111

Background: My boss has tried exporting an ASC key to me with public and private parts but whenever I get the file the private part never loads up and it won't decrypt any files.

We have tried Exporting the ASC Key using:

  • Windows Application Kleopatra 2.1 (included in gpg4win)

  • Windows Application GNU Privacy Assistant (included in gpg4win)

    Error: "Decryption failed. Secret Key Not available." 
    

How do you properly export a secret or private asc key to decrypt gpg files?

7 Answers 7

216

You can export the private key with the command-line tool from GPG. It works on the Windows-shell. Use the following command:

gpg --export-secret-keys

A normal export with --export will not include any private keys, therefore you have to use --export-secret-keys.

Edit:

To sum up the information given in my comments, this is the command that allows you to export a specific key with the ID 1234ABCD to the file secret.asc:

gpg --export-secret-keys --armor 1234ABCD > secret.asc

You can find the ID that you need using the following command. The ID is the second part of the second column:

gpg --list-keys

To Export just 1 specific secret key instead of all of them:

gpg --export-secret-keys keyIDNumber > exportedKeyFilename.asc

keyIDNumber is the number of the key id for the desired key you are trying to export.

11
  • 4
    @Brian: This will dump the key to the console. If you want to store it in a file, you can redirect the output to an arbitrary filename ("gpg --export-secret-keys > secret.asc").
    – Demento
    Apr 8, 2011 at 15:19
  • 6
    @Brian: This gives you the output in ASCII and not in binary. If you keep it in a file, it doesn't really matter. But once you want to pass it around any other way, the ASCII version is much easier to handle (sending it inline in an email e.g.)
    – Demento
    Apr 13, 2011 at 12:32
  • 8
    Maybe you want to carry your secret key to another location. In this case you should encrypt the exported data: "gpg --export-secret-keys keyIDNumber | gpg -c >encrypted" decrypt it with "gpg -o unencrypted encrypted".
    – rockdaboot
    Jun 26, 2014 at 13:25
  • 3
    Keys exported from GnuPG remain encrypted (which is why you don't need to enter the private key passphrase), so there's really no need to encrypt it again. Feb 26, 2017 at 8:57
  • 1
    @FerryBoender Are you sure about that?
    – vhs
    Nov 8, 2019 at 8:42
34

All the above replies are correct, but might be missing one crucial step, you need to edit the imported key and "ultimately trust" that key

gpg --edit-key (keyIDNumber)
gpg> trust

Please decide how far you trust this user to correctly verify other users' keys
(by looking at passports, checking fingerprints from different sources, etc.)

  1 = I don't know or won't say
  2 = I do NOT trust
  3 = I trust marginally
  4 = I trust fully
  5 = I trust ultimately
  m = back to the main menu

and select 5 to enable that imported private key as one of your keys

21

See the treatment by Dark Otter

https://montemazuma.wordpress.com/2010/03/01/moving-a-gpg-key-privately/

If the site is down use reference the archive.org backup:

https://web.archive.org/web/20170518155052/https://montemazuma.wordpress.com/2010/03/01/moving-a-gpg-key-privately/

which includes a reasonably secure way to transfer keys. You could put that recommendation into shell-scripts shown below for repeated use.

First get the KEYID you want from the list shown by

$ gpg -K

From the resulting list note the KEYID (the 8 hexadecimals following sec) you need for transfer.

Then envoke the tested shell scipts "export_private_key" on the first account and generate your pubkey.gpg + keys.asc. Subsequently invoke on the second account "import_private_key". Here is their content shown with cat (copy & paste content):

$ cat export_private_key 
gpg -K
echo "select private key"
read KEYID
gpg --output pubkey.gpg --export $KEYID
echo REMEMBER THE COMING PASS-PHRASE
gpg --output - --export-secret-key $KEYID | \
   cat pubkey.gpg - | \
   gpg --armor --output keys.asc --symmetric --cipher-algo AES256
ls -l pubkey.gpg keys.asc
####################  E X P O R T _ P R I V A T E _ K E Y  #####################

Now tranfer by some means the "pubkey.gpg" (if needed) and the private "keys.asc" to the second account and envoke the below-shown program.

$ cat import_private_key 
gpg --no-use-agent --output - keys.asc | gpg --import
###################  I M P O R T _ P R I V A T E _ K E Y  ######################

In Otter's spirit "And that, should be, that".

2
  • Thank you for the script to include both the public and private key in one passphrase-protected file. Makes my life much better!
    – codekoala
    Apr 16, 2016 at 4:52
  • Option --no-use-agent is obsolete in gpg version 2.
    – vhs
    Nov 8, 2019 at 7:32
10

I think you had not yet import the private key as the message error said, To import public/private key from gnupg:

gpg --import mypub_key
gpg --allow-secret-key-import --import myprv_key
4
  • i was asking about exporting from a computer that works... you can only import the key if its on a local server. Apr 12, 2011 at 21:04
  • @Brian McCarthy: What are you trying to say?
    – SIFE
    Apr 12, 2011 at 23:02
  • Do we really need to import the public key if the private one has been imported already? As I understand, a public key can be generated out of a private one anything.
    – farhany
    Jul 10, 2013 at 16:54
  • @farhany I think yes, because you will need it when you sign your message.
    – SIFE
    Sep 4, 2013 at 5:01
6

this ended up working for me:

gpg -a --export-secret-keys > exportedKeyFilename.asc 

you can name keyfilename.asc by any name as long as you keep on the .asc extension.
this command copies all secret-keys on a user's computer to keyfilename.asc in the working directory of where the command was called.

To Export just 1 specific secret key instead of all of them:

gpg -a --export-secret-keys keyIDNumber > exportedKeyFilename.asc

keyIDNumber is the number of the key id for the desired key you are trying to export.

6
  • 1
    You can list all available keys with "--list-keys". The second column will contain IDs like "2048g/1234ABCD". Find the desired key and export it with "gpg --export-secret-keys 1234ABCD > secret.asc", of course changing 1234ABCD with the correct ID. You can also add the "-a" flag. It writes the output with ASCII characters, just in case the binary output is causing trouble.
    – Demento
    Apr 8, 2011 at 15:27
  • @demento, thanks for the additional feedback... ill add that to the answer Apr 12, 2011 at 20:56
  • 2
    you still need the -a if you really want asc
    – RichieHH
    Oct 14, 2014 at 20:41
  • How do you then import them to another computer?
    – Natim
    May 11, 2015 at 10:30
  • @Natim I imagine you take exportedKeyFilename.asc to the other computer and then do gpg --allow-secret-key-import --import exportedKeyFilename.asc in the directory with the .asc file. See: unix.stackexchange.com/questions/184947/… Oct 2, 2015 at 13:51
5

Similar to @Wolfram J's answer, here is a method to encrypt your private key with a passphrase:

gpg --output - --armor --export $KEYID | \
    gpg --output private_key.asc --armor --symmetric --cipher-algo AES256

And a corresponding method to decrypt:

gpg private_key.asc
1
5

1.Export a Secret Key (this is what your boss should have done for you)

gpg --export-secret-keys yourKeyName > privateKey.asc

2.Import Secret Key (import your privateKey)

gpg --import privateKey.asc

3.Not done yet, you still need to ultimately trust a key. You will need to make sure that you also ultimately trust a key.

gpg --edit-key yourKeyName

Enter trust, 5, y, and then quit

Source: https://medium.com/@GalarnykMichael/public-key-asymmetric-cryptography-using-gpg-5a8d914c9bca

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