TQSL(5)TQSL(5)NAMETQSL - digitally sign amateur radio contact logs
SYNOPSIS
tqsl -i [certificate-file]...
tqsl [OPTIONS] [log-file]...
DESCRIPTION
TrustedQSL is a file format and set of procedures that is used to
send digitally signed QSL information (logs of contacts between
amateur radio operators). One notable service that makes use of
TrustedQSL is ARRL's Logbook of the World.
The tqsl program is used to digitally sign contact log files using
a digital certificate. It is also used to generate requests for
digital certificates and to store the resulting received digital
certificates. (Certificates used to be handled by a separate pro‐
gram, tqslcert, but all functions are now handled by tqsl).
This manual page briefly documents the tqsl program. Complete
documentation is also available:
tqsl: file:///usr/share/TrustedQSL/help/tqslapp/main.htm
OPTIONS
tqsl accepts these command line options:
-b begin_date and -e end_date
Supply a start date and end date for QSOs to be signed. If
present, any QSOs before the begin date will be ignored,
and any after the end date will be ignored. If either begin
or end are omitted, then the corresponding limit is
ignored. You should specify -d with this option to suppress
the normal date range dialog as these options will override
the user-specified dates if given.
-d Suppress date-range dialog. If present, the QSO date-range
dialog will not be shown for files that follow this option
on the command line.
-l location_name
Selects an existing station location. This location will be
used for the commands that follow. If the station location
doesn't exist, tqsl will just exit.
-o output_file
Writes the resulting signed log file to output_file instead
of a default name based on the input log-file name.
-s Add or edit station location. If there is a preceding -l
option the specified location will be edited. If there is
no preceding -l option, a new station location is being
added.
-x (or) -q
Exit tqsl. If this argument is used it should be the last
one on the command line. If this argument is not present,
tqsl will begin normal operation after successfully pro‐
cessing all command-line arguments.
-u Upload log file. If this argument is used, the input files
will be signed then automatically uploaded to the Logbook
of the World web site for processing.
-v Display the version number of tqsl and exit.
-i filename
Import a certificate - either a signed response (.tq6) or a
certificate stored with a private key in PKCS#12 format
(.p12).
-t filename
Open a diagnostic trace file at startup. This file will log
internal TQSL function calls for debugging purposes.
log-files
Any command-line parameter that is not an option or an
option's argument will be treated as the name of a log file
(ADIF or Cabrillo) to be signed. The resulting signed file
(.tq8) will be placed in the same directory as the log
file, overwriting any existing .tq8 file of the same name.
(Note: If this option is not preceded by a -l option that
selects the station location to be used for signing, the
Select Station Location for Signing dialog will be pre‐
sented.) File names that contain spaces or other shell-spe‐
cial characters should be quoted in a manner suitable for
the operating system and shell that's being used. If -u is
used, the signed log is not saved to disk but is instead
uploaded and submitted to Logbook of the World.
N.B.: If the private key needed to sign a log is protected
by a password, the user will be prompted to supply that
password for each file being signed.
AUTHOR
trustedqsl was written by "American Radio Relay League, Inc." and
the TrustedQSL authors. Please see the AUTHORS.txt file in the
source distribution for a list of contributors.
This manual page was originally prepared by Kamal Mostafa
<kamal@whence.com>, for the Debian project (and may be used by
others).
August 28, 2013 TQSL(5)