PGPainless is a wrapper around [Bouncycastle](https://www.bouncycastle.org/), which provides an easy to use, intuitive, but also powerful API for OpenPGP ([RFC4880](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc4880)). Its primary functionality is encrypting, signing, decrypting and verifying data, as well as generating and modifying keys. ## Why should I use it? > At FlowCrypt we are using PGPainless in our Kotlin code bases on Android and on server side. > The ergonomy of legacy PGP tooling on Java is not very good, and PGPainless improves it greatly. > We were so happy with our initial tests and with Paul - the maintainer, that we decided to sponsor further development of this library. > > -Tom @ FlowCrypt.com There are a bunch of reasons why you should consider switching to PGPainless: ### Easy to use API One main focus of the project is ease of use. Using Bouncycastle can be a hassle, since simple tasks require a substantial amount of boilerplate code and small mistakes are easily made. PGPainless aims at providing a simple interface to get the job done quickly, while not trading away functionality or correctness. For examples about how to use the API, see the projects [readme](https://github.com/pgpainless/pgpainless/blob/master/README.md). ### Complementing Bouncycastle **PGPainless has Bouncycastle truly figured out!** If you already use BC in your code, PGPainless is a perfect complement! It allows you to remove many lines of boilerplate code and offers you the certitude of a dedicated JUnit test suite. Furthermore PGPainless is scoring *second place* on the very extensive [Sequoia OpenPGP Interoperability Test Suite](https://tests.sequoia-pgp.org). We have studied BC intensively, identified its shortcomings and came up with solutions to those: Contrary to vanilla BC and some other BC-based OpenPGP libraries, PGPainless does signature verification **the right way**. It not only checks for signature *correctness*, but goes the extra mile to also check signature *validity* by taking into consideration key expiration dates, revocations, signature structures, etc. Take a look at [this blog post](https://blog.jabberhead.tk/2021/04/03/why-signature-verification-in-openpgp-is-hard/) to get an idea of how complex signature verification with OpenPGP truly is. ### Android Support PGPainless is designed to work on Android versions down to [API level 10](https://developer.android.com/about/versions/android-2.3.3) (Gingerbread). This makes PGPainless a good choice for implementing OpenPGP encryption in your Android app. Compatibility with certain Android APIs is ensured through [Animalsniffer](http://www.mojohaus.org/animal-sniffer/). ## Releases PGPainless is released on the maven central repository. Including it in your project is simple: Maven: ```xml org.pgpainless pgpainless-core 0.2.9 ``` Gradle: ```gradle repositories { mavenCentral() } dependencies { compile 'org.pgpainless:pgpainless-core:0.2.9' } ``` There are [snapshot releases](https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/snapshots/org/pgpainless/pgpainless-core/) available as well. ## Command Line Interface PGPainless provides an implementation of the [Stateless OpenPGP Command Line Interface](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-dkg-openpgp-stateless-cli-01) in the `pgpainless-sop` module. This allows PGPainless to be used as a command line application for encryption/decryption and signature creation/validation. More importantly though, this allows to plug PGPainless into the [Sequoia OpenPGP Interoperability Test Suite](https://tests.sequoia-pgp.org/). This extensive test suite demonstrates how closely PGPainless is following the standard, especially when it comes to signature verification. ## Forever Free Software PGPainless is licensed under the Apache License 2.0 and this will never change. **Free Libre Open Source Software Rocks!** ## About PGPainless was created [during a Google Summer of Code project](https://blog.jabberhead.tk/summer-of-code-2018/), for which an easy to use OpenPGP API for Java and Android was needed. Originally we looked into forking [bouncy-gpg](https://github.com/neuhalje/bouncy-gpg), but since support for lower Android versions was a requirement, PGPainless was born as an independent project. In its early development stages the library was however influenced by bouncy-gpg written by Jens Neuhalje. ## Development PGPainless is currently developed by [Paul Schaub (@vanitasvitae)](https://blog.jabberhead.tk). ### Contribute Contributions are always welcome :) The project is developed in the following places: * [Github](https://github.com/pgpainless/pgpainless) * [Codeberg](https://codeberg.org/pgpainless/pgpainless) Pull requests are accepted on either of them. ### Bug Reports If you encounter a bug, please make sure to check, whether the bug has already been reported either [here](https://github.com/pgpainless/pgpainless/issues), or [here](https://codeberg.org/PGPainless/pgpainless/issues), in order to avoid duplicate bug reports.