- Queries
- All Stories
- Search
- Advanced Search
- Transactions
- Transaction Logs
All Stories
Nov 25 2019
To be clear, i believe @mgorny means that he wants the User ID containing the e-mail address to be considered *valid* (that is, full or ultimate validity). I don't think this operation should care about ownertrust.
Nov 24 2019
Nov 23 2019
The manual states that --standard-resolver is mostly for debugging. The reason you get an "not enabled" is that we can't allow direct DNS queries in Tor mode which would happen with the system (standard) DNS resolver.
In T4726#130765, @werner wrote:Given that the the angle brackets are elsewhere used to indicate a search by mail address, it would be okay to allow for them in this case too (that is dkg's second example).
[...]
To answer your question: With the exception of case two this is desired behaviour also in the future,
Done for 2.2 and master.
Nov 22 2019
Please no bug reports for the development branch. You need to have a recent libgpg-error. We do not update the requirements checked by configure for master immediately. It is better to report this to gnupg-devel if you are sure that you have the latest versions of all libraries.
Nov 21 2019
Nov 20 2019
Nov 19 2019
Nov 18 2019
Done. Thanks.
Okay, maybe this should just be added to the 2.2.x docs.
Thanks for your comments. It would have been cool if this restriction would have been noted
in the gpg options documentation. (Where is was missing at least where I was looking.)
You may want to use a recent version of GnuPG ;-)
Here is my understanding:
--log-file option is valid for for background task like gpg-agent, dirmngr and scdaemon.
For gpg, it only works with --batch or --server.
This will be in 2.2.18, closing.
In my own opinion, it will be good when desktop environments support GnuPG as one of first class citizens, to protect user's data.
For example, currently, libscret stores secret data (such as WiFi shared secret, etc.) by its own cipher preference and method (and it is symmetric cipher by user's password). I don't think it is secure enough.
For me, it will be good if it is protected by user's gpg key using asymmetric crypto.
it's been almost a quarter year since my last nudge on this supplied patch. It's not clear to me why it hasn't been merged in master. I'm trying to not be a nag, but:
Nov 17 2019
Nov 16 2019
UserIDs are mandatory and do not see any reason to change this except maybe by specialized application in the embedded field.
Given that the the angle brackets are elsewhere used to indicate a search by mail address, it would be okay to allow for them in this case too (that is dkg's second example). The risk of a regression in that case is pretty low.
Nov 15 2019
it is just that we won't fix that for gpg 1.4.
Wow thanks for the great explanation! I've always wondered what is the relationship between gnupg and other secrets services. Personally, although Gnome's / KDE's secrets services offer better UX out of the box, I've always preferred gpg's agent because I can control it better from the command line and hence customize it's behavior. The only use I have for gnome-secrets service is for a few passwords I always want them to be cached (because I obtain them in systemd timers+services). Do you think Gnome / KDE will ever plan to _use_ gpg-agent, instead of reimplementing it?
Sorry in advance for long explanation. :-) Well, let me show my stand point at first (to avoid confusion): I don't like the concept of "desktop integration" when it makes difficult for a user to control his environment.
Nov 14 2019
Works! I still wonder though: How come my system / gpg agent has all of a sudden started using the external cache? Is this a new feature of gpg-agent? And what is the meaning of this message:
This is a bug tracker and not a general help line. You are better off asking on the gnupg-uisers mailing list.
Could you try to put no-allow-external-cache in your gpg-agent.conf?
If it changes the behavior, it is your desktop environment which caches your input, I suppose.