SH SEE ALSO
.PP
The \f[I]README\f[] file distributed with Keyringer contains full
documentation.
.PP
The Keyringer source code and all documentation may be downloaded from
<https://keyringer.pw>.
.SH AUTHORS
Silvio Rhatto <rhatto@riseup.net>.