#!/bin/bash # Copyright 2018 B. Persson, Bjorn@Rombobeorn.se # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along # with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., # 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. function print_help { cat <<'EOF' Usage: gpgverify --keyring= --signature= --data= gpgverify is a wrapper around gpgv designed for easy and safe scripting. It verifies a file against a detached OpenPGP signature and a keyring. The keyring shall contain all the keys that are trusted to certify the authenticity of the file, and must not contain any untrusted keys. The differences, compared to invoking gpgv directly, are that gpgverify accepts the keyring in either ASCII-armored or unarmored form, and that it will not accidentally use a default keyring in addition to the specified one. Parameters: --keyring= keyring with all the trusted keys and no others --signature= detached signature to verify --data= file to verify against the signature EOF } fatal_error() { message="$1" # an error message status=$2 # a number to use as the exit code echo "gpgverify: $message" >&2 exit $status } require_parameter() { term="$1" # a term for a required parameter value="$2" # Complain and terminate if this value is empty. if test -z "${value}" ; then fatal_error "No ${term} was provided." 2 fi } check_status() { action="$1" # a string that describes the action that was attempted status=$2 # the exit code of the command if test $status -ne 0 ; then fatal_error "$action failed." $status fi } # Parse the command line. keyring= signature= data= for parameter in "$@" ; do case "${parameter}" in (--help) print_help exit ;; (--keyring=*) keyring="${parameter#*=}" ;; (--signature=*) signature="${parameter#*=}" ;; (--data=*) data="${parameter#*=}" ;; (*) fatal_error "Unknown parameter: \"${parameter}\"" 2 ;; esac done require_parameter 'keyring' "${keyring}" require_parameter 'signature' "${signature}" require_parameter 'data file' "${data}" # Make a temporary working directory. workdir="$(mktemp --directory)" check_status 'Making a temporary directory' $? workring="${workdir}/keyring.gpg" # Decode any ASCII armor on the keyring. This is harmless if the keyring isn't # ASCII-armored. gpg2 --homedir="${workdir}" --yes --output="${workring}" --dearmor "${keyring}" check_status 'Decoding the keyring' $? # Verify the signature using the decoded keyring. gpgv2 --homedir="${workdir}" --keyring="${workring}" "${signature}" "${data}" check_status 'Signature verification' $? # (--homedir isn't actually necessary. --dearmor processes only the input file, # and if --keyring is used and contains a slash, then gpgv2 uses only that # keyring. Thus neither command will look for a default keyring, but --homedir # makes extra double sure that no default keyring will be touched in case # another version of GPG works differently.) # Clean up. (This is not done in case of an error that may need inspection.) rm --recursive --force ${workdir}