A linux specific, small, simple & intuitive wrapper for creating, using and managing GnuPG's Ed25519 curve keys. In our design, we favor reducing code size & complexity with strong, bias defaults over flexibility in the api. Our goal is to turn the powerful, complex, legacy gnupg system into a fun and safe tool to develop with.
This project is currently in unstable beta. It works like a charm, but there's likely, and often bugs floating around, and the api is subject to change. Contributions are welcome.
sudo apt-get install tor torsocks gnupg2 gpg-agent
pip install --user --upgrade tiny_gnupg
The GnuPG
class's instances are the primary interface for running commands & managing keys using the gpg2 executable.
from tiny_gnupg import GnuPG, run
PATH_TO_GPG_BINARY = "/usr/bin/gpg2"
gpg = GnuPG(
email_address="bob@user.net",
passphrase="bobs's passphrase",
executable=PATH_TO_GPG_BINARY,
)
# This will generate a primary ed25519 ECC certifying key, and three
# subkeys, one each for the authentication, encryption, and signing
# functionalities.
gpg.generate_key()
# Now this fingerprint can be used with arbitrary gpg2 commands.
gpg.fingerprint
# The list of keys in the package's environment can be accessed
# from the list_keys() method, which returns a dict ->
gpg.list_keys()
>>> {fingerprint: email_address, ...}
# Or retrieve a specific key where a searchable portion of its uid
# information is known, like an email address or fingerprint ->
gpg.list_keys("bob@user.net")
>>> {"EE36F0584971280730D76CEC94A470B77ABA6E81": "bob@user.net"}
# Let's try encrypting a message to Alice, whose public key is
# stored on keys.openpgp.org/
# First, we'll import Alice's key from the keyserver (This requires
# a Tor system installation. Or an open TorBrowser, and the tor_port
# attribute set to 9150) ->
# Optional: gpg.keyserver.network.tor_port = 9150
run(gpg.network_import(uid="alice@email.domain"))
# Then encrypt a message with Alice's key and sign it ->
msg = "So, what's the plan this Sunday, Alice?"
encrypted_message = gpg.encrypt(
message=msg, uid="alice@email.domain", sign=True # True is the default
)
# The process of encrypting a message to a peer whose public key
# might not be in the local package keyring is conveniently available
# in a single method. It automatically searches for the recipient's
# key on the keyserver so it can be used to encrypt the message ->
run(gpg.auto_encrypt(msg, "alice@email.domain")) # Signs by default
# We could directly send a copy of our key to Alice, or upload it to
# the keyserver. Alice will need a copy so the signature on the
# message can be verified. So let's upload it to the keyserver ->
run(gpg.network_export(uid="bob@user.net"))
# Alice could now import our key (after we do an email verification
# with the keyserver) ->
run(gpg.network_import("bob@user.net"))
# Then Alice can simply receive the encrypted message and decrypt it ->
decrypted_msg = gpg.decrypt(encrypted_message)
# The process of decrypting a encrypted & signed message from a peer
# whose public key might not be in the local package keyring is
# conveniently available in a single method. It automatically determines
# the signing key fingerprint, and searches for it on the keyserver
# to verify the signature ->
decrypted_msg = run(gpg.auto_decrypt(encrypted_message))
On most systems, because of a bug in GnuPG, email verification of uploaded keys will be necessary for others to import them from the keyserver. That's because GnuPG will throw an error immediately upon trying to import keys with their uid information stripped off.
The package no longer comes with its own gpg2 binary. Your system gpg2 executable is probably located at: /usr/bin/gpg2. You could also type: whereis gpg2
to find it. If it's not installed, you'll have to install it with your system's equivalent of: sudo apt-get install gnupg2
# Since we use SOCKSv5 over Tor for all of our networking, as well
# as the user-friendly aiohttp + aiohttp_socks libraries, the Tor
# networking interface is also available to users. These utilities
# allow arbitrary POST and GET requests to clearnet, or onionland,
# websites ->
from tiny_gnupg import GnuPG, Network, run
client = Network(tor_port=9050)
async def read_url(client, url):
"""
Use the instance's interface to read the page located at the url
with a wrapper around an `aiohttp.ClientSession` context manager.
"""
async with client.context_get(url) as response:
return await response.text()
# Now we can read webpages with GET requests ->
page_html = run(read_url(client, "https://keys.openpgp.org/"))
# Let's try onionland ->
url = "http://zkaan2xfbuxia2wpf7ofnkbz6r5zdbbvxbunvp5g2iebopbfc4iqmbad.onion/"
onion_page_html = run(read_url(client, url))
# Check your ip address for fun ->
ip_addr = run(read_url(client, "https://icanhazip.com/"))
# There's a convenience function built into the class that
# basically mimics read_url() ->
ip_addr = run(client.get("https://icanhazip.com/"))
# POST requests can also be sent with the context_post() method.
# Let's use a POST request to send the keyserver a new key we
# create ->
async def post_data(client, url, payload=""):
"""
Use the instance's interface to post the api payload to the
keyserver with a wrapper around an `aiohttp.ClientSession`
context manager.
"""
async with client.context_post(url, json=payload) as response:
return await response.text()
gpg = GnuPG(email_address="bob@user.net", passphrase="bobs's passphrase")
gpg.generate_key()
url = gpg.keyserver._key_export_api_url
payload = {"keytext": gpg.text_export(uid=gpg.fingerprint)}
api_token_json = run(post_data(client, url, payload))
# There's also a convenience function built into the class that
# mimics post_data() ->
api_token_json = run(client.post(url, json=payload))
# Of course, this is just for demonstration. The method that should
# be used for uploading a key to the keyserver is network_export ->
run(gpg.network_export(gpg.fingerprint))
# And there we have it, it's super simple. And these requests have
# the added benefit of being completely routed through Tor. The
# keyserver here also has a v3 onion address which we use to query,
# upload, and import keys. This provides a nice, default layer of
# privacy to our communication needs.
These networking tools work off instances of aiohttp.ClientSession. To learn more about how to use their POST and GET requests, you can read the docs here.
A user can make sure that any connections the gnupg binary makes with the network are always run through Tor by setting torify=True
during initialization.
from tiny_gnupg import GnuPG
gpg = GnuPG(**user_details, torify=True)
This is helpful because there are gnupg settings which cause certain commands to do automatic connections to the web. For instance, when encrypting, gnupg may be set to automatically search for the recipient's key on a keyserver if it's not in the local keyring. This doesn't normally effect tiny_gnupg because it doesn't use gnupg's networking interface. It ensures Tor connections through the aiohttp_socks library. But, if gnupg does make these kinds of connections silently, using torify can prevent a user's IP address from being inadvertently revealed.
Using torify requires a Tor installation on the user system. If the user is running Debian / Ubuntu, then this guide could be helpful.
# An instance can also be constructed from lower-level objects ->
from tiny_gnupg import BaseGnuPG, User, GnuPGConfig, run
PATH_TO_GPG_BINARY = "/usr/bin/gpg2"
# Passphrases can contain any characters, even emojis ->
user = User(email_address="bob@user.net", passphrase="✅🐎🔋📌")
config = GnuPGConfig(executable=PATH_TO_GPG_BINARY, torify=True)
gpg = BaseGnuPG(user, config=config)
# It turns out that the encrypt() method automatically signs the
# message being encrypted. So, the `sign=False` flag only has to be
# passed when a user doesn't want to sign a message ->
encrypted_unsigned_message = gpg.encrypt(
message="sending message as an unidentified sender",
uid="alice@email.domain", # sending to alice,
sign=False, # no sender identification
)
# It also turns out, a user can sign things independently from
# encrypting ->
message_to_verify = "maybe a hash of a file?"
signed_data = gpg.sign(target=message_to_verify)
assert message_to_verify == gpg.decrypt(signed_data)
# And verify a signature without checking the signed value ->
gpg.verify(message=signed_data) # throws if invalid
# Or sign a key in the package's keyring ->
gpg.sign("alice@email.domain", key=True)
# Importing key files is also a thing ->
path_to_file = "/home/user/keyfiles/"
gpg.file_import(path=path_to_file + "alices_key.asc")
# As well as exporting public keys ->
gpg.file_export(path=path_to_file, uid=gpg.user.email_address)
# And secret keys, but really, keep those safe! ->
gpg.file_export(
path=path_to_file, uid=gpg.user.email_address, secret=True
)
# The keys don't have to be exported to a file. Instead they can
# be exported as strings ->
my_key = gpg.text_export(uid=gpg.fingerprint)
# So can secret keys (Be careful!) ->
my_secret_key = gpg.text_export(gpg.fingerprint, secret=True)
# And they can just as easily be imported from strings ->
gpg.text_import(key=my_key)
# The generated keys are stored in the package's local keyring.
# To talk to the package's gpg environment, an arbitrary command
# can be constructed like this ->
# (an example) options = ["list", "of", "options", "target"]
options = ["--armor", "--encrypt", "-r", gpg.fingerprint]
command = gpg.encode_command(*options)
inputs = gpg.encode_inputs("Message to myself")
encrypted_message = gpg.read_output(command, inputs)
# If a command would invoke the need for a passphrase, the
# with_passphrase kwarg should be set to True ->
command = gpg.encode_command(*options, with_passphrase=True)
# The passphrase then needs to be the first arg passed to
# encode_inputs ->
inputs = gpg.encode_inputs(gpg.user.passphrase, *other_inputs)
After a user no longer considers a key useful, or wants to dissociate from the key, then they have some options:
from tiny_gnupg import GnuPG, run
PATH_TO_GPG_BINARY = "/usr/bin/gpg2"
gpg = GnuPG(
email_address="bob@user.net",
passphrase="bobs's passphrase",
executable=PATH_TO_GPG_BINARY,
)
# They can revoke their key then distribute it publicly (somehow)
# (the keyserver can't currently handle key revocations) ->
revoked_key = gpg.revoke(gpg.fingerprint) # <-- Distribute this!
# Uploading the revoked key will only strip the user ID information
# from the key on the keyserver. It won't explicitly let others know
# the key has been retired. However, this action cannot be undone ->
run(gpg.network_export(gpg.fingerprint))
# The key can also be deleted from the package keyring like this ->
gpg.delete(uid="bob@user.net")
- Because of Debian bug #930665, & related GnuPG bug #T4393,
importing keys from the default keyserver keys.openpgp.org doesn’t
work automatically on all systems. Not without email confirmation, at
least. That’s because the keyserver will not publish uid information
attached to a key before a user confirms access to the email address
assigned to the uploaded key. And, because GnuPG folks are still
holding up the merging, & back-porting, of patches that would allow
GnuPG to automatically handle keys without uids gracefully. This
effects the
network_import()
method specifically, but also thetext_import()
&file_import()
methods, if they happen to be passed a key or filename argument which refers to a key without uid information. The gpg2 binary in this package can be replaced manually if a user’s system has access to a patched version. - Because of GnuPG bug #T3065, & related bug #1788190, the
--keyserver
&--keyserver-options http-proxy
options won’t work with onion addresses, & they cause a crash if a keyserver lookup is attempted. This is not entirely an issue for us since we don’t use gnupg’s networking interface. In fact, we set these environment variables anyway to crash on purpose if gnupg tries to make a network connection. And in case the bug ever gets fixed (it won’t), or by accident the options do work in the future, then a tor SOCKSv5 connection will be used instead of a raw connection. - This program may only be reliably compatible with keys that are also created with this program. That’s because our terminal parsing is reliant on specific metadata to be similar across all encountered keys. It seems most keys have successfully been parsed with recent updates, though more testing is needed.
- The tests don’t currently work when a tester’s system has a system installation of tiny_gnupg, & the tests are being run from a local git repo directory. That’s because the tests import tiny_gnupg, but if the program is installed in the system, then python will get confused about which keyring to use during the tests. This will lead to crashes & failed tests. Git clone testers probably have to run the test script closer to their system installation, one directory up & into a tests folder. Or pip uninstall tiny_gnupg. OR, send a pull request with an import fix.
- Currently, the package is part synchronous, & part asynchronous. This is not ideal, so a decision has to be made: either to stay mixed style, or choose one consistent style.
- We’re still in unstable beta & have to build out our test suite. Contributions welcome.
- The tests seems to fail on some systems because of a torsocks filter [1][2] which blocks some syscalls. This may be patched or not applicable on non-linux operating systems.