age - simple, modern, and secure file encryption
age [
--encrypt] (
-r RECIPIENT |
-R
PATH)... [
--armor] [
-o OUTPUT] [
INPUT]
age [
--encrypt]
--passphrase [
--armor] [
-o
OUTPUT] [
INPUT]
age --decrypt [
-i PATH |
-j PLUGIN]...
[
-o OUTPUT] [
INPUT]
age encrypts or decrypts
INPUT to
OUTPUT. The
INPUT
argument is optional and defaults to standard input. Only a single
INPUT file may be specified. If
-o is not specified,
OUTPUT defaults to standard output.
If
-p/
--passphrase is specified, the file is encrypted with a
passphrase requested interactively. Otherwise, it's encrypted to one or more
RECIPIENTS specified with
-r/
--recipient or
-R/
--recipients-file. Every recipient can decrypt the file.
In
-d/
--decrypt mode, passphrase-encrypted files are detected
automatically and the passphrase is requested interactively. Otherwise, one or
more
IDENTITIES specified with
-i/
--identity are used to
decrypt the file.
age encrypted files are binary and not malleable, with around 200 bytes
of overhead per recipient, plus 16 bytes every 64KiB of plaintext.
-
-o, --output=OUTPUT
- Write encrypted or decrypted file to OUTPUT instead
of standard output. If OUTPUT already exists it will be
overwritten.
- If encrypting without --armor, age will
refuse to output binary to a TTY. This can be forced by specifying
- as OUTPUT.
- --version
- Print the version and exit.
-
-e, --encrypt
- Encrypt INPUT to OUTPUT. This is the
default.
-
-r, --recipient=RECIPIENT
- Encrypt to the explicitly specified RECIPIENT. See
the RECIPIENTS AND IDENTITIES section for possible recipient
formats.
- This option can be repeated and combined with other
recipient flags, and the file can be decrypted by all provided recipients
independently.
-
-R, --recipients-file=PATH
- Encrypt to the RECIPIENTS listed in the file at
PATH, one per line. Empty lines and lines starting with #
are ignored as comments.
- If PATH is -, the recipients are read from
standard input. In this case, the INPUT argument must be
specified.
- This option can be repeated and combined with other
recipient flags, and the file can be decrypted by all provided recipients
independently.
-
-p, --passphrase
- Encrypt with a passphrase, requested interactively from the
terminal. age will offer to auto-generate a secure passphrase.
- This option can't be used with other recipient flags.
-
-a, --armor
- Encrypt to an ASCII-only "armored" encoding.
-
age armor is a strict version of PEM with type
AGE ENCRYPTED FILE, canonical "strict" Base64, no
headers, and no support for leading and trailing extra data.
- Decryption transparently detects and decodes ASCII
armoring.
-
-i, --identity=PATH
- Encrypt to the RECIPIENTS corresponding to the
IDENTITIES listed in the file at PATH. This is equivalent to
converting the file at PATH to a recipients file with age-keygen
-y and then passing that to -R/--recipients-file.
- For the format of PATH, see the definition of
-i/ --identity in the Decryption options
section.
-
-e/--encrypt must be explicitly specified
when using -i/--identity in encryption mode to avoid
confusion.
-
-j PLUGIN
- Encrypt using the data-less plugin
PLUGIN.
- This is equivalent to using -i/--identity
with a file that contains a single plugin IDENTITY that encodes no
plugin-specific data.
-
-e/--encrypt must be explicitly specified
when using -j in encryption mode to avoid confusion.
-
-d, --decrypt
- Decrypt INPUT to OUTPUT.
- If INPUT is passphrase encrypted, it will be
automatically detected and the passphrase will be requested interactively.
Otherwise, the IDENTITIES specified with
-i/--identity are used.
- ASCII armoring is transparently detected and decoded.
-
-i, --identity=PATH
- Decrypt using the IDENTITIES at PATH.
-
PATH may be one of the following:
- a. A file listing IDENTITIES one per line. Empty
lines and lines starting with " #" are ignored as
comments.
- b. A passphrase encrypted age file, containing
IDENTITIES one per line like above. The passphrase is requested
interactively. Note that passphrase-protected identity files are not
necessary for most use cases, where access to the encrypted identity file
implies access to the whole system.
- c. An SSH private key file, in PKCS#1, PKCS#8, or OpenSSH
format. If the private key is password-protected, the password is
requested interactively only if the SSH identity matches the file. See the
SSH keys section for more information, including supported key
types.
- d. "-", causing one of the options above
to be read from standard input. In this case, the INPUT argument
must be specified.
- This option can be repeated. Identities are tried in the
order in which are provided, and the first one matching one of the file's
recipients is used. Unused identities are ignored, but it is an error if
the INPUT file is passphrase-encrypted and
-i/--identity is specified.
-
-j PLUGIN
- Decrypt using the data-less plugin
PLUGIN.
- This is equivalent to using -i/--identity
with a file that contains a single plugin IDENTITY that encodes no
plugin-specific data.
RECIPIENTS are public values, like a public key, that a file can be
encrypted to.
IDENTITIES are private values, like a private key, that
allow decrypting a file encrypted to the corresponding
RECIPIENT.
Native
age key pairs are generated with
age-keygen(1), and provide small
encodings and strong encryption based on X25519. They are the recommended
recipient type for most applications.
A
RECIPIENT encoding begins with
age1 and looks like the
following:
-
-
age1gde3ncmahlqd9gg50tanl99r960llztrhfapnmx853s4tjum03uqfssgdh
-
An
IDENTITY encoding begins with
AGE-SECRET-KEY-1 and looks like
the following:
-
-
AGE-SECRET-KEY-1KTYK6RVLN5TAPE7VF6FQQSKZ9HWWCDSKUGXXNUQDWZ7XXT5YK5LSF3UTKQ
-
An encrypted file can't be linked to the native recipient it's encrypted to
without access to the corresponding identity.
As a convenience feature,
age also supports encrypting to RSA or Ed25519
ssh(1) keys. RSA keys must be at least 2048 bits. This feature employs more
complex cryptography, and should only be used when a native key is not
available for the recipient. Note that SSH keys might not be protected
long-term by the recipient, since they are revokable when used only for
authentication.
A
RECIPIENT encoding is an SSH public key in
authorized_keys
format (see the
AUTHORIZED_KEYS FILE FORMAT section of
sshd(8)),
starting with
ssh-rsa or
ssh-ed25519, like the following:
-
-
ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAABgQDULTit0KUehbi[...]GU4BtElAbzh8=
ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAIH9pO5pz22JZEas[...]l1uZc31FGYMXa
-
The comment at the end of the line, if present, is ignored.
In recipient files passed to
-R/
--recipients-file, unsupported but
valid SSH public keys are ignored with a warning, to facilitate using
authorized_keys or GitHub
.keys files. (See
EXAMPLES.)
An
IDENTITY is an SSH private key
file passed individually to
-i/
--identity. Note that keys held on hardware tokens such as
YubiKeys or accessed via
ssh-agent(1) are not supported.
An encrypted file
can be linked to the SSH public key it was encrypted
to. This is so that
age can identify the correct SSH private key before
requesting its password, if any.
age can be extended through plugins. A plugin is only loaded if a
corresponding
RECIPIENT or
IDENTITY is specified. (Simply
decrypting a file encrypted with a plugin will not cause it to load, for
security reasons among others.)
A
RECIPIENT for a plugin named
example starts with
age1example1, while an
IDENTITY starts with
AGE-PLUGIN-EXAMPLE-1. They both encode arbitrary plugin-specific data,
and are generated by the plugin.
When either is specified,
age searches for
age-plugin-example in
the PATH and executes it to perform the file header encryption or decryption.
The plugin may request input from the user through
age to complete the
operation.
Plugins can be freely mixed with other plugins or natively supported keys.
A plugin is not bound to only encrypt or decrypt files meant for or generated by
the plugin. For example, a plugin can be used to decrypt files encrypted to a
native X25519
RECIPIENT or even with a passphrase. Similarly, a plugin
can encrypt a file such that it can be decrypted without the use of any
plugin.
Plugins for which the
IDENTITY/
RECIPIENT distinction doesn't make
sense (such as a symmetric encryption plugin) may generate only an
IDENTITY and instruct the user to perform encryption with the
-e/
--encrypt and
-i/
--identity flags. Plugins for
which the concept of separate identities doesn't make sense (such as a
password-encryption plugin) may instruct the user to use the
-j flag.
age will exit 0 if and only if encryption or decryption are successful
for the full length of the input.
If an error occurs during decryption, partial output might still be generated,
but only if it was possible to securely authenticate it. No unauthenticated
output is ever released.
Files encrypted with a stable version (not alpha, beta, or release candidate) of
age, or with any v1.0.0 beta or release candidate, will decrypt with
any later version of the tool.
If decrypting older files poses a security risk, doing so might cause an error
by default. In this case, a flag will be provided to force the operation.
Generate a new identity, encrypt data, and decrypt:
-
-
$ age-keygen -o key.txt
Public key: age1ql3z7hjy54pw3hyww5ayyfg7zqgvc7w3j2elw8zmrj2kg5sfn9aqmcac8p
$ tar cvz ~/data | age -r age1ql3z7hjy54pw3hyww5ayyfg7zqgvc7w3j2elw8zmrj2kg5sfn9aqmcac8p > data.tar.gz.age
$ age -d -o data.tar.gz -i key.txt data.tar.gz.age
-
Encrypt
example.jpg to multiple recipients and output to
example.jpg.age:
-
-
$ age -o example.jpg.age -r age1ql3z7hjy54pw3hyww5ayyfg7zqgvc7w3j2elw8zmrj2kg5sfn9aqmcac8p \
-r age1lggyhqrw2nlhcxprm67z43rta597azn8gknawjehu9d9dl0jq3yqqvfafg example.jpg
-
Encrypt to a list of recipients:
-
-
$ cat > recipients.txt
# Alice
age1ql3z7hjy54pw3hyww5ayyfg7zqgvc7w3j2elw8zmrj2kg5sfn9aqmcac8p
# Bob
age1lggyhqrw2nlhcxprm67z43rta597azn8gknawjehu9d9dl0jq3yqqvfafg
$ age -R recipients.txt example.jpg > example.jpg.age
-
Encrypt and decrypt a file using a passphrase:
-
-
$ age -p secrets.txt > secrets.txt.age
Enter passphrase (leave empty to autogenerate a secure one):
Using the autogenerated passphrase "release-response-step-brand-wrap-ankle-pair-unusual-sword-train".
$ age -d secrets.txt.age > secrets.txt
Enter passphrase:
-
Encrypt and decrypt with a passphrase-protected identity file:
-
-
$ age-keygen | age -p > key.age
Public key: age1yhm4gctwfmrpz87tdslm550wrx6m79y9f2hdzt0lndjnehwj0ukqrjpyx5
Enter passphrase (leave empty to autogenerate a secure one):
Using the autogenerated passphrase "hip-roast-boring-snake-mention-east-wasp-honey-input-actress".
$ age -r age1yhm4gctwfmrpz87tdslm550wrx6m79y9f2hdzt0lndjnehwj0ukqrjpyx5 secrets.txt > secrets.txt.age
$ age -d -i key.age secrets.txt.age > secrets.txt
Enter passphrase for identity file "key.age":
-
Encrypt and decrypt with an SSH public key:
-
-
$ age -R ~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub example.jpg > example.jpg.age
$ age -d -i ~/.ssh/id_ed25519 example.jpg.age > example.jpg
-
Encrypt and decrypt with age-plugin-yubikey:
-
-
$ age-plugin-yubikey # run interactive setup, generate identity file and obtain recipient
$ age -r age1yubikey1qwt50d05nh5vutpdzmlg5wn80xq5negm4uj9ghv0snvdd3yysf5yw3rhl3t secrets.txt > secrets.txt.age
$ age -d -i age-yubikey-identity-388178f3.txt secrets.txt.age
-
Encrypt to the SSH keys of a GitHub user:
-
-
$ curl https://github.com/benjojo.keys | age -R - example.jpg > example.jpg.age
-
age-keygen(1)
Filippo Valsorda
[email protected]