Provided by: pskc-utils_1.3-2_all 

NAME
csv2pskc - Convert a CSV file to PSKC
SYNOPSIS
csv2pskc [options] [<FILE>]
DESCRIPTION
csv2pskc reads a CSV file where the first line contains column labels and following lines contain key
information for one key per line.
OPTIONS
-h, --help
Display usage summary.
-V, --version
Display version information.
-o FILE, --output FILE
By default csv2pskc writes a PSKC file to stdout. This option can be used to save to a file
instead.
-c COL,COL,.., --columns COL,COL,..
Specify the meaning of the columns in the CSV file. By default the first row of the CSV file is
expected to list the names of the columns.
Any property of Key instances can be used as well as Policy properties via policy. For example:
serial, secret, counter, time_offset, time_interval, interval, time_drift, issuer, manufacturer,
response_length, policy.pin_min_length.
This option can either specify a list of columns or a COL:KEY mapping where COL refers to the
value found in the first line of the CSV file and KEY refers to a property as described above.
It is possible to map a single column in the CSV file to multiple PSKC properties (e.g. use of
id+serial sets both the ID and device serial number to the value found in that column).
--skip-rows N
By default the first row is treated as a header which contains labels. This option can be used to
either skip more row (the first row of the CSV file will still be treated as a header) or to
indicate that there is no header row.
In the latter case the --columns option is required.
-x COL=VALUE, --set COL=VALUE
Specify properties that are added to all keys in the generated PSKC file. Accepted labels are the
same as for the --columns option.
This can be useful for setting the issuer, manufacturer or other common properties globally.
-p PASS/FILE, --password PASS/FILE, --passwd PASS/FILE
Encrypt the PSKC file with the specified password. If the argument refers to a file the password
is read from the file instead.
-s KEY/FILE, --secret KEY/FILE
A hex encoded encryption key or a file containing the binary key (raw data, not encoded).
-e ENCODING, --secret-encoding ENCODING
Specify the encoding to use for reading key material from the CSV file. By default HEX encoding is
used. Valid encodings are: base32, base64 or hex.
AUTHOR
Arthur de Jong
COPYRIGHT
2014-2024 Arthur de Jong
1.3 Jan 17, 2025 CSV2PSKC(1)