sq-pki-identify - Identify a certificate
sq pki identify [OPTIONS]
Identify a certificate.
Identify a certificate by finding authenticated bindings (User ID
and certificate pairs).
An error is return if no binding could be authenticated to the
specified level (by default: fully authenticated, i.e., a trust amount of
120).
If a binding could be partially authenticated (i.e., its trust
amount is greater than 0), then the binding is displayed, even if the trust
is below the specified threshold.
- --amount=AMOUNT
- The required amount of trust
- 120 indicates full authentication; values less than 120 indicate partial
authentication. When `--certification-network` is passed, this defaults to
1200, i.e., this command tries to find 10 paths.
- --cert=FINGERPRINT|KEYID
- Use certificates with the specified fingerprint or key ID
- --certification-network
- Treats the network as a certification network
- Normally, the authentication machinery treats the Web of Trust network as
an authentication network where a certification only means that the
binding is correct, not that the target should be treated as a trusted
introducer. In a certification network, the targets of certifications are
treated as trusted introducers with infinite depth, and any regular
expressions are ignored. Note: The trust amount remains unchanged. This is
how most so-called PGP path-finding algorithms work.
- --gossip
- Treats all certificates as unreliable trust roots
- This option is useful for figuring out what others think about a
certificate (i.e., gossip or hearsay). In other words, this finds
arbitrary paths to a particular certificate.
- Gossip is useful in helping to identify alternative ways to authenticate a
certificate. For instance, imagine Ed wants to authenticate Laura's
certificate, but asking her directly is inconvenient. Ed discovers that
Micah has certified Laura's certificate, but Ed hasn't yet authenticated
Micah's certificate. If Ed is willing to rely on Micah as a trusted
introducer, and authenticating Micah's certificate is easier than
authenticating Laura's certificate, then Ed has learned about an easier
way to authenticate Laura's certificate.
- Stable since 1.1.0.
- --show-paths
- Show why a binding is authenticated
- By default, only a user ID and certificate binding's degree of
authentication (a value between 0 and 120) is shown. This changes the
output to also show how that value was computed by showing the paths from
the trust roots to the bindings.
- --unusable
- Show bindings that are unusable
- Normally, unusable certificates and bindings are not shown. This option
considers bindings, even if they are not unusable, because they (or the
certificates) are not valid according to the policy, are revoked, or are
not live.
- This option only makes sense with `--gossip`, because unusable bindings
are still considered unauthenticated.
- Stable since 1.1.0.
See sq(1) for a description of the global options.
Identify the user IDs that can be authenticated for the
certificate.
EB28F26E2739A4870ECC47726F0073F60FD0CBF0
List all user IDs that have that have been certified by
anyone.
sq pki identify --gossip --cert \
511257EBBF077B7AEDAE5D093F68CB84CE537C9A
sq(1), sq-pki(1).
For the full documentation see
<https://book.sequoia-pgp.org/>.