From: Werner Koch Date: Thu, 5 Jun 2008 10:56:40 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Add missing file. X-Git-Tag: gpgme-1.1.8~36 X-Git-Url: http://git.tremily.us/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=1358096083dfba7747ed0eadc734db801bfc2aad;p=gpgme.git Add missing file. --- diff --git a/doc/uiserver.texi b/doc/uiserver.texi new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c372750 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/uiserver.texi @@ -0,0 +1,591 @@ +@c uiserver.texi -*- mode: texinfo; coding: latin-1; -*- +@c Specification of the UI server protocol. +@c To be included by gpgme.texi + +@node UI Server Protocol +@appendix The GnuPG UI Server Protocol +@cindex UI server +@cindex user interface server + + +This section specifies the protocol used between clients and a User +Interface Server (UI server). This protocol helps to build a system +where all cryptographic operations are done by a server and the server +is responsible for all dialogs. Although @acronym{GPGME} has no direct +support for this protocol it is believed that servers will utilize the +@acronym{GPGME} library; thus having the specification included in this +manual is an appropriate choice. This protocol should be referenced as +`The GnuPG UI Server Protocol'. + +@noindent +A server needs to implement these commands:@footnote{In all examples we +assume that the connection has already been established; see the Assuan +manual for details.} + +@menu +* UI Server Encrypt:: Encrypt a message. +* UI Server Sign:: Sign a message. +* UI Server Decrypt:: Decrypt a message. +* UI Server Verify:: Verify a message. +* UI Server Set Input Files:: Specifying the input files to operate on. +* UI Server Sign/Encrypt Files:: Encrypting and signing files. +* UI Server Verify/Decrypt Files:: Decrypting and verifying files. +* UI Server Import/Export Keys:: Managing certificates. +* UI Server Checksum Files:: Create and verify checksums for files. +* Miscellaneous UI Server Commands:: Commands not related to a specific operation. +@end menu + + + +@node UI Server Encrypt +@section UI Server: Encrypt a Message + +Before encryption can be done the recipients must be set using the +command: + +@deffn Command RECIPIENT @var{string} + +Set the recipient for the encryption. @var{string} is an RFC-2822 +recipient name ("mailbox" as per section 3.4). This command may or may +not check the recipient for validity right away; if it does not all +recipients are expected to be checked at the time of the @code{ENCRYPT} +command. All @code{RECIPIENT} commands are cumulative until a +successful @code{ENCRYPT} command or until a @code{RESET} command. +Linefeeds are obviously not allowed in @var{string} and should be folded +into spaces (which are equivalent). +@end deffn + +@noindent +To tell the server the source and destination of the data, the next two +commands are to be used: + +@deffn Command INPUT FD=@var{n} +Set the file descriptor for the message to be encrypted to @var{n}. The +message send to the server is binary encoded. + +GpgOL is a Windows only program, thus @var{n} is not a libc file +descriptor but a regular system handle. Given that the Assuan +connection works over a socket, it is not possible to use regular +inheritance to make the file descriptor available to the server. +Thus @code{DuplicateHandle} needs to be used to duplicate a handle +to the server process. This is the reason that the server needs to +implement the @code{GETINFO pid} command. Sending this command a second +time replaces the file descriptor set by the last one. +@c If @var{n} is not given, this commands uses the +@c %last file descriptor passed to the application. +@c %@xref{fun-assuan_sendfd, ,the assuan_sendfd function,assuan,the +@c %Libassuan manual}, on how to do descriptor passing. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command OUTPUT FD=@var{n} +Set the file descriptor to be used for the output (i.e. the encrypted +message) to @var{n}. For OpenPGP, the output needs to be ASCII armored; +for CMS, the output needs to be Base-64 encoded. For details on the +file descriptor, see the @code{INPUT} command. +@end deffn + +@noindent +The setting of the recipients, the data source and destination may +happen in any order, even intermixed. If this has been done the actual +encryption operation is called using: + +@deffn Command ENCRYPT -@w{}-protocol=@var{name} + +This command reads the plaintext from the file descriptor set by the +@code{INPUT} command, encrypts it and writes the ciphertext to the file +descriptor set by the @code{OUTPUT} command. The server may (and +should) overlap reading and writing. The recipients used for the +encryption are all the recipients set so far. If any recipient is not +usable the server should take appropriate measures to notify the user +about the problem and may cancel the operation by returning an error +code. The used file descriptors are void after this command; the +recipient list is only cleared if the server returns success. + +@noindent +Because GpgOL uses a streaming mode of operation the server is not +allowed to auto select the protocol and must obey to the mandatory +@var{protocol} parameter: + +@table @code +@item OpenPGP +Use the OpenPGP protocol (RFC-2440). +@item CMS +Use the CMS (PKCS#7) protocol (RFC-3852). +@end table + +@end deffn + +To support automagically selection of the protocol depending on the +selected keys, the server MAY implement the command: + +@deffn Command PREP_ENCRYPT [-@w{}-protocol=@var{name}] + +This commands considers all recipients set so far and decides whether it +is able to take input and start the actual decryption. This is kind of +a dry-run @command{ENCRYPT} without requiring or using the input and +output file descriptors. The server shall cache the result of any user +selection to avoid asking this again when the actual @command{ENCRYPT} +command is send. The @option{--protocol} option is optional; if it is +not given, the server should allow the user to select the protocol to be +used based on the recipients given or by any other means. + +If this command is given again before a successful @command{ENCRYPT} +command, the second one takes effect. + +Before sending the OK response the server shall tell the client the +protocol to be used (either the one given by the argument or the one +selected by the user) by means of a status line: +@end deffn + +@deffn {Status line} PROTOCOL @var{name} +Advise the client to use the protocol @var{name} for the +@command{ENCRYPT} command. The valid protocol names are listed under +the description of the @command{ENCRYPT} command. The server shall emit +exactly one PROTOCOL status line. +@end deffn + +@noindent +Here is an example of a complete encryption sequence; client lines are +indicated by a @sc{c:}, server responses by @sc{c:}: + +@smallexample +@group + @clnt RESET + @srvr OK + @clnt RECIPIENT foo@@example.net + @srvr OK + @clnt RECIPIENT bar@@example.com + @srvr OK + @clnt PREP_ENCRYPT + @srvr S PROTOCOL OpenPGP + @srvr OK + @clnt INPUT FD=17 + @srvr OK + @clnt OUTPUT FD=18 + @srvr OK + @clnt ENCRYPT + @srvr OK +@end group +@end smallexample + + + +@node UI Server Sign +@section UI Server: Sign a Message + +The server needs to implement opaque signing as well as detached +signing. Due to the nature of OpenPGP messages it is always required to +send the entire message to the server; sending just the hash is not +possible. The following two commands are required to set the input and +output file descriptors: + +@deffn Command INPUT FD=@var{n} +Set the file descriptor for the message to be signed to @var{n}. The +message send to the server is binary encoded. For details on the file +descriptor, see the description of @code{INPUT} in the @code{ENCRYPT} +section. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command OUTPUT FD=@var{n} +Set the file descriptor to be used for the output. The output is either +the complete signed message or in case of a detached signature just that +detached signature. For OpenPGP, the output needs to be ASCII armored; +for CMS, the output needs to be Base-64 encoded. For details on the +file descriptor, see the @code{INPUT} command. +@end deffn + +@noindent +To allow the server the selection of a non-default signing key the +client may optionally use the @code{SENDER} command, see @ref{command +SENDER}. + +@noindent +The signing operation is then initiated by: + +@deffn Command SIGN -@w{}-protocol=@var{name} [-@w{}-detached] +Sign the data set with the @code{INPUT} command and write it to the sink +set by OUTPUT. @var{name} is the signing protocol used for the +message. For a description of the allowed protocols see the +@code{ENCRYPT} command. With option @code{--detached} given, a detached +signature is created; this is actually the usual way the command is +used. +@end deffn + +@noindent +The client expects the server to send at least this status information +before the final OK response: + +@deffn {Status line} MICALG @var{string} +The @var{string} represents the hash algorithm used to create the +signature. It is used with MOSS style signature messages and defined by +PGP/MIME (RFC-3156) and S/MIME (RFC-3851). The GPGME library has a +supporting function @code{gpgme_hash_algo_name} to return the algorithm +name as a string. This string needs to be lowercased and for OpenPGP +prefixed with "@code{pgp-}". +@end deffn + + + +@node UI Server Decrypt +@section UI Server: Decrypt a Message + +Decryption may include the verification of OpenPGP messages. This is +due to the often used combined signing/encryption modus of OpenPGP. The +client may pass an option to the server to inhibit the signature +verification. The following two commands are required to set the input +and output file descriptors: + +@deffn Command INPUT FD=@var{n} +Set the file descriptor for the message to be decrypted to @var{n}. The +message send to the server is either binary encoded or --- in the case +of OpenPGP --- ASCII armored. For details on the file descriptor, see +the description of @code{INPUT} in the @code{ENCRYPT} section. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command OUTPUT FD=@var{n} +Set the file descriptor to be used for the output. The output is binary +encoded. For details on the file descriptor, see the description of +@code{INPUT} in the @code{ENCRYPT} section. +@end deffn + +@noindent +The decryption is started with the command: + +@deffn Command DECRYPT -@w{}-protocol=@var{name} [-@w{}-no-verify] +@var{name} is the encryption protocol used for the message. For a +description of the allowed protocols see the @code{ENCRYPT} command. +This argument is mandatory. If the option @option{--no-verify} is given, +the server should not try to verify a signature, in case the input data +is an OpenPGP combined message. +@end deffn + + +@node UI Server Verify +@section UI Server: Verify a Message + +The server needs to support the verification of opaque signatures as +well as detached signatures. The kind of input sources controls what +kind message is to be verified. + +@deffn Command MESSAGE FD=@var{n} +This command is used with detached signatures to set the file descriptor +for the signed data to @var{n}. The data is binary encoded (used +verbatim). For details on the file descriptor, see the description of +@code{INPUT} in the @code{ENCRYPT} section. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command INPUT FD=@var{n} +Set the file descriptor for the opaque message or the signature part of +a detached signature to @var{n}. The message send to the server is +either binary encoded or -- in the case of OpenPGP -- ASCII armored. +For details on the file descriptor, see the description of @code{INPUT} +in the @code{ENCRYPT} section. +@end deffn + +@deffn Command OUTPUT FD=@var{n} +Set the file descriptor to be used for the output. The output is binary +encoded and only used for opaque signatures. For details on the file +descriptor, see the description of @code{INPUT} in the @code{ENCRYPT} +section. +@end deffn + +@noindent +The verification is then started using: + +@deffn Command VERIFY -@w{}-protocol=@var{name} [-@w{}-silent] +@var{name} is the signing protocol used for the message. For a +description of the allowed protocols see the @code{ENCRYPT} command. +This argument is mandatory. Depending on the combination of +@code{MESSAGE} @code{INPUT} and @code{OUTPUT} commands, the server needs +to select the appropriate verification mode: + +@table @asis +@item MESSAGE and INPUT +This indicates a detached signature. Output data is not applicable. +@item INPUT +This indicates an opaque signature. As no output command has been given, +the server is only required to check the signature. +@item INPUT and OUTPUT +This indicates an opaque signature. The server shall write the signed +data to the file descriptor set by the output command. This data shall +even be written if the signatures can't be verified. +@end table +@end deffn + +With @option{--silent} the server shall not display any dialog; this is +for example used by the client to get the content of opaque signed +messages. The client expects the server to send at least this status +information before the final OK response: + +@deffn {Status line} SIGSTATUS @var{flag} @var{displaystring} +Returns the status for the signature and a short string explaining the +status. Valid values for @var{flag} are: + +@table @code +@item none +The message has a signature but it could not not be verified due to a +missing key. +@item green +The signature is fully valid. +@item yellow +The signature is valid but additional information was shown regarding the +validity of the key. +@item red +The signature is not valid. +@end table + +@var{displaystring} is a percent-and-plus-encoded string with a short +human readable description of the status. For example + +@smallexample +S SIGSTATUS green Good+signature+from+Keith+Moon+ +@end smallexample + +Note that this string needs to fit into an Assuan line and should be +short enough to be displayed as short one-liner on the clients window. +As usual the encoding of this string is UTF-8 and it should be send in +its translated form. + +The server shall send one status line for every signature found on the +message. + + +@end deffn + + +@node UI Server Set Input Files +@section UI Server: Specifying the input files to operate on. + +All file related UI server commands operate on a number of input files +or directories, specified by one or more @code{FILE} commands: + +@deffn Command FILE @var{name} [--continued] +Add the file or directory @var{name} to the list of pathnames to be +processed by the server. The parameter @var{name} must be an absolute +path name (including the drive letter) and is percent espaced (in +particular, the characters %, = and white space characters are always +escaped). The option @code{--continued} is present for all but the +last @code{FILE} command. +@end deffn + + +@node UI Server Sign/Encrypt Files +@section UI Server: Encrypting and signing files. + +First, the input files need to be specified by one or more +@code{FILE} commands. Afterwards, the actual operation is requested: + +@deffn Command ENCRYPT_FILES --nohup +@deffnx Command SIGN_FILES --nohup +@deffnx Command ENCRYPT_SIGN_FILES --nohup +Request that the files specified by @code{FILE} are encrypted and/or +signed. The command selects the default action. The UI server may +allow the user to change this default afterwards interactively, and +even abort the operation or complete it only on some of the selected +files and directories. + +What it means to encrypt or sign a file or directory is specific to +the preferences of the user, the functionality the UI server provides, +and the selected protocol. Typically, for each input file a new file +is created under the original filename plus a protocol specific +extension (like @code{.gpg} or @code{.sig}), which contain the +encrypted/signed file or a detached signature. For directories, the +server may offer multiple options to the user (for example ignore or +process recursively). + +The @code{ENCRYPT_SIGN_FILES} command requests a combined sign and +encrypt operation. It may not be available for all protocols (for +example, it is available for OpenPGP but not for CMS). + +The option @code{--nohup} is mandatory. It is currently unspecified +what should happen if @code{--nohup} is not present. Because +@code{--nohup} is present, the server always returns @code{OK} +promptly, and completes the operation asynchronously. +@end deffn + + +@node UI Server Verify/Decrypt Files +@section UI Server: Decrypting and verifying files. + +First, the input files need to be specified by one or more +@code{FILE} commands. Afterwards, the actual operation is requested: + +@deffn Command DECRYPT_FILES --nohup +@deffnx Command VERIFY_FILES --nohup +@deffnx Command DECRYPT_VERIFY_FILES --nohup +Request that the files specified by @code{FILE} are decrypted and/or +verified. The command selects the default action. The UI server may +allow the user to change this default afterwards interactively, and +even abort the operation or complete it only on some of the selected +files and directories. + +What it means to decrypt or verify a file or directory is specific to +the preferences of the user, the functionality the UI server provides, +and the selected protocol. Typically, for decryption, a new file is +created for each input file under the original filename minus a +protocol specific extension (like @code{.gpg}) which contains the +original plaintext. For verification a status is displayed for each +signed input file, indicating if it is signed, and if yes, if the +signature is valid. For files that are signed and encrypted, the +@code{VERIFY} command transiently decrypts the file to verify the +enclosed signature. For directories, the server may offer multiple +options to the user (for example ignore or process recursively). + +The option @code{--nohup} is mandatory. It is currently unspecified +what should happen if @code{--nohup} is not present. Because +@code{--nohup} is present, the server always returns @code{OK} +promptly, and completes the operation asynchronously. +@end deffn + + +@node UI Server Import/Export Keys +@section UI Server: Managing certificates. + +First, the input files need to be specified by one or more +@code{FILE} commands. Afterwards, the actual operation is requested: + +@deffn Command IMPORT_FILES --nohup +Request that the certificates contained in the files specified by +@code{FILE} are imported into the local certificate databases. + +For directories, the server may offer multiple options to the user +(for example ignore or process recursively). + +The option @code{--nohup} is mandatory. It is currently unspecified +what should happen if @code{--nohup} is not present. Because +@code{--nohup} is present, the server always returns @code{OK} +promptly, and completes the operation asynchronously. +@end deffn + +FIXME: It may be nice to support an @code{EXPORT} command as well, +which is enabled by the context menu of the background of a directory. + + +@node UI Server Checksum Files +@section UI Server: Create and verify checksums for files. + +First, the input files need to be specified by one or more +@code{FILE} commands. Afterwards, the actual operation is requested: + +@deffn Command CHECKSUM_CREATE_FILES --nohup +Request that checksums are created for the files specifed by +@code{FILE}. The choice of checksum algorithm and the destination +storage and format for the created checksums depend on the preferences +of the user and the functionality provided by the UI server. For +directories, the server may offer multiple options to the user (for +example ignore or process recursively). + +The option @code{--nohup} is mandatory. It is currently unspecified +what should happen if @code{--nohup} is not present. Because +@code{--nohup} is present, the server always returns @code{OK} +promptly, and completes the operation asynchronously. +@end deffn + + +@deffn Command CHECKSUM_VERIFY_FILES --nohup +Request that checksums are created for the files specifed by +@code{FILE} and verified against previously created and stored +checksums. The choice of checksum algorithm and the source storage +and format for previously created checksums depend on the preferences +of the user and the functionality provided by the UI server. For +directories, the server may offer multiple options to the user (for +example ignore or process recursively). + +If the source storage of previously created checksums is available to +the user through the Windows shell, this command may also accept such +checksum files as @code{FILE} arguments. In this case, the UI server +should instead verify the checksum of the referenced files as if they +were given as INPUT files. + +The option @code{--nohup} is mandatory. It is currently unspecified +what should happen if @code{--nohup} is not present. Because +@code{--nohup} is present, the server always returns @code{OK} +promptly, and completes the operation asynchronously. +@end deffn + + + + +@c +@c M I S C E L L A N E O U S C O M M A N D S +@c +@node Miscellaneous UI Server Commands +@section Miscellaneous UI Server Commands + +The server needs to implement the following commands which are not +related to a specific command: + +@deffn Command GETINFO @var{what} +This is a multi purpose command, commonly used to return a variety of +information. The required subcommands as described by the @var{what} +parameter are: + +@table @code +@item pid +Return the process id of the server in decimal notation using an Assuan +data line. +@end table +@end deffn + + +@noindent +To allow the server to pop up the windows in the correct relation to the +client, the client is advised to tell the server by sending the option: + +@deffn {Command option} window-id @var{number} +The @var{number} represents the native window ID of the clients current +window. On Windows systems this is a windows handle (@code{HWND}) and +on X11 systems it is the @code{X Window ID}. The number needs to be +given as a hexadecimal value so that it is easier to convey pointer +values (e.g. @code{HWND}). +@end deffn + + +@noindent +GpgOL features a button to invoke the certificate manager. To do this +it uses the Assuan command: + +@deffn Command START_KEYMANAGER +The server shall pop up the main window of the key manager (aka +certificate manager). The client expects that the key manager is brought +into the foregound and that this command immediatley returns (does not +wait until the key manager has been fully brought up). +@end deffn + +@anchor{command SENDER} +@noindent +When doing an operation on a mail, it is useful to let the server know +the address of the sender: + +@deffn Command SENDER [-@w{}-info] @var{email} +@var{email} is the plain ASCII encoded address ("addr-spec" as per +RFC-2822) enclosed in angle brackets. The address set with this command +is valid until a successful completion of the operation or until a +@code{RESET} command. A second command overrides the effect of the +first one; if @var{email} is not given and @option{--info} is not used, +the server shall use the default signing key. + +If option @option{--info} is not given, the server shall also suggest a +protocol to use for signing. The client may use this suggested protocol +on its own discretion. The same status line as with PREP_ENCRYPT is +used for this. +@end deffn + +@noindent +To allow the UI-server to visually identify a running operation or to +associate operations the server MAY support the command: + +@deffn Command SESSION @var{number} [@var{string}] +The @var{number} is an arbitrary value, a server may use to associate +simultaneous running sessions. It is a 32 bit unsigned integer with +@code{0} as a special value indicating that no session association shall +be done. + +If @var{string} is given, the server may use this as the title of a +window or, in the case of an email operation, to extract the sender's +address. The string may contain spaces; thus no plus-escaping is used. + +This command may be used at any time and overrides the effect of the +last command. A @code{RESET} undoes the effect of this command. + +@end deffn