Following up on our IRC discussion on Monday, I have had a request to support signing git commits and tags with SSL certificates instead of SSH/GPG. The organization is heavily invested in SSL infrastructure, so they want to go down that path. The basic technique for doing this is, for example: openssl dgst -sha256 -sign key -out content.sha256 signature.txt -passin passphrase There is a pre-step to compute the sha256, in this example, into a file provided to openssl. We could use openssl to compute the hash also. Verification is a bit different than what SSH or GPG does: openssl dgst -sha256 -verify <(openssl x509 -in certificate -pubkey -noout) -signature sign.txt.sha256 signature.txt and reports either Verified OK Or Verification Failure It does not look like completion codes are consistently involved. This also does look structurally different than both GPG and SSH and more work to set up. It may be possible to provide wrappers and pretend we are in SSH, but I'm not sure that is the right path to take. Any pointers on how this might be done in existing git infrastructure, or should I look into making this work in code? Sorry to say that the documentation is not that clear on this. Thanks in advance, Randall -- Brief whoami: NonStop&UNIX developer since approximately UNIX(421664400) NonStop(211288444200000000) -- In real life, I talk too much.