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SQ(1) User Commands SQ(1) NAME sq key revoke - Revoke a certificate SYNOPSIS sq key revoke [OPTIONS] REASON MESSAGE DESCRIPTION Revoke a certificate. Creates a revocation certificate for the certificate. If `--revocation-file` is provided, then that key is used to create the signature. If that key is different from the certificate being re- voked, this creates a third-party revocation. This is normally only useful if the owner of the certificate designated the key to be a des- ignated revoker. If `--revocation-file` is not provided, then the certificate must in- clude a certification-capable key. `sq key revoke` respects the reference time set by the top-level `--time` argument. When set, it uses the specified time instead of the current time, when determining what keys are valid, and it sets the re- vocation certificate's creation time to the reference time instead of the current time. OPTIONS Subcommand options -B, --binary Emit binary data --certificate-file=FILE Read the certificate to revoke from FILE or stdin, if omitted. It is an error for the file to contain more than one certifi- cate. --notation NAME VALUE Add a notation to the certification. A user-defined notation's name must be of the form `name@a.domain.you.control.org`. If the notation's name starts with a `!`, then the notation is marked as being critical. If a consumer of a signature doesn't under- stand a critical notation, then it will ignore the signature. The notation is marked as being human readable. -o, --output=FILE Write to FILE or stdout if omitted [default: -] --private-key-store=KEY_STORE Provide parameters for private key store --revocation-file=KEY_FILE Sign the revocation certificate using the key in KEY_FILE. If the key is different from the certificate, this creates a third-party revocation. If this option is not provided, and the certificate includes secret key material, then that key is used to sign the revocation certificate. REASON The reason for the revocation. This must be either: `compro- mised`, `superseded`, `retired`, or `unspecified`: - `compromised` means that the secret key material may have been compromised. Prefer this value if you suspect that the se- cret key has been leaked. - `superseded` means that the owner of the certificate has re- placed it with a new certificate. Prefer `compromised` if the se- cret key material has been compromised even if the certificate is also being replaced! You should include the fingerprint of the new certificate in the message. - `retired` means that this certificate should not be used anymore, and there is no replacement. This is appropriate when some- one leaves an organisation. Prefer `compromised` if the secret key material has been compromised even if the certificate is also being retired! You should include how to contact the owner, or who to contact instead in the message. - `unspecified` means that none of the three other three rea- sons apply. OpenPGP implementations conservatively treat this type of revocation similar to a compromised key. If the reason happened in the past, you should specify that us- ing the `--time` argument. This allows OpenPGP implementations to more accurately reason about objects whose validity depends on the validity of the certificate. [possible values: compromised, superseded, retired, unspecified] MESSAGE A short, explanatory text that is shown to a viewer of the revo- cation certificate. It explains why the certificate has been revoked. For instance, if Alice has created a new key, she would generate a `superseded` revocation certificate for her old key, and might include the message `I've created a new certifi- cate, FINGERPRINT, please use that in the future.` Global options See sq(1) for a description of the global options. SEE ALSO sq(1), sq-key(1). For the full documentation see <https://book.sequoia-pgp.org>. VERSION 0.36.0 (sequoia-openpgp 1.20.0) Sequoia PGP 0.36.0 SQ(1)
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | SEE ALSO | VERSION
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