Provided by: gnupg-utils_2.4.7-17ubuntu3_amd64 bug

NAME

       gpg-mail-tube - Encrypt rfc822 formatted mail in a pipeline

SYNOPSIS

       gpg-mail-tube [options] recipients

DESCRIPTION

       gpg-mail-tube  takes RFC-822 formatted mail on stdin and turns it into a PGP/MIME encrypted mail which is
       then written to stdout.

       The recipients must be plain mail addresses (e.g. foo@example.org) and should in general list the To  and
       Cc addresses contained in the mail.

OPTIONS

       gpg-mail-tube understands these options:

       --verbose
       -v     Enable extra informational output.

       --quiet
       -q     Try to be as quiet as possible.

       --log-file file
              Write log output to file.  Use ‘socket://’ to log to a socket.

       --no-stderr
              Suppresses  all  output  to stderr.  This is useful for callers which don't distinguish stdout and
              stderr.  To get diagnostics the option --log-file can be used.

       --header name=value
              Add the mail header "name: value" to the output.

       --setenv name=value
              Put the given environment string into the environment of this process and of the called gpg.  This
              option is required if there is no other way to set the environemt.

       --as-attach
       -a     Do not write a PGP/MIME mail but emit a simple  body  along  with  an  attachment  containing  the
              encrypted  body  of the input mail.  If the input was a plain text message a simple encrypted file
              will be attached.  If the input was a multipart  MIME  message  the  encrypted  file  is  of  type
              message/rfc822.

       --gpg gpgcmd
              Use the specified command gpgcmd instead of gpg.

       --vsd  Use  the  gpg from a GnuPG VS-Desktop® AppImage.  The AppImage is started if it is not running.  A
              symlink named ‘~/.gnupg-vsd/gnupg-vs-desktop.AppImage’ needs to link to the actually  to  be  used
              AppImage.

       --version
              Print version of the program and exit.

       --help Display a brief help page and exit.

EXAMPLES

       The  following  options  can  be  used  in a local transport rule of the Exim MTA which assumes that that
       check_local_user has been used in the router.

         transport_filter = /usr/local/bin/gpg-mail-tube --setenv HOME=${home} \
                            --no-stderr -- $pipe_addresses

       For a remote transport the use of size_addition and  an  explicit  setting  of  the  user  and  its  home
       directory might be required.

DIAGNOSTICS

       The  program  returns 0 on a successful encryption or a non-zero value on error.  Note that on error some
       output might have already been written to stdout.

SEE ALSO

       gpg(1),

       The full documentation for this tool is maintained as a Texinfo manual.  If GnuPG and  the  info  program
       are properly installed at your site, the command

         info gnupg

       should give you access to the complete manual including a menu structure and an index.

GnuPG 2.4.7                                        2024-11-22                                   GPG-MAIL-TUBE(1)