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GnuPG::Interface(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation GnuPG::Interface(3pm)
NAME
GnuPG::Interface - Perl interface to GnuPG
SYNOPSIS
# A simple example
use IO::Handle;
use GnuPG::Interface;
# settting up the situation
my $gnupg = GnuPG::Interface->new();
$gnupg->options->hash_init( armor => 1,
homedir => '/home/foobar' );
# Note you can set the recipients even if you aren't encrypting!
$gnupg->options->push_recipients( 'ftobin AT cpan.org' );
$gnupg->options->meta_interactive( 0 );
# how we create some handles to interact with GnuPG
my $input = IO::Handle->new();
my $output = IO::Handle->new();
my $handles = GnuPG::Handles->new( stdin => $input,
stdout => $output );
# Now we'll go about encrypting with the options already set
my @plaintext = ( 'foobar' );
my $pid = $gnupg->encrypt( handles => $handles );
# Now we write to the input of GnuPG
print $input @plaintext;
close $input;
# now we read the output
my @ciphertext = <$output>;
close $output;
waitpid $pid, 0;
DESCRIPTION
GnuPG::Interface and its associated modules are designed to provide an object-oriented
method for interacting with GnuPG, being able to perform functions such as but not limited
to encrypting, signing, decryption, verification, and key-listing parsing.
How Data Member Accessor Methods are Created
Each module in the GnuPG::Interface bundle relies on Moo to generate the get/set methods
used to set the object's data members. This is very important to realize. This means
that any data member which is a list has special methods assigned to it for pushing,
popping, and clearing the list.
Understanding Bidirectional Communication
It is also imperative to realize that this package uses interprocess communication methods
similar to those used in IPC::Open3 and "Bidirectional Communication with Another Process"
in perlipc, and that users of this package need to understand how to use this method
because this package does not abstract these methods for the user greatly. This package
is not designed to abstract this away entirely (partly for security purposes), but rather
to simply help create 'proper', clean calls to GnuPG, and to implement key-listing
parsing. Please see "Bidirectional Communication with Another Process" in perlipc to
learn how to deal with these methods.
Using this package to do message processing generally invovlves creating a
GnuPG::Interface object, creating a GnuPG::Handles object, setting some options in its
options data member, and then calling a method which invokes GnuPG, such as clearsign.
One then interacts with with the handles appropriately, as described in "Bidirectional
Communication with Another Process" in perlipc.
OBJECT METHODS
Initialization Methods
new( %initialization_args )
This methods creates a new object. The optional arguments are initialization of data
members.
hash_init( %args ).
Object Methods which use a GnuPG::Handles Object
list_public_keys( % )
list_sigs( % )
list_secret_keys( % )
encrypt( % )
encrypt_symmetrically( % )
sign( % )
clearsign( % )
detach_sign( % )
sign_and_encrypt( % )
decrypt( % )
verify( % )
import_keys( % )
export_keys( % )
recv_keys( % )
send_keys( % )
search_keys( % )
These methods each correspond directly to or are very similar to a GnuPG command
described in gpg. Each of these methods takes a hash, which currently must contain a
key of handles which has the value of a GnuPG::Handles object. Another optional key
is command_args which should have the value of an array reference; these arguments
will be passed to GnuPG as command arguments. These command arguments are used for
such things as determining the keys to list in the export_keys method. Please note
that GnuPG command arguments are not the same as GnuPG options. To understand what
are options and what are command arguments please read "COMMANDS" in gpg and "OPTIONS"
in gpg.
Each of these calls returns the PID for the resulting GnuPG process. One can use this
PID in a "waitpid" call instead of a "wait" call if more precise process reaping is
needed.
These methods will attach the handles specified in the handles object to the running
GnuPG object, so that bidirectional communication can be established. That is, the
optionally-defined stdin, stdout, stderr, status, logger, and passphrase handles will
be attached to GnuPG's input, output, standard error, the handle created by setting
status-fd, the handle created by setting logger-fd, and the handle created by setting
passphrase-fd respectively. This tying of handles of similar to the process done in
IPC::Open3.
If you want the GnuPG process to read or write directly to an already-opened
filehandle, you cannot do this via the normal IPC::Open3 mechanisms. In order to
accomplish this, set the appropriate handles data member to the already-opened
filehandle, and then set the option direct to be true for that handle, as described in
"options" in GnuPG::Handles. For example, to have GnuPG read from the file input.txt
and write to output.txt, the following snippet may do:
my $infile = IO::File->new( 'input.txt' );
my $outfile = IO::File->new( '>output.txt' );
my $handles = GnuPG::Handles->new( stdin => $infile,
stdout => $outfile,
);
$handles->options( 'stdin' )->{direct} = 1;
$handles->options( 'stdout' )->{direct} = 1;
If any handle in the handles object is not defined, GnuPG's input, output, and
standard error will be tied to the running program's standard error, standard output,
or standard error. If the status or logger handle is not defined, this channel of
communication is never established with GnuPG, and so this information is not
generated and does not come into play. If the passphrase data member handle of the
handles object is not defined, but the the passphrase data member handle of
GnuPG::Interface object is, GnuPG::Interface will handle passing this information into
GnuPG for the user as a convience. Note that this will result in GnuPG::Interface
storing the passphrase in memory, instead of having it simply 'pass-through' to GnuPG
via a handle.
Other Methods
get_public_keys( @search_strings )
get_secret_keys( @search_strings )
get_public_keys_with_sigs( @search_strings )
These methods create and return objects of the type GnuPG::PublicKey or
GnuPG::SecretKey respectively. This is done by parsing the output of GnuPG with the
option with-colons enabled. The objects created do or do not have signature
information stored in them, depending if the method ends in _sigs; this separation of
functionality is there because of performance hits when listing information with
signatures.
test_default_key_passphrase()
This method will return a true or false value, depending on whether GnuPG reports a
good passphrase was entered while signing a short message using the values of the
passphrase data member, and the default key specified in the options data member.
version()
Returns the version of GnuPG that GnuPG::Interface is running.
Invoking GnuPG with a custom call
GnuPG::Interface attempts to cover a lot of the commands of GnuPG that one would want to
perform; however, there may be a lot more calls that GnuPG is and will be capable of, so a
generic command interface is provided, "wrap_call".
wrap_call( %args )
Call GnuPG with a custom command. The %args hash must contain at least the following
keys:
commands
The value of this key in the hash must be a reference to a a list of commands for
GnuPG, such as "[ qw( --encrypt --sign ) ]".
handles
As with most other GnuPG::Interface methods, handles must be a GnuPG::Handles
object.
The following keys are optional.
command_args
As with other GnuPG::Interface methods, the value in hash for this key must be a
reference to a list of arguments to be passed to the GnuPG command, such as which
keys to list in a key-listing.
OBJECT DATA MEMBERS
call
This defines the call made to invoke GnuPG. Defaults to 'gpg'; this should be changed
if 'gpg' is not in your path, or there is a different name for the binary on your
system.
passphrase
In order to lessen the burden of using handles by the user of this package, setting
this option to one's passphrase for a secret key will allow the package to enter the
passphrase via a handle to GnuPG by itself instead of leaving this to the user. See
also "passphrase" in GnuPG::Handles.
options
This data member, of the type GnuPG::Options; the setting stored in this data member
are used to determine the options used when calling GnuPG via any of the object
methods described in this package. See GnuPG::Options for more information.
EXAMPLES
The following setup can be done before any of the following examples:
use IO::Handle;
use GnuPG::Interface;
my @original_plaintext = ( "How do you doo?" );
my $passphrase = "Three Little Pigs";
my $gnupg = GnuPG::Interface->new();
$gnupg->options->hash_init( armor => 1,
recipients => [ 'ftobin AT uiuc.edu',
'0xABCD1234' ],
meta_interactive => 0 ,
);
Encrypting
# We'll let the standard error of GnuPG pass through
# to our own standard error, by not creating
# a stderr-part of the $handles object.
my ( $input, $output ) = ( IO::Handle->new(),
IO::Handle->new() );
my $handles = GnuPG::Handles->new( stdin => $input,
stdout => $output );
# this sets up the communication
# Note that the recipients were specified earlier
# in the 'options' data member of the $gnupg object.
my $pid = $gnupg->encrypt( handles => $handles );
# this passes in the plaintext
print $input @original_plaintext;
# this closes the communication channel,
# indicating we are done
close $input;
my @ciphertext = <$output>; # reading the output
waitpid $pid, 0; # clean up the finished GnuPG process
Signing
# This time we'll catch the standard error for our perusing
my ( $input, $output, $error ) = ( IO::Handle->new(),
IO::Handle->new(),
IO::Handle->new(),
);
my $handles = GnuPG::Handles->new( stdin => $input,
stdout => $output,
stderr => $error,
);
# indicate our pasphrase through the
# convience method
$gnupg->passphrase( $passphrase );
# this sets up the communication
my $pid = $gnupg->sign( handles => $handles );
# this passes in the plaintext
print $input @original_plaintext;
# this closes the communication channel,
# indicating we are done
close $input;
my @ciphertext = <$output>; # reading the output
my @error_output = <$error>; # reading the error
close $output;
close $error;
waitpid $pid, 0; # clean up the finished GnuPG process
Decryption
# This time we'll catch the standard error for our perusing
# as well as passing in the passphrase manually
# as well as the status information given by GnuPG
my ( $input, $output, $error, $passphrase_fh, $status_fh )
= ( IO::Handle->new(),
IO::Handle->new(),
IO::Handle->new(),
IO::Handle->new(),
IO::Handle->new(),
);
my $handles = GnuPG::Handles->new( stdin => $input,
stdout => $output,
stderr => $error,
passphrase => $passphrase_fh,
status => $status_fh,
);
# this time we'll also demonstrate decrypting
# a file written to disk
# Make sure you "use IO::File" if you use this module!
my $cipher_file = IO::File->new( 'encrypted.gpg' );
# this sets up the communication
my $pid = $gnupg->decrypt( handles => $handles );
# This passes in the passphrase
print $passphrase_fh $passphrase;
close $passphrase_fh;
# this passes in the plaintext
print $input $_ while <$cipher_file>;
# this closes the communication channel,
# indicating we are done
close $input;
close $cipher_file;
my @plaintext = <$output>; # reading the output
my @error_output = <$error>; # reading the error
my @status_info = <$status_fh>; # read the status info
# clean up...
close $output;
close $error;
close $status_fh;
waitpid $pid, 0; # clean up the finished GnuPG process
Printing Keys
# This time we'll just let GnuPG print to our own output
# and read from our input, because no input is needed!
my $handles = GnuPG::Handles->new();
my @ids = ( 'ftobin', '0xABCD1234' );
# this time we need to specify something for
# command_args because --list-public-keys takes
# search ids as arguments
my $pid = $gnupg->list_public_keys( handles => $handles,
command_args => [ @ids ] );
waitpid $pid, 0;
Creating GnuPG::PublicKey Objects
my @ids = [ 'ftobin', '0xABCD1234' ];
my @keys = $gnupg->get_public_keys( @ids );
# no wait is required this time; it's handled internally
# since the entire call is encapsulated
Custom GnuPG call
# assuming $handles is a GnuPG::Handles object
my $pid = $gnupg->wrap_call
( commands => [ qw( --list-packets ) ],
command_args => [ qw( test/key.1.asc ) ],
handles => $handles,
);
my @out = <$handles->stdout()>;
waitpid $pid, 0;
FAQ
How do I get GnuPG::Interface to read/write directly from a filehandle?
You need to set GnuPG::Handles direct option to be true for the filehandles in
concern. See "options" in GnuPG::Handles and "Object Methods which use a
GnuPG::Handles Object" for more information.
Why do you make it so difficult to get GnuPG to write/read from a filehandle? In the
shell, I can just call GnuPG with the --outfile option!
There are lots of issues when trying to tell GnuPG to read/write directly from a file,
such as if the file isn't there, or there is a file, and you want to write over it!
What do you want to happen then? Having the user of this module handle these
questions beforehand by opening up filehandles to GnuPG lets the user know fully what
is going to happen in these circumstances, and makes the module less error-prone.
When having GnuPG process a large message, sometimes it just hanges there.
Your problem may be due to buffering issues; when GnuPG reads/writes to non-direct
filehandles (those that are sent to filehandles which you read to from into memory,
not that those access the disk), buffering issues can mess things up. I recommend
looking into "options" in GnuPG::Handles.
NOTES
This package is the successor to PGP::GPG::MessageProcessor, which I found to be too
inextensible to carry on further. A total redesign was needed, and this is the resulting
work.
After any call to a GnuPG-command method of GnuPG::Interface in which one passes in the
handles, one should all wait to clean up GnuPG from the process table.
BUGS
Currently there are problems when transmitting large quantities of information over
handles; I'm guessing this is due to buffering issues. This bug does not seem specific to
this package; IPC::Open3 also appears affected.
I don't know yet how well this modules handles parsing OpenPGP v3 keys.
SEE ALSO
GnuPG::Options, GnuPG::Handles, GnuPG::PublicKey, GnuPG::SecretKey, gpg, "Bidirectional
Communication with Another Process" in perlipc
LICENSE
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
terms as Perl itself.
AUTHOR
GnuPg::Interface is currently maintained by Jesse Vincent <jesse AT cpan.org>.
Frank J. Tobin, ftobin AT cpan.org was the original author of the package.
perl v5.20.0 2014-03-14 GnuPG::Interface(3pm)
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