table of contents
GPG-CONNECT-AGENT(1) | GNU Privacy Guard 2.2 | GPG-CONNECT-AGENT(1) |
NAME¶
gpg-connect-agent - Communicate with a running agent
SYNOPSIS¶
gpg-connect-agent [options][commands]
DESCRIPTION¶
The gpg-connect-agent is a utility to communicate with a running gpg-agent. It is useful to check out the commands gpg-agent provides using the Assuan interface. It might also be useful for scripting simple applications. Input is expected at stdin and output gets printed to stdout.
It is very similar to running gpg-agent in server mode; but here we connect to a running instance.
The following options may be used:
- -v
- --verbose
- Output additional information while running.
- -q
- --quiet
- Try to be as quiet as possible.
- --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.
To install GnuPG as a portable application under Windows, create an empty file named ‘gpgconf.ctl’ in the same directory as the tool ‘gpgconf.exe’. The root of the installation is then that directory; or, if ‘gpgconf.exe’ has been installed directly below a directory named ‘bin’, its parent directory. You also need to make sure that the following directories exist and are writable: ‘ROOT/home’ for the GnuPG home and ‘ROOT/var/cache/gnupg’ for internal cache files.
- --agent-program file
- Specify the agent program to be started if none is running. 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 the directory manager (keyserver client) program to be started if none is running. This has only an effect if used together with the option --dirmngr.
- --dirmngr
- Connect to a running directory manager (keyserver client) instead of to the gpg-agent. If a dirmngr is not running, start it.
- -S
- --raw-socket name
- Connect to socket name assuming this is an Assuan style server. Do not run any special initializations or environment checks. This may be used to directly connect to any Assuan style socket server.
- -E
- --exec
- Take the rest of the command line as a program and it's arguments and execute it as an Assuan server. Here is how you would run gpgsm:
gpg-connect-agent --exec gpgsm --server
- --no-ext-connect
- When using -S or --exec, gpg-connect-agent connects to the Assuan server in extended mode to allow descriptor passing. This option makes it use the old mode.
- --no-autostart
- Do not start the gpg-agent or the dirmngr if it has not yet been started.
- -r file
- --run file
- Run the commands from file at startup and then continue with the regular input method. Note, that commands given on the command line are executed after this file.
- -s
- --subst
- Run the command /subst at startup.
- --hex
- Print data lines in a hex format and the ASCII representation of non-control characters.
- --decode
- Decode data lines. That is to remove percent escapes but make sure that a new line always starts with a D and a space.
CONTROL COMMANDS¶
While reading Assuan commands, gpg-agent also allows a few special commands to control its operation. These control commands all start with a slash (/).
- /echo args
- Just print args.
- /let name value
- Set the variable name to value. Variables are only
substituted on the input if the /subst has been used. Variables are
referenced by prefixing the name with a dollar sign and optionally include
the name in curly braces. The rules for a valid name are identically to
those of the standard bourne shell. This is not yet enforced but may be in
the future. When used with curly braces no leading or trailing white space
is allowed.
If a variable is not found, it is searched in the environment and if found copied to the table of variables.
Variable functions are available: The name of the function must be followed by at least one space and the at least one argument. The following functions are available:
- get
- Return a value described by the argument. Available arguments are:
- cwd
- The current working directory.
- homedir
- The gnupg homedir.
- sysconfdir
- GnuPG's system configuration directory.
- bindir
- GnuPG's binary directory.
- libdir
- GnuPG's library directory.
- libexecdir
- GnuPG's library directory for executable files.
- datadir
- GnuPG's data directory.
- serverpid
- The PID of the current server. Command /serverpid must have been given to return a useful value.
- unescape args
- Remove C-style escapes from args. Note that \0 and \x00 terminate the returned string implicitly. The string to be converted are the entire arguments right behind the delimiting space of the function name.
- unpercent args
- unpercent+ args
- Remove percent style escaping from args. Note that %00 terminates the string implicitly. The string to be converted are the entire arguments right behind the delimiting space of the function name. unpercent+ also maps plus signs to a spaces.
- percent args
- percent+ args
- Escape the args using percent style escaping. Tabs, formfeeds, linefeeds, carriage returns and colons are escaped. percent+ also maps spaces to plus signs.
- errcode arg
- errsource arg
- errstring arg
- Assume arg is an integer and evaluate it using strtol. Return the gpg-error error code, error source or a formatted string with the error code and error source.
- +
- -
- *
- /
- %
- Evaluate all arguments as long integers using strtol and apply this operator. A division by zero yields an empty string.
- !
- |
- &
- Evaluate all arguments as long integers using strtol and apply the logical operators NOT, OR or AND. The NOT operator works on the last argument only.
- /definq name var
- Use content of the variable var for inquiries with name. name may be an asterisk (*) to match any inquiry.
- /definqfile name file
- Use content of file for inquiries with name. name may be an asterisk (*) to match any inquiry.
- /definqprog name prog
- Run prog for inquiries matching name and pass the entire line to it as command line arguments.
- /datafile name
- Write all data lines from the server to the file name. The file is opened for writing and created if it does not exists. An existing file is first truncated to 0. The data written to the file fully decoded. Using a single dash for name writes to stdout. The file is kept open until a new file is set using this command or this command is used without an argument.
- /showdef
- Print all definitions
- /cleardef
- Delete all definitions
- /sendfd file mode
- Open file in mode (which needs to be a valid fopen mode string) and send the file descriptor to the server. This is usually followed by a command like INPUT FD to set the input source for other commands.
- /recvfd
- Not yet implemented.
- /open var file [mode]
- Open file and assign the file descriptor to var. Warning: This command is experimental and might change in future versions.
- /close fd
- Close the file descriptor fd. Warning: This command is experimental and might change in future versions.
- /showopen
- Show a list of open files.
- /serverpid
- Send the Assuan command GETINFO pid to the server and store the returned PID for internal purposes.
- /sleep
- Sleep for a second.
- /hex
- /nohex
- Same as the command line option --hex.
- /decode
- /nodecode
- Same as the command line option --decode.
- /subst
- /nosubst
- Enable and disable variable substitution. It defaults to disabled unless the command line option --subst has been used. If /subst as been enabled once, leading whitespace is removed from input lines which makes scripts easier to read.
- /while condition
- /end
- These commands provide a way for executing loops. All lines between the while and the corresponding end are executed as long as the evaluation of condition yields a non-zero value or is the string true or yes. The evaluation is done by passing condition to the strtol function. Example:
/subst
/let i 3
/while $i
/echo loop counter is $i
/let i ${- $i 1}
/end
- /if condition
- /end
- These commands provide a way for conditional execution. All lines between the if and the corresponding end are executed only if the evaluation of condition yields a non-zero value or is the string true or yes. The evaluation is done by passing condition to the strtol function.
- /run file
- Run commands from file.
- /bye
- Terminate the connection and the program.
- /help
- Print a list of available control commands.
SEE ALSO¶
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.
2020-03-18 | GnuPG 2.2.20 |