> I've successfully set it up, now whenever I restart gpg-agent (e.g. on
> reboot), it will ask for the passphrase twice, once for the GPG keys,
> once for the SSH keys, even though they are the same passphrases.
I need a solution for this same problem.
> You may now wonder why this does not
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 15:02, w...@gnupg.org said:
> Oh no, I don't want to promote create solutions of our complex API ;-)
s/create/creative/
--
# Please read: Daniel Ellsberg - The Doomsday Machine #
Die Gedanken sind frei. Ausnahmen regelt ein Bundesgesetz.
pgpGzDg0TYmpd.pgp
On Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 03:02:58PM +0100, Werner Koch wrote:
> On Wed, 21 Feb 2018 07:27, b...@adversary.org said:
>
> >> No, there is no way to configure an extra hack to also test a passphrase
> >> for an ssh key.
> >
> > Wanna bet?
>
> Oh no, I don't want to promote create solutions of our
On Wed, 21 Feb 2018 07:27, b...@adversary.org said:
>> No, there is no way to configure an extra hack to also test a passphrase
>> for an ssh key.
>
> Wanna bet?
Oh no, I don't want to promote create solutions of our complex API ;-)
Shalom-Salam,
Werner
--
# Please read: Daniel
On Tue, Feb 13, 2018 at 04:55:19PM +0100, Werner Koch wrote:
> On Tue, 13 Feb 2018 15:03, ambre...@gmail.com said:
>
> > Thanks for the detailed answer. But why not doing it for SSH then?
>
> I like to see when an ssh key is used the first time. Note that the
> maximum caching time for ssh
On Tue, 13 Feb 2018 15:03, ambre...@gmail.com said:
> Thanks for the detailed answer. But why not doing it for SSH then?
I like to see when an ssh key is used the first time. Note that the
maximum caching time for ssh keys can be configured independent from the
caching time of other keys.
>
Werner Koch writes:
> You may now wonder why this does not happen when you decrypt a mail,
> reply to it and sign the reply. Two subkeys (or the primary and the
> encryption subkey) are involved in this workflow. Because this is so
> common, gpg-agent knows about it and tries
On Fri, 9 Feb 2018 14:25, ambre...@gmail.com said:
> this time the SSH key is obviously encrypted with the same passphrase as
> my GPG key, since it's part of it. Any clue why gpg-agent keeps asking?
gpg (or correct gpg-agent) can't know which passphrase is used for each
key or subkey.
I use gpg-agent as my SSH agent.
I've successfully set it up, now whenever I restart gpg-agent (e.g. on
reboot), it will ask for the passphrase twice, once for the GPG keys,
once for the SSH keys, even though they are the same passphrases.
First setup: I called ssh-add to add existing SSH keys