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B.3. Checking a Package's Signature
If you want to verify that a package has not been corrupted or tampered with, examine only the md5sum by typing the following command at a shell prompt (where <rpm_file> is the file name of the RPM package):
rpm -K --nosignature <rpm_file>
The message
<rpm_file>: rsa sha1 (md5) pgp md5 OK
(specifically the OK part of it) is displayed. This brief message means that the file was not corrupted during download. To see a more verbose message, replace -K
with -Kvv
in the command.
On the other hand, how trustworthy is the developer who created the package? If the package is signed with the developer's GnuPG key, you know that the developer really is who they say they are.
An RPM package can be signed using GNU Privacy Guard (or GnuPG), to help you make certain your downloaded package is trustworthy.
GnuPG is a tool for secure communication; it is a complete and free replacement for the encryption technology of PGP, an electronic privacy program. With GnuPG, you can authenticate the validity of documents and encrypt/decrypt data to and from other recipients. GnuPG is capable of decrypting and verifying PGP 5.x files as well.
During installation, GnuPG is installed by default. That way you can immediately start using GnuPG to verify any packages that you receive from Red Hat. Before doing so, you must first import Red Hat's public key.
B.3.1. Importing Keys
To verify Red Hat packages, you must import the Red Hat GnuPG key. To do so, execute the following command at a shell prompt:
rpm --import /usr/share/rhn/RPM-GPG-KEY
To display a list of all keys installed for RPM verification, execute the command:
rpm -qa gpg-pubkey*
For the Red Hat key, the output includes:
gpg-pubkey-db42a60e-37ea5438
To display details about a specific key, use
rpm -qi
followed by the output from the previous command:
rpm -qi gpg-pubkey-db42a60e-37ea5438