Keyservers are largely a thing of the past with the replacement systems like keys.openpgp.net specifically designed to offer no support for the web of trust. Remove all sections that talk about keyservers and add a small section with the link to kernel.org documentation that talks about using the kernel.org public key repository. Signed-off-by: Konstantin Ryabitsev <konstantin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> diff --git a/Documentation/process/maintainer-pgp-guide.rst b/Documentation/process/maintainer-pgp-guide.rst index cdd108f50fe7..01112ac7723e 100644 --- a/Documentation/process/maintainer-pgp-guide.rst +++ b/Documentation/process/maintainer-pgp-guide.rst @@ -121,18 +121,6 @@ edit your ``~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf`` file to set your own values:: to remove anything you had in place for older versions of GnuPG, as it may not be doing the right thing any more. -Set up a refresh cronjob -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -You will need to regularly refresh your keyring in order to get the -latest changes on other people's public keys, which is best done with a -daily cronjob:: - - @daily /usr/bin/gpg2 --refresh >/dev/null 2>&1 - -Check the full path to your ``gpg`` or ``gpg2`` command and use the -``gpg2`` command if regular ``gpg`` for you is the legacy GnuPG v.1. - .. _protect_your_key: Protect your PGP key @@ -228,11 +216,6 @@ separate signing subkey:: $ gpg --quick-addkey [fpr] ed25519 sign -Remember to tell the keyservers about this change, so others can pull down -your new subkey:: - - $ gpg --send-key [fpr] - .. note:: ECC support in GnuPG GnuPG 2.1 and later has full support for Elliptic Curve @@ -906,65 +889,17 @@ the new default in GnuPG v2). To set it, add (or modify) the trust-model tofu+pgp -How to use keyservers (more) safely ------------------------------------ - -If you get a "No public key" error when trying to validate someone's -tag, then you should attempt to lookup that key using a keyserver. It is -important to keep in mind that there is absolutely no guarantee that the -key you retrieve from PGP keyservers belongs to the actual person -- -that much is by design. You are supposed to use the Web of Trust to -establish key validity. - -How to properly maintain the Web of Trust is beyond the scope of this -document, simply because doing it properly requires both effort and -dedication that tends to be beyond the caring threshold of most human -beings. Here are some shortcuts that will help you reduce the risk of -importing a malicious key. - -First, let's say you've tried to run ``git verify-tag`` but it returned -an error saying the key is not found:: - - $ git verify-tag sunxi-fixes-for-4.15-2 - gpg: Signature made Sun 07 Jan 2018 10:51:55 PM EST - gpg: using RSA key DA73759BF8619E484E5A3B47389A54219C0F2430 - gpg: issuer "wens@xxxxxx" - gpg: Can't check signature: No public key - -Let's query the keyserver for more info about that key fingerprint (the -fingerprint probably belongs to a subkey, so we can't use it directly -without finding out the ID of the master key it is associated with):: - - $ gpg --search DA73759BF8619E484E5A3B47389A54219C0F2430 - gpg: data source: hkp://keys.gnupg.net - (1) Chen-Yu Tsai <wens@xxxxxx> - 4096 bit RSA key C94035C21B4F2AEB, created: 2017-03-14, expires: 2019-03-15 - Keys 1-1 of 1 for "DA73759BF8619E484E5A3B47389A54219C0F2430". Enter number(s), N)ext, or Q)uit > q - -Locate the ID of the master key in the output, in our example -``C94035C21B4F2AEB``. Now display the key of Linus Torvalds that you -have on your keyring:: - - $ gpg --list-key torvalds@xxxxxxxxxx - pub rsa2048 2011-09-20 [SC] - ABAF11C65A2970B130ABE3C479BE3E4300411886 - uid [ unknown] Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxx> - sub rsa2048 2011-09-20 [E] - -Next, find a trust path from Linus Torvalds to the key-id you found via ``gpg ---search`` of the unknown key. For this, you can use several tools including -https://github.com/mricon/wotmate, -https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/docs/kernel/pgpkeys.git/tree/graphs, and -https://the.earth.li/~noodles/pathfind.html. - -If you get a few decent trust paths, then it's a pretty good indication -that it is a valid key. You can add it to your keyring from the -keyserver now:: - - $ gpg --recv-key C94035C21B4F2AEB - -This process is not perfect, and you are obviously trusting the -administrators of the PGP Pathfinder service to not be malicious (in -fact, this goes against :ref:`devs_not_infra`). However, if you -do not carefully maintain your own web of trust, then it is a marked -improvement over blindly trusting keyservers. +Using the kernel.org web of trust repository +-------------------------------------------- + +Kernel.org maintains a git repository with developers' public keys as a +replacement for replicating keyserver networks that have gone mostly +dark in the past few years. The full documentation for how to set up +that repository as your source of public keys can be found here: + +- `Kernel developer PGP Keyring`_ + +If you are a kernel developer, please consider submitting your key for +inclusion into that keyring. + +.. _`Kernel developer PGP Keyring`: https://korg.docs.kernel.org/pgpkeys.html -- b4 0.10.0-dev-49460