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1 twoaday 222 \input texinfo
2    
3     @setfilename WinPT
4    
5     This file describes the Windows Privacy Tray program and its main functions
6    
7     This file is free under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2.
8    
9     Copyright (C) 2006 Timo Schulz
10    
11 twoaday 253 Version 0.9.0
12 twoaday 222
13 twoaday 253 @settitle WinPT - The Windows Privacy Tray; a free GPG front-end
14 twoaday 222
15     @section Requirements for WinPT
16    
17 twoaday 253 First you need to have a working GnuPG 1.4 installtion on the machine you plan to install WinPT.
18     If you do not have GPG in your machine, please visit http://www.gnupg.org and download the latest
19     GPG version there. It comes with a graphical installer so there is no need to do this step manually.
20 twoaday 222
21 twoaday 253 You need at least Windows 98/2K/XP, but Windows XP or better is recommend. The program also works
22     on NT/95/ME but there is no support for these OS versions any longer. Mainly because the OS
23     vendor also dropped support and no bug fixes will be provided any longer.
24     And it is very likely that work optimal on such platforms.
25 twoaday 222
26 twoaday 224 @section A short Introduction
27 twoaday 225
28 twoaday 253 WinPT is a graphical GnuPG front-end which resides in the task bar. It is divided into several,
29     so-called, managers. There is a manager for the key(ring), for files and for smart cards.
30     The aim of the program is to secure email communication and to perform file encryption and
31 twoaday 246 to allow an easy and user friendly way for key management.
32 twoaday 222
33 twoaday 224 @subsection What is GnuPG
34 twoaday 253 GnuPG is a tool for secure communication and data storage. It can be used to encrypt data and
35     to create digital signatures. It includes an advanced key management facility and is compliant
36 twoaday 224 with the proposed Internet standard as described in RFC2440.
37    
38     @subsection The Web of Trust
39 twoaday 253 For a detailled description of these and other GnuPG topics, I recommend the available literature
40     at http://www.gnupg.org. But at least a general overview should be given here.
41 twoaday 224
42 twoaday 253 The certification scheme of OpenPGP does not base on a hirachical approach. Instead it uses
43     a combination of ownertrust and direct key certification.
44     Here is an example with the imaginary persons called Alice, Bob, Carol and Dave.
45 twoaday 224
46 twoaday 253 Alice knows Bob and checked the fingerprint of Bob's key when he met him personally.
47     Thus she knows that the key really belongs to its owner and he trusts Bob to certify other keys.
48     Then she issued a signature on Bob's key. Bob knows Carol and also checked her identity.
49     Then he signed her key. Alice does not know Carol, but he knows Bob and Bob trusts Carol.
50     And because Alice trusts Bob, at a level she decided before, he also trusts Carol.
51     It's a transitiv relation. Dave is isolated and does not know anybody for the mentioned reasons,
52     thus he is not in the WoT. Another very important point is, that the signer can decide, after the
53     certification, how much he trusts the key owner to certify other keys.
54 twoaday 224
55 twoaday 253 It is very important to check the identify of a key owner. Mostly this is done by comparing the
56     fingerprint, which were submitted by phone or written down at a personal meeting, with the
57     fingerprint of the key in the keyring. Please bear in mind that anybody can create a key with an
58     email address and a specific name.
59     Thus it is not recommend to sign keys without doing this check before!
60 twoaday 224
61 twoaday 253 The fingerprint of the key is hexadecial (160-bit) sequence divided into 10 groups of 4 hex
62     digits. You can get the fingerprint of a key by opening the key property dialog. There you can
63     mark the fingerprint and copy it to the clipboard. The fingerprint of a key can be compared
64 twoaday 231 to human fingerprints, it is unique for each key.
65 twoaday 224
66     Example: 1D75 8108 5BC9 D9FB E78B 2078 ED46 81C9 BF3D F9B4
67    
68 twoaday 227 It is a good idea to publish your fingerprint wherever possible.
69     For example via a business card or your website.
70    
71 twoaday 222 @section Installation of the Program
72    
73 twoaday 253 It is always recommend to use the latest version of the program. You can download it from
74     http://wald.intevation.org/projects/winpt. Download the zip file with the binaries inside and
75     unpack them in a folder. All files need to be in the same folder, so if you change the folder do
76     not forget to move all files.
77     You should also download and verify the signature of the packet to make sure that the release is
78     really authentic and were not altered in any way.
79 twoaday 222
80 twoaday 253 To activate the program you just need to start WinPT.exe. You should now see a
81     little (golden key) icon in the taskbar which indicates that the program is running.
82     If you want to quit the program, right click on the symbol and select "Exit".
83 twoaday 222
84 twoaday 253 Alternative, you may use one of the graphical GPG installers which are available on the internet.
85     I recommend to use Gpg4Win which includes a set of very useful privacy tools, beside WinPT and it
86     is very easy to use with an average size (~4MB). For non-German speaking users, I recommend the
87     light version because it does not contain the 2 German PDF manuals.
88 twoaday 222
89 twoaday 225 @subsection Getting the Source of the Program
90 twoaday 253 As free software, according to the GNU General Public License, WinPT also offers the source code
91     for the program. It can be used for reviews, to compile your own binary and/or to modify and/or
92     redistribute it or just to learn how it works. The source is available at the same place you
93     downloaded the binary. If not, you should contact the author of the site.
94     The entire program can be build with free software; the default environment is a cross-compiler
95     hosted on a Linux box. All you need is the mingw32 packages, a working autoconf environment
96 twoaday 225 and the libs WinPT depends on (currently gpgme and libgpg-error).
97 twoaday 253 It is also possible to build the binary with cygwin/mingw32 on Windows but this environment is
98     not actively supported and propably needs adjustment of the source.
99 twoaday 225
100 twoaday 222 @subsection Configure the Program
101 twoaday 253 After the installation not much of the default settings need to be changed. If you prefer a
102     special keyserver, it is propably a good idea to open the keyserver dialog and to set one of the
103     existing keyservers as the default or create a new entry and mark it as the new default.
104     The default keyserver is subkeys.pgp.net, which is the best choice for most users.
105 twoaday 222
106 twoaday 253 @subsection The GPG Preference Dialog
107     In this dialog you can change your GPG config and customize its behaviour. Please be advised that
108     in most cases there is no need to overwrite the default GPG path settings.
109     There are three different paths available. First, the GPG home directory. The place where the
110     keyrings are stored and also the config files. The second path points directly to the gpg.exe.
111     The third is the path to the language files,
112     where you usually store your winpt.mo/gpg.mo files. These entries should be only changed when
113     really need and extra caution is needed because with wrong settings, WinPT will not be able to
114     work any longer!
115 twoaday 222
116 twoaday 253 The second part of the dialog is the "General GPG options" section. Here you can influence the
117     behaviour of some commands. If you do not know what they mean, it is safe not to change the
118     values and stick with the default ones.
119     For expert users, it is possible to set the signature class of issued key signatures and to set
120     an expiration date for key signatures or to specify an comment in armor files.
121     The "Encrypt to this key" might be useful for anybody who needs to decrypt mails or any data he
122     sent to a recipient. The field value should contain the key ID of the default key pair.
123    
124 twoaday 222 @subsection Preferences
125 twoaday 253 In the WinPT preference dialog, the user can modify and/or disable the default options. For new
126     users it is suggested to leave the default values as they are, except when there are problems
127     related to the hotkeys.
128 twoaday 222
129 twoaday 253 To enable keyring backups, the user can either decide to use the GPG home directory as the backup
130     folder or any other folder. In the latter case, a folder needs to be chosen.
131 twoaday 222
132     @section The First Start
133 twoaday 225
134 twoaday 253 This section is only important for people who never installed and/or used WinPT before and thus
135     no keyrings are available.
136 twoaday 222
137 twoaday 253 When the program is started the first time, it offers two choices. The one is to generate a key
138     pair and the other is to copy existing GPG keyrings into the current installation.
139 twoaday 222
140     We assume the user will select the first entry.
141    
142 twoaday 253 Now a new dialog is shown which requests some information from the user to allow a meaningful
143     association between the key and the user. If the user prefer RSA keys, the check box should be
144     marked.
145     But this is a decision of personal taste and does not influence the security or anything else.
146     If the entered data is OK, WinPT then generates a new key pair. As long as this step takes, a
147     progress dialog is shown to indicate the enduring process. When the generation of the keypair is
148     done, WinPT offers the chance to backup the existing keyrings.
149     This is definitely an important decision because if the keyring will get corrupted or lost, there
150     is no way to recover the encrypted data. That is why it is also important to store the backup, at
151     least of the secret keyring, at a @strong{safe} place.
152 twoaday 222
153 twoaday 246 @section The Passphrase for the Secret Key
154    
155 twoaday 253 First a short explaination what passphrase is. A passphrase is like a password but usually
156     longer, maybe a sentence, which can consists of any 7-bit ASCII characters. It is used to protect
157     your secret key and thus it is very import to chose a secure passphrase. If your computer, and
158     thus the secret key, were stolen and an attacker can guess your passphrase he is able to decrypt
159     all your data and to create signatures in your name! A good passphrase is difficult to guess but
160     easy to remember and should be at least 10 characters long.
161     An easy way to generate a strong passphrase is to use a sentence only you know but you can easily
162     remind and then take the first letter of each word, plus some special characters and maybe even
163     some intentionally made spelling mistakes.
164    
165 twoaday 246 Example: Row - row - row your boat, gently down the stream
166 twoaday 253 Passphrase: "R - r - ryb,gdt"
167 twoaday 246
168     Never write down or passphrase or share it among other people!
169    
170 twoaday 222 @section Keyserver Access
171 twoaday 225
172 twoaday 253 An easy way to retrieve keys is the keyserver. You can think of it like a huge database with a
173     lot of keys as its content. It is possible to search keys by a pattern, a keyid or even a
174     fingerprint.
175     WinPT allows to access different kind of keyservers. For example LDAP, HKP, Finger and HTTP.
176     But the focus will be set on HKP because this is the common case.
177 twoaday 222
178 twoaday 253 In some situations WinPT asks the user whether to retrieve keys automatically. One example is the
179     signature verification when the key that issued the signature was not found in the keyring.
180 twoaday 222
181 twoaday 253 The main keyserver dialog allows to fetch one or more keys directly or to search for a given pattern.
182 twoaday 222
183     @subsection Retrieve a key by Key ID
184 twoaday 224 The best way to fetch a key from the server is by the key ID.
185 twoaday 253 Just enter the key ID, it is a good idea to prefix it with 0x, and click the "Receive" button.
186 twoaday 222
187 twoaday 224 An example:
188    
189     pattern: 0xBF3DF9B4
190    
191     [Receive]
192    
193    
194 twoaday 222 @subsection Retrieve a key by its email address
195 twoaday 253 If you only know the email address from your partner, you can enter it instead of the key ID.
196     It is unlikely but possible that there are more keys with the same address. In this situation,
197     WinPT will warn you that multiple keys were imported. The difference to the search function is,
198     that the keys were dirctly fetched and not displayed as a key result list.
199 twoaday 222
200 twoaday 224
201     An example:
202    
203     pattern: name_of_friend@@gmx.net
204    
205     [Receive]
206    
207    
208 twoaday 222 @subsection Search for a key by pattern
209 twoaday 253 If you want to communicate with a new mail partner and you are not sure about the key ID, it can
210     be useful to search for his email address. This address is considered as quite unique.
211 twoaday 222
212     An example:
213    
214 twoaday 224 pattern: winpt@@windows-privacy-tray.com
215 twoaday 222
216     [Search]
217    
218 twoaday 253 Now a dialog is opened with a list of all keys which matched the search string. If the name
219     @strong{and} the email address is known, the matching key should be selected and "Receive"
220     should be clicked. Then the key will be downloaded and added to your keyring. Now you can encrypt
221     data with this key, for example an email.
222 twoaday 222
223 twoaday 224 @subsection Sending a Key to the Keyserver
224 twoaday 253 After you generated a new key pair, it is a good idea to send your key to the keyserver to make
225     it available for other users. If you issue a signature, the key ID is part of the signature and
226     people can automatically retrieve your key when they try to verify the signature.
227 twoaday 222
228 twoaday 253 Actually, the action is performed in the Key Manager and not in the keyserver dialog. Just open
229     the Key Manager, select the key you want to send right-click on it and chose "Send to Keyserver"
230     in the popup menu. Then a message box with the result is shown.
231 twoaday 224
232     @subsection Add, Delete or Edit a Keyserver Entry
233 twoaday 253 The keyserver dialog allow to change the existing keyserver entries, to delete them or to add new
234     entries. Just right click on a selected item and a popup menu will be
235     shown with ("Edit", "Remove" and "New").
236 twoaday 224
237     @section Using the Clipboard
238 twoaday 225
239 twoaday 253 A major aim from the first day was, that the program does not depend on a special mailer client.
240     For this reason it uses the clipboard to encrypt and/or sign data.
241     For the examples, let's assume that you want to write a new mail or that you received a mail
242     protected by GnuPG.
243 twoaday 224
244 twoaday 253 @subsection The Clipboard Editor
245     This dialog allows it to modify the clipboard contents directly and/or to display the contents of
246     the clipboard. It is also possible to load a text file into the clipboard or store the contents
247     into a file. For the convenience, the dialog also allows to encrypt and/or decrypt clipboard data.
248    
249 twoaday 224 @subsection Encrypt Data in the Clipboard
250 twoaday 253 Just copy the text from the mailer window into the clipboard. This is usually done by CTRL+C,
251     make sure you really selected all portions of the text. Then right-click on the tray icon and
252     select Clipboard->Encryption. Now a dialog is shown to select the recipients. This means you need
253     to select all keys which should be able to decrypt the mail. Confirm with "OK". GnuPG now
254     encrypts the data with the selected recipients. At the end a message box with the result is
255     shown. Now the clipboard should contain the encrypted data. Just paste it into the mailer window.
256     The output should contain a header and a footer "BEGIN PGP MESSAGE" and "END PGP MESSAGE.
257 twoaday 224
258     @subsection Decrypt/Verify Data from the Clipboard
259 twoaday 253 The most common case is propably that you got a signed email and now you want to verify it. For
260     this procedure, you have to copy the entire signature in the clipboard. The easiest way is to
261     use CTRL+A and CTRL+C, then all available text will be copied. WinPT (GnuPG) is smart enough to
262     figure out the signature related data. Now go to the taskbar, display the popup menu and select
263     Clipboard->Decrypt/Verify. Now a new dialog, the verify dialog, should be available on screen
264     with all information about the signature. For example who is the signer, when was it signed how
265     much do you try this key and what was signed and most important, the status of it (is the
266     signature good or BAD).
267     A special case is when you don't have the public key to verify the signature, if this happens
268     WinPT offers to download the key from the default keyserver. If the key was not found, the
269     procedure is aborted because without the key the sig cannot bed checked.
270 twoaday 224
271     @subsection Sign the Clipboard
272 twoaday 253 We assume that text that shall be signed is already in the clipboard. If not, select the text you
273     want to sign and copy with via CTRL+C in the clipboard. Now go to the taskbar and open the peopup
274     menu, Clipboard->Sign. If you just have one secret key, the passphrase dialog will be automatically shown.
275     All you need is to enter your passphrase and confirm. In case of more available secret keys, a
276     list with all keys is shown and you can select which key shall be used for signing.
277     The output is always a cleartext signature which is in text format. Do not try to sign binary
278     clipboard data, the result would be unpredictable and not readable by human beings.
279 twoaday 224
280 twoaday 232 @section The Current Window Support
281 twoaday 253 Compared to the clipboard mode, the CWS mode has some advantages. Let us assume that you want to
282     extract text from an editor window. With the CWS mode, the program automatically tries to focus
283     the window to select the text and to copy it to the clipboard and execute the
284     selected command (Sign, Encrypt, Decrypt).
285     No manual user interaction is needed. Except this different behaviour, it is very likewise to the
286     clipboard mode and thus we do not describe each command again.
287 twoaday 232
288 twoaday 224 @section The Key Manager
289 twoaday 225
290 twoaday 253 This part of the program is propably most important for many users. It contains function to
291     manage your keyring and to perform actions which are required and/or useful in the OpenPGP environment.
292 twoaday 224
293     @subsection Tips
294    
295     @itemize @bullet
296    
297     @item
298 twoaday 253 If you want to import quickly a key from a into the keyring, just drag and drop the file into the
299     Key Manager window. Then the import procedure will be automatically started.
300 twoaday 224
301     @item
302 twoaday 253 Key which were fetched from keyservers often contain a lot of, maybe obsolete, self signatures,
303     if you want to get rid of them you can use the Key Edit->Clean feature. Just start the edit
304 twoaday 224 dialog and select the clean command. That's it.
305    
306     @item
307 twoaday 253 The keyserver dialog does not allow to import a key directly via an URL, as an alternative you
308     may use the "Import HTTP..." feature in the Key Manager. With it you can directly fetch keys
309 twoaday 224 from the web (Example: http://www.users.my-isp.de/~joe/gpg-keys.asc).
310    
311     @item
312 twoaday 253 To customize the parameters of the generated key, you can use the expert key generation.
313     It allows you to set the public key algorithm and/or the size of the key directly.
314 twoaday 224
315 twoaday 225 @item
316 twoaday 253 Most of the list view based dialogs allow to use the right mouse button, to show popup menus with
317     available commands.
318 twoaday 225
319 twoaday 224 @end itemize
320    
321 twoaday 225 @subsection Create a Revocation Certificate
322 twoaday 253 It is very important to do this step early as possible. With this certificate, you can revoke
323     your entire key. The reason for this can be for example, that your key is no longer used or even
324     compromised.
325     After you generated the revocation cert, you should move it to a secure place because anybody who
326     gets access to it, can render your key unuseable.
327 twoaday 225
328 twoaday 253 Just right-click on your key and select "Revoke Cert". If you do this step directly after key
329     generation, there is no need to change the default values. Just select a file name and enter the
330     passphrase. The program issues a warning which should be read carefully.
331 twoaday 225
332 twoaday 227 @subsection Adding a new Secondary Key
333 twoaday 222
334 twoaday 253 For most users the existing keys in the key pair are enough and no extra key is needed. But there
335     are some exceptions.
336 twoaday 222
337     @itemize @bullet
338    
339     @item
340 twoaday 253 The primary key has no secondary key and the primary key is not able to encrypt data. In this
341     case it can be a good idea to add a secondary encryption key.
342 twoaday 222
343     @item
344 twoaday 253 A lot of people use secondary encryption keys with an expiration date. Usually the key is valid
345     for 1-2 years. After the key is expired, a new key is needed in order to encrypt data.
346 twoaday 222
347     @end itemize
348    
349 twoaday 253 What kind of public key algorithm should be selected is a matter of taste. RSA and ElGamal are
350     both capable for encryption. For most users it's a good idea to let the program chose the key
351     size (in bits). The default settings should be secure enough for most purposes.
352 twoaday 222
353 twoaday 227 @subsection Adding a new User ID
354 twoaday 253 If you got a new email account, it's propably a good idea to add these new account to your key
355     also. For example:
356 twoaday 222
357 twoaday 253 A new account was registed at gmail.com (john.doo@@gmail.com).
358 twoaday 222 Then you should create a new user ID with the following fields:
359    
360     name: John Doo
361    
362     email: john.doo@@gmail.com
363    
364     comment: (optional)
365    
366 twoaday 253 Now email programs are able to associate this address with your key when somebody wants to send
367     you a protected mail to this account.
368 twoaday 222
369 twoaday 227 @subsection Adding a new Photographic ID
370 twoaday 253 With this function you can add a photo to your public. It will be displayed in the key property
371     dialog.
372 twoaday 222
373 twoaday 253 You just need to select a JPEG file which contains the photo and enter your passphrase and
374     confirm with OK. Please read the note in the dialog carefully to make sure the photo has a proper
375     size (file, height and weight).
376 twoaday 222
377 twoaday 227 @subsection Adding a new Designated Revoker
378 twoaday 253 If you want to allow another key to revoke your own key, this might be useful if you lost your
379     secret or a simliar situation, you can use this function to add a designated revoker to your key.
380 twoaday 222
381 twoaday 253 All you need to do is to select the key you want to add as a desig revoker. But please bear in
382     mind that this procedure cannot be undone and that this person really has the power to make your
383     public key unuseable. You really should trust the selected key, in case it is not a key owned by yourself.
384 twoaday 222
385 twoaday 226 @subsection Export a Public Key
386 twoaday 253 There are several reason why to export a public key and there are also several ways to do it. If
387     you want to send the key directly to a mail recipient, you can select the key, right-click,
388     and select "Send Key to Mail Recipient". As an alternative, you can also export it to the
389     clipboard or to a file. To export a key to the clipboard, you can select "Copy key to Clipboard"
390     in the popup menu of the selected key. To export it to a file, you need to select the menu "Key"
391     and then "Export...". The program will automatically suggest a name for the output.
392 twoaday 226
393 twoaday 253 @subsection Export your Secret Key
394     This command should be used with caution because it exports your secret key. Please bear in mind
395     that you should never export your key to a place where it can be accessed by others.
396     An USB stick or a likewise mobile storage device should be used for the export.
397    
398 twoaday 226 @subsection Import a Public Key
399 twoaday 253 Similar to the key import, the import of a key can be done in several ways. First, let's assume
400     you got a mail with an OpenPGP key included as inline text. Then you can use the current window
401     feature and "Decrypt/Verify" to import the key. Alternative you also may use the clipboard.
402     To achieve this, you first need to select the entire key (CTRL+A) and then copy it to the
403     clipboard (CTRL+C), then use the Key Manager (Edit->Paste) to import it. If the key is stored as
404     an attachment, or you want to import a key from a file in general, just drag the file and drop it
405 twoaday 226 into the Key Manager window or use "Key" -> "Import...".
406    
407 twoaday 227 @subsection Sign a Public Key
408 twoaday 253 If you verified that a key really belongs to its owner, you should sign the key to integrate it
409     into your Web of Trust and also to mark the key as valid in your keyring. Do not sign a key you
410     just got via email with the request to sign it. Anybody can create a key with your (or better ANY) name,
411     these information are no hint to whom the key really belongs. You can check a key
412     by meeting or calling the key owner and verify the key fingerprint of the key with the one
413     published by the key owner. Additional checks should be to watch at his driver license or the
414     identity card to make sure that name of the key matches the name of the key owner. After this
415     procedure is done, you can open the Key Manager, select the right key and either use the context
416     menu "Sign Key" or use the toolbar button.
417 twoaday 227
418 twoaday 253 The next dialog will summarize the key information and some additional options. For example if
419     the signature should be local or exportable. Local means the signature will be stripped if you
420     export the key and no one else except you can use it to calculate the validity. If you mark the
421     signature exportable, any other user can see and use it. Now you can select the key you want to
422     use to sign and enter the passphrase. Confirm with "OK" and the key will be signed. Now the validity
423     of the new key is "Full". It is propably a good idea to set the ownertrust of the key.
424     For a detailled description, see the chapter "Key Ownertrust".
425 twoaday 227
426     @subsection Key Ownertrust
427 twoaday 253 First we should explain what the ownertrust of a key is. The ownertrust is a measurement how much
428     you trust somebody to certify and check keys of other people. For example, if you know that Bob
429     is really the owner of the key, you should sign it. But he is also known to sign other keys
430     without checking the idenity of the other key owner. Values for the ownertrust are
431     1) Don't Know 2) Don't Trust 3) Marginal 4) Full
432     and thus you should propably use an ownertrust value like "Marginal". But this is a personal
433     decision and stored in a separate file and never exported with the public keys. For further
434     information, please take a look into the GNU Privacy Handbook.
435     Just a last work on Key Pairs, they are automatically marked as "Ultimate" because the key
436     belongs to you and you trust it implicit.
437 twoaday 242
438 twoaday 253 @subsection List Signatures
439     This dialog contains a list of all signatures of the selected key. The basic dialog, the tree
440     based version, just shows signatures when the issuer key is in the public keyring. A double click
441     opens the signature property dialog which contains detailled description about the selected
442     signature. A dialog which is useful for people who wants to get all information about the key
443     signatures, can click on the "Edit.." button.
444    
445     @subsection Copy Key Information to the Clipboard
446     Often it is useful to copy parts of the user ID to the clipboard. One example is that you want to
447     send an email to the key owner or that you want to search the key by the email address or you
448     want to copy the fingerprint to the clipboard to paste it somewhere else.
449     This command is available in the popup menu (right click).
450    
451     @subsection Delete one or more Keys
452     To delete a key, or more than one key, you just need to select the keys in the Key Manager and
453     either select "Delete" or use the toolbar button.
454     Be careful if you delete a key pair, because you will not be able to decrypt and/or sign data any
455     longer. In any case you should have a backup of your key pair at a safe place.
456    
457     @subsection Re-verify Signatures
458     After you refreshed or imported a lot of new keys, either from a file or the keyserver, it is a
459     good idea to re-verify the signature in the keyring. This speeds up listing operations.
460    
461     @subsection WinPT Website
462     If you want to check for updates or general information about the Windows Privacy Tray program,
463     you can select this menu item.
464     The WWW webite of WinPT will be loaded in the default browser.
465     If you want to visit the project website directly, select the "Project Website" entry.
466    
467     @subsection The Key Edit Dialog
468     For the average GPG user, the popup menu of the Key Manager contains all command to manage your
469     keys. For example to add a key/userid/revoker/photo, just right click on the click and select the
470     command from the "Add" submenu.
471     But for advanced users, this dialog contain a lot of extra commands to customize your key.
472    
473     The main dialog contains a list of all keys in the first list view box and all user IDs in the
474     second list view box. The help button gives you a short hint about each command and what it does.
475     For example you can set the primary user ID via the "primary" command or with "deluid" you can
476     delete the selected user ID. Please always bear in mind, that most keyserver are not able to
477     remove user IDs in its database so if another user fetch your 'updated' key from the keyserver
478     the user ID might be still part of the key. If you want to make an user ID unuseable, you should
479     revoke it. This is also possible with this dialog.
480    
481     @subsection Update your Preferences in the Key Manager
482     To avoid that the user needs detour to select the taskbar icon, click on it, etc., all
483     preferences can be changed in the Key Manager via the Edit->Preferences... menu.
484    
485 twoaday 242 @section The File Manager
486    
487     @subsection Introduction
488 twoaday 253 The File Manager is no replacement for an Explorer Extension. If you secure your files frequently
489     and you want to do this fast and easy, I suggest to install GPGee. It is a program which
490     integrates itself into the explorer and provide menu entries in the context menu of files and
491     directory. But the File Manager can be very useful if you just want to decrypt and/or encrypt
492     some files without additional programs. You can find the File Manager via the symbol in the
493     taskbar, right click and then "File Manager".
494 twoaday 242
495     @subsection An Overview of the GUI
496 twoaday 253 First there are different ways to add (open) files in the Key Manager. The easiest way is to use
497     drag and drop to add files into the File Manager. Just drag a file from the explorer and drop it
498     into the File Manager window. The second way is to use File->Open. A dialog opens which is common
499     for all "File Open" operations in most Windows application. Now you can select one or more files
500     and confirm. The files will be automatically added to the File Manager window. The main window
501     consists of a listview with three rows.
502 twoaday 242
503 twoaday 253 The first row is the status of the file. It can be "ENCRYPTED", "SIGNED", "PUBKEY", "SECKEY",
504     "SIG" or "UNKNOWN". Dependent on the file status, the File Manager offers different choices.
505     For example "SIG" enables the verify options in the (popup) menu. "UNKNOWN" is the default for
506     all plaintext files.
507     The second row is the file name. And the last row is the status of the operation. It can be
508     either "", "SUCCESS" or "FAILED". An empty status means no operation was started yet. FAILED
509     indicates that the GnuPG operation failed. In this case an error message was issued before.
510 twoaday 242
511     Now it follows an example:
512 twoaday 253 We assume that user wants to encrypt "c:\My Ideas\GPG GUI.txt". Drag the file from the Explorer
513     and drop it into the open File Manager, the main window. The file will be added and recognized
514     as "UNKNOWN". Now we select the file and right click, a popup menu is shown and we select
515     "Encrypt". An new dialog is opened which looks similar to the Clipboard Encryption dialog.
516     Just select the recipients and confirm. In contrast to clipboard encryption, file encryption
517     offers some more extra options. They are described later. And hour glass will be shown as long as
518     GnuPG takes to encrypt the file. When the procedure is done, the third row should be change
519 twoaday 242 to "SUCCESS" and the first row to "ENCRYPTED".
520    
521     @subsection General Options
522 twoaday 253 Now we describe the general options which are possible in some File Manager dialogs.
523 twoaday 242
524     @itemize
525    
526     @item Text Output
527 twoaday 253 When this option is checked, the output will be encoded in ASCII armor. This can be useful if the
528     file should be transfered via email. The size of the output file is larger than the usual binary
529     output.
530 twoaday 242
531     @item Wipe Original
532 twoaday 253 If this option is checked, the original file will be deleted after successfull encryption.
533     This can be useful if data should not be available in plaintext any longer on a machine.
534 twoaday 242
535     @end itemize
536    
537 twoaday 253 @section Reporting a Problem (Bug) or a Feature Request
538    
539     For the case that you have problems with the program, that includes crashes or or the handling,
540     please first check the forum at http://wald.intevation.org to see if someone else reported and/or
541     wrote about the issue. It is possible that the issue is already solved/answered in the forum.
542     Plus all other users can benefit of it because maybe another person has the same problem and then
543     he can check the forum and will find the answer.
544    
545     Feature requests can be submitted at the same site in a different tab (Tracker->Feature Request).
546     There is no guarantee that the request will be implemented in the next version. The reason is,
547     that other issues might be more important or that the request must be first discussed with other
548     developers. But each request will be considered.
549    
550     For the case that you found a bug, it is very important to provide much details as possible to
551     allow the developers to track down the problem and to fix it easily. Please do not forgot to be
552     precise as possible and the best idea is to provide a step-by-step text to reproduce the problem.
553    
554     @section Problem with the Program or an unexpected Behaviour
555    
556     First let me say that it is very important always to use the newest version. Each new version
557     contains bug fixes and might also fix usability issues. This is also valid for GPG, WinPT
558     checks that the minimum GPG version is available but even so it is important and often useful to
559     have the newest GPG version if this is possible.
560    
561     But sometimes the problem is not the software itself, but the software which was involved to
562     transfer the data. Here are some examples of what could happen:
563    
564     - The downloaded file could be broken (FTP ascii->binary issue) and thus WinPT is unable to
565     verify the signature. In this case you should download the file again.
566    
567     - A mailer broke the signature because the line endings were altered or the mail text was wrapped
568     after the signature was issued. There is no solution to this problem, except to use
569     a smart Mail Client.
570    
571     - A public key (file or clipboard) will not be recognized but the data should definitely contain
572     one or more keys. Sometimes line endings are messed up or white spaces were removed. In
573     this case GPG/WinPT is not able to detect when the data begins and the header section starts.
574     You can use the clipboard editor to see if the ascii armor is broken. If this happened, the
575     file must be repaired manually or should be sent again.
576    
577     - WinPT reports that the key could not be imported because of missing self signature or a
578     likewise message. To make sure that the receiver can really verify the key belongs to its
579     owner, the key carries a self signature which can be checked by anybody. Some PGP 2.6 version
580     do not issue this self signature and some other PGP versions might be also able to
581     supress its generation. Such a key cannot be used, even if the import were forced. The solution
582     to this problem is easy but sometimes not possible. Ask the key issuer to self sign his key and
583     to upload it to the keyserver or send it again.
584     But sometimes companies have a policy and thus newly generated keys are not self signed. I do
585     not know what to do in this case except for asking if it would be possible to sign a copy of
586     the key.
587    
588     - You received a message from a user which uses PGP and WinPT/GPG will not be able to decrypt it.
589     First let me say that this should happen very seldom with newer (PGP >= 7) versions of PGP.
590     The reason could be, that IDEA has been used. A patented Cipher which is not included in GPG.
591     GPG will not be able to decrypt the data because it has been ciphered with IDEA. There is no
592     solution for this problem, except to use the IDEA plug-in. But be advised that the IDEA
593     algorithm is only free for private use and NOT for commercial mails.
594    
595     Another problem could be, that your files cannot be automatically decrypted by the receiver
596     (who uses PGP) because the file extension of it is .GPG. You can solve this problem by changing
597     the default extension in the WinPT preferences from .GPG to .PGP.
598    
599     To minimize the change of problems when you communicate with a PGP user, you can add "pgp8" or
600     "pgp7" to your gpg.conf. This can be done via the Key Manager
601     ->Edit->Preferences...->GPG Config Preferences.
602    
603    
604     @section How can I help the Project
605    
606     There are several ways to help the project. For example you could provide (or work on) the
607     existing documentation or write new docs. You could translate WinPT into a new language or
608     maintain an existing language file. Of course it is also possible to contribute code or to
609     become part of the WinPT developer crew.
610     Commercial support for WinPT is available via g10 Code GmbH.
611    
612     @subsection What I need for Development
613     First, you need a Windows C-compiler and knowledge how to use the tools and the Win32 API. There
614     is no need to use MS-Visual C, you can use Ming-W32 (gcc) and a free IDE to hack some code.
615     The default building environment is a mingw32 hosted on Linux and it produces W32 executables.
616    
617     If you plan to contribute some code or to work on an item from the TODO file, please contact me
618     first to make sure no one else is working on it and that and we can discuss the details.
619    
620     @section Closing Words
621     Please remember that currently the core WinPT crew is just me and thus it might take some time to
622     respond to forum messages, and mails. If my spare time allows it, I try to respond quick as
623     possible. But as a free software project, I do most coding in my spare time and I can't guarantee
624     anything. If you need commercial support for WinPT or GPG in general,
625     please contact g10 Code GmbH.
626    
627 twoaday 222 @bye

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