-.B update-userids [USERID]...
-Add/update a user ID to the authorized_user_ids file. The user IDs
-specified should be exact matches to OpenPGP user IDs. For each
-specified user ID, gpg will be queried for a key associated with that
-user ID, querying a keyserver if specified. If a key is found, the
-user ID will be added to the user's authorized_user_ids file (if it
-wasn't already present). `u' may be used in place of
-`update-userids'.
-.TP
-.B remove-userids [USERID]...
-Remove a user ID from the authorized_user_ids file. The user IDs
-specified should be exact matches to OpenPGP user IDs. `r' may be
-used in place of `remove-userids'.
+.B ssh-proxycommand
+an ssh proxy command that can be used
+to trigger a monkeysphere update of the ssh known_hosts file for a
+host that is being connected to with ssh. This works by updating the
+known_hosts file for the host first, before an attempted connection to
+the host is made. Once the known_hosts file has been updated, a TCP
+connection to the host is made by exec'ing netcat(1). Regular ssh
+communication is then done over this netcat TCP connection (see
+ProxyCommand in ssh_config(5) for more info).
+
+This command is meant to be run as the ssh "ProxyCommand". This can
+either be done by specifying the proxy command on the command line:
+
+.B ssh -o ProxyCommand="monkeysphere ssh-proxycommand %h %p" ...
+
+or by adding the following line to your ~/.ssh/config script:
+
+.B ProxyCommand monkeysphere ssh-proxycommand %h %p
+
+The script can easily be incorporated into other ProxyCommand scripts
+by calling it with the "--no-connect" option, i.e.:
+
+.B monkeysphere ssh-proxycommand --no-connect "$HOST" "$PORT"
+
+This will run everything except the final exec of netcat to make the
+TCP connection to the host. In this way this command can be added to
+another proxy command that does other stuff, and then makes the
+connection to the host itself.
+
+KEYSERVER CHECKING:
+The proxy command has a fairly nuanced policy for when keyservers are
+queried when processing a host. If the host userID is not found in
+either the user's keyring or in the known_hosts file, then the
+keyserver is queried for the host userID. If the host userID is found
+in the user's keyring, then the keyserver is not checked. This
+assumes that the keyring is kept up-to-date, in a cronjob or the like,
+so that revocations are properly handled. If the host userID is not
+found in the user's keyring, but the host is listed in the known_hosts
+file, then the keyserver is not checked. This last policy might
+change in the future, possibly by adding a deferred check, so that
+hosts that go from non-monkeysphere-enabled to monkeysphere-enabled
+will be properly checked.
+
+Setting the MONKEYSPHERE_CHECK_KEYSERVER
+variable (to `true' or `false') will override the keyserver-checking policy
+defined above.
+