trezor-agent/README-GPG.md
2016-07-30 14:53:54 +03:00

3.6 KiB

Note: the GPG-related code is still under development, so please try the current implementation and feel free to report any issue you have encountered. Thanks!

Installation

First, verify that you have GPG 2.1+ installed:

$ gpg2 --version | head -n1
gpg (GnuPG) 2.1.11

Update you TREZOR firmware to the latest version (at least c720614).

Install latest trezor-agent package from gpg-agent branch:

$ pip install --user git+https://github.com/romanz/trezor-agent.git@gpg-agent

Define your GPG user ID as an environment variable:

$ export TREZOR_GPG_USER_ID="John Doe <john@doe.bit>"

There are two ways to generate TREZOR-based GPG public keys, as described below.

1. generate a new GPG identity:

$ trezor-gpg create | gpg2 --import              # use the TREZOR to confirm signing the primary key
gpg: key 5E4D684D: public key "John Doe <john@doe.bit>" imported
gpg: Total number processed: 1
gpg:               imported: 1

$ gpg2 --edit "${TREZOR_GPG_USER_ID}" trust      # set this key to ultimate trust (option #5)

$ gpg2 -k
/home/roman/.gnupg/pubring.kbx
------------------------------
pub   nistp256/5E4D684D 2016-06-17 [SC]
uid         [ultimate] John Doe <john@doe.bit>
sub   nistp256/A31D9E25 2016-06-17 [E]

2. generate a new subkey for an existing GPG identity:

$ gpg2 -k                                        # suppose there is already a GPG primary key
/home/roman/.gnupg/pubring.kbx
------------------------------
pub   rsa2048/87BB07B4 2016-06-17 [SC]
uid         [ultimate] John Doe <john@doe.bit>
sub   rsa2048/7176D31F 2016-06-17 [E]

$ trezor-gpg create --subkey | gpg2 --import     # use the TREZOR to confirm signing the subkey
gpg: key 87BB07B4: "John Doe <john@doe.bit>" 2 new signatures
gpg: key 87BB07B4: "John Doe <john@doe.bit>" 2 new subkeys
gpg: Total number processed: 1
gpg:            new subkeys: 2
gpg:         new signatures: 2

$ gpg2 -k
/home/roman/.gnupg/pubring.kbx
------------------------------
pub   rsa2048/87BB07B4 2016-06-17 [SC]
uid         [ultimate] John Doe <john@doe.bit>
sub   rsa2048/7176D31F 2016-06-17 [E]
sub   nistp256/DDE80B36 2016-06-17 [S]
sub   nistp256/E3D0BA19 2016-06-17 [E]

Usage examples:

Start the TREZOR-based gpg-agent:

$ trezor-gpg agent &

Note: this agent intercepts all GPG requests, so make sure to close it (e.g. by using killall trezor-gpg), when you are done with the TREZOR-based GPG operations.

Sign and verify GPG messages:

$ echo "Hello World!" | gpg2 --sign | gpg2 --verify
gpg: Signature made Fri 17 Jun 2016 08:55:13 PM IDT using ECDSA key ID 5E4D684D
gpg: Good signature from "Roman Zeyde <roman.zeyde@gmail.com>" [ultimate]

Encrypt and decrypt GPG messages:

$ date | gpg2 --encrypt -r "${TREZOR_GPG_USER_ID}" | gpg2 --decrypt
gpg: encrypted with 256-bit ECDH key, ID A31D9E25, created 2016-06-17
      "Roman Zeyde <roman.zeyde@gmail.com>"
Fri Jun 17 20:55:31 IDT 2016

Git commit & tag signatures:

Git can use GPG to sign and verify commits and tags (see here):

$ git config --local gpg.program gpg2
$ git commit --gpg-sign                      # create GPG-signed commit
$ git log --show-signature -1                # verify commit signature
$ git tag --sign "TAG"                       # create GPG-signed tag
$ git verify-tag "TAG"                       # verify tag signature