Use gpg from elixir
Add this to your mixfile
{ :exgpg, "~> 0.0.3" },
Install goon and put it on your PATH.
If you can run goon
and get a usage output, then porcelain and thereby exgpg will be able to use it.
#proc is a Porcelain.Process. The `out` key is a stream of gpg's output.
proc = Exgpg.symmetric("test string", [passphrase: "hunter2"])
# this will be a binary of the encrypted "test string"
encrypted = Enum.into(proc.out, "")
proc = Exgpg.decrypt(encrypted, [passphrase: "hunter2"])
#put the decrypt stream into a string
Enum.into(proc.out, "") # this will be "test string"
#proc is a Porcelain.Process. The `out` key is a stream of gpg's output. this
#method allows for direct piping..
defp output(proc), do: proc.out
out = "hello world"
|> Exgpg.encrypt([{:recipient, "alice@alice.com"}, {keyring: "alice.pub"}])
|> output
|> Exgpg.decrypt([secret_keyring: "alice.sec", keyring: "alice.pub"])
|> output
|> Enum.into("")
IO.puts out # this will print "hello world"
{:ok, proc} = Exgpg.gen_key(
[
key_type: "DSA",
key_length: "1024",
subkey_type: "ELG-E",
subkey_length: "1024",
name_real: "alice",
name_email: "alice@alice.com",
expire_date: "0",
ctrl_pubring: "alice.pub", #pub ring will be written to alice.pub
ctrl_secring: "alice.sec", #sec ring will be written to alice.sec
ctrl_commit: "",
ctrl_echo: "done"
]
)
proc.status #will give the status code
proc.err #will give an error description, if one occurred
Options are passed directly to gpg
, with a transformation to change the the key_with_underscore
keylist convention in elixir to the --key-with-dashes
. Most options should Just Work™.