optools/gpg/kant/docs/REF.keys.struct.txt

128 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Permalink Normal View History

2017-09-19 05:09:33 -04:00
TYPES:
d = dict
l = list
s = string
i = int
b = binary (True/False)
o = object
- pkey's dict key is the 40-char key ID of the primary key
- "==>" indicates the next item is a dict and the current item may contain one or more elements of the same format,
"++>" is a list,
"-->" is a "flat" item (string, object, int, etc.)
2017-09-19 05:09:33 -04:00
-"status" is one of "an UPGRADE", "a DOWNGRADE", or "a NEW TRUST".
keys(d) ==> (40-char key ID)(s) ==> pkey(d) --> email(s)
--> name(s)
--> creation (o, datetime)
--> key(o, gpg)
--> trust(i)
--> check(i)
--> local(b)
--> notify(b)
==> subkeys(d) ==> (40-char key ID)(s) --> creation
--> change(b)
--> sign(b)
--> status(s)
==> uids(d) ==> email(s) --> name(s)
--> comment(s)
--> email(s)
--> updated(o, datetime)*
* For many keys, this is unset. In-code, this is represented by having a timestamp of 0, or a
datetime object matching UNIX epoch. This is converted to a string, "Never/unknown".
2017-09-19 05:09:33 -04:00
for email templates, they are looped over for each key dict as "key".
so for example, instead of specifying "keys['748231EBCBD808A14F5E85D28C004C2F93481F6B']['pkey']['name']",
you instead should specify "key['pkey']['name']". To get the name of e.g. the second uid,
you'd use "key['uids'][(uid email)]['name'].
e.g. in the code, it's this:
{'748231EBCBD808A14F5E85D28C004C2F93481F6B': {'change': None,
'check': 0,
'local': False,
'notify': True,
'pkey': {'creation': '2013-12-10 '
'08:35:52',
'email': 'brent.saner@gmail.com',
'key': '<GPGME object>',
'name': 'Brent Timothy '
'Saner'},
'sign': True,
'status': None,
'subkeys': {'748231EBCBD808A14F5E85D28C004C2F93481F6B': '2013-12-10 '
'08:35:52'},
'trust': 2,
'uids': {'brent.saner@gmail.com': {'comment': '',
'name': 'Brent '
'Timothy '
'Saner',
'updated': 'Never/unknown'},
'bts@square-r00t.net': {'comment': 'http://www.square-r00t.net',
'name': 'Brent '
'S.',
'updated': 'Never/unknown'},
'r00t@sysadministrivia.com': {'comment': 'https://sysadministrivia.com',
'name': 'r00t^2',
'updated': 'Never/unknown'},
'squarer00t@keybase.io': {'comment': '',
'name': 'keybase.io/squarer00t',
'updated': 'Never/unknown'}}}}
but this is passed to the email template as:
{'change': None,
'check': 0,
'local': False,
'notify': True,
'pkey': {'creation': '2013-12-10 08:35:52',
'email': 'brent.saner@gmail.com',
'key': '<GPGME object>',
'name': 'Brent Timothy Saner'},
'sign': True,
'status': None,
'subkeys': {'748231EBCBD808A14F5E85D28C004C2F93481F6B': '2013-12-10 08:35:52'},
'trust': 2,
'uids': {'brent.saner@gmail.com': {'comment': '',
'name': 'Brent Timothy Saner',
'updated': '1970-01-01 00:00:00'},
'bts@square-r00t.net': {'comment': 'http://www.square-r00t.net',
'name': 'Brent S.',
'updated': 'Never/unknown'},
'r00t@sysadministrivia.com': {'comment': 'https://sysadministrivia.com',
'name': 'r00t^2',
'updated': 'Never/unknown'},
'squarer00t@keybase.io': {'comment': '',
'name': 'keybase.io/squarer00t',
'updated': 'Never/unknown'}}}
(because the emails are iterated through the keys).
the same structure is available via the "mykey" dictionary (e.g. to get the key ID of *your* key,
you can use "mykey['subkeys'][0][0]"):
{'change': False,
'check': None,
'local': False,
'notify': False,
'pkey': {'creation': '2017-09-07 20:54:31',
'email': 'test@test.com',
'key': '<GPGME object>',
'name': 'test user'},
'sign': False,
'status': None,
'subkeys': {'1CD9200637EC587D1F8EB94198748C2879CCE88D': '2017-09-07 20:54:31',
'2805EC3D90E2229795AFB73FF85BC40E6E17F339': '2017-09-07 20:54:31'},
'trust': 'ultimate',
'uids': {'test@test.com': {'comment': 'this is a testing junk key. DO NOT '
'IMPORT/SIGN/TRUST.',
'name': 'test user',
'updated': 'Never/unknown'}}}
2017-09-19 05:09:33 -04:00
you also have the following variables/lists/etc. available for templates (via the Jinja2 templating syntax[0]):
- "keyservers", a list of keyservers set.
2017-09-19 05:09:33 -04:00
[0] http://jinja.pocoo.org/docs/2.9/templates/