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KEYNOTE(1)		   OpenBSD Reference Manual		    KEYNOTE(1)

NAME
     keynote - command line tool for keynote operations

SYNOPSIS
     keynote keygen AlgorithmName KeySize PublicKeyFile PrivateKeyFile
	     [print-offset] [print-length]

     keynote sign [-v] AlgorithmName AssertionFile PrivateKeyFile
	     [print-offset] [print-length]

     keynote sigver [AssertionFile]

     keynote verify [-h] [-e file] [-k file] [-l file] -r retlist [file ...]

DESCRIPTION
     For more details on KeyNote, see RFC 2704.

KEY GENERATION
     keynote keygen creates a public/private key of size KeySize (in bits),
     for the algorithm specified by AlgorithmName.  Typical keysizes are 512,
     1024, or 2048 (bits).  The minimum key size for DSA keys is 512 (bits).
     Supported AlgorithmName identifiers are:

	   dsa-hex:
	   dsa-base64:
	   rsa-hex:
	   rsa-base64:

     Notice that the trailing colon is required.  The resulting public key is
     stored in file PublicKeyFile.  Similarly, the resulting private key is
     stored in file PrivateKeyFile.  Either of the filenames can be specified
     to be `-', in which case the corresponding key(s) will be printed to
     standard output.

     The optional parameters print-offset and print-length specify the offset
     from the beginning of the line where the key will be printed, and the
     number of characters of the key that will be printed per line.
     print-length includes AlgorithmName for the first line and has to be
     longer (by at least 2) than AlgorithmName.	 print-length also accounts
     for the line-continuation character (backslash) at the end of each line,
     and the double quotes at the beginning and end of the key encoding.
     Default values are 12 and 50 respectively.

ASSERTION SIGNING
     keynote sign reads the assertion contained in AssertionFile and generates
     a signature specified by AlgorithmName using the private key stored in
     PrivateKeyFile.  The private key is expected to be of the form output by
     keynote keygen.  The private key algorithm and the AlgorithmName
     specified as an argument are expected to match.  There is no requirement
     for the internal or ASCII encodings to match.  Valid AlgorithmName
     identifiers are:

	   sig-dsa-sha1-hex:
	   sig-dsa-sha1-base64:
	   sig-rsa-sha1-hex:
	   sig-rsa-sha1-base64:
	   sig-rsa-md5-hex:
	   sig-rsa-md5-base64:
	   sig-x509-sha1-hex:
	   sig-x509-sha1-base64:

     Notice that the trailing colon is required.  The resulting signature is
     printed to standard output.  This can then be added (via cut-and-paste or
     some script) at the end of the assertion, in the Signature field.

     The public key corresponding to the private key in PrivateKeyFile is
     expected to already be included in the Authorizer field of the assertion,
     either directly or indirectly (i.e., through use of a Local-Constants
     attribute).  Furthermore, the assertion must have a Signature field (even
     if it is empty), as the signature is computed on everything between the
     KeyNote-Version and Signature keywords (inclusive), and the AlgorithmName
     string.

     If the -v flag is provided, keynote sign will also verify the newly-
     created signature using the Authorizer field key.

     The optional parameters print-offset and print-length specify the offset
     from the beginning of the line where the signature will be printed, and
     the number of characters of the signature that will be printed per line.
     print-length includes AlgorithmName for the first line and has to be
     longer (by at least 2) than AlgorithmName.	 print-length also accounts
     for the line-continuation character (backslash) at the end of each line,
     and the double quotes at the beginning and end of the signature encoding.
     Default values are 12 and 50 respectively.

SIGNATURE VERIFICATION
     keynote sigver reads the assertions contained in AssertionFile and
     verifies the public-key signatures on all of them.

QUERY TOOL
     For each operand that names a file, keynote verify reads the file and
     parses the assertions contained therein (one assertion per file).

     The options are as follows:

     -e file  Specify a file containing environment variables and their
	      values, in the following format:

		    varname = "value"

	      varname can begin with any letter (upper or lower case) or
	      number, and can contain underscores.  value is a quoted string,
	      and can contain any character, and escape (backslash) processing
	      is performed, as specified in the KeyNote RFC.

     -h	      Print a usage message and exit.

     -k file  Add a key from file in the action authorizers.

     -l file  Specify a file containing trusted assertions (no signature
	      verification is performed), and the Authorizer field can contain
	      non-key principals.  There should be at least one assertion with
	      the POLICY keyword in the Authorizer field.

     -r retlist
	      Specify a comma-separated list of return values, in increasing
	      order of compliance from left to right.

     Exactly one -r and at least one each of the -e, -l, and -k flags should
     be given per invocation.  If no flags are given, keynote verify prints
     the usage message and exits with error code -1.

     keynote verify exits with code -1 if there was an error, and 0 on
     success.

SEE ALSO
     keynote(3), keynote(4), keynote(5)

     M. Blaze, J. Feigenbaum, and A. D. Keromytis, The KeyNote
     Trust-Management System, Version 2, RFC 2704, 1999.

     M. Blaze, J. Feigenbaum, and J. Lacy, "Decentralized Trust Management",
     IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy, 1996.

     M. Blaze, J. Feigenbaum, and M. Strauss, "Compliance-Checking in the
     PolicyMaker Trust Management System", Financial Crypto Conference, 1998.

AUTHORS
     Angelos D. Keromytis <angelos@cs.columbia.edu>

WEB PAGE
     http://www1.cs.columbia.edu/~angelos/keynote.html

BUGS
     None that we know of.  If you find any, please report them at
     <keynote@research.att.com>.

OpenBSD 4.9		       December 22, 2010		   OpenBSD 4.9
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