Daniel Kahn Gillmor wrote:
If you have an authentication-capable subkey on your OpenPGP key, you
might be interested in monkeysphere (http://web.monkeysphere.info/),
which has some tools for importing authentication-capable RSA subkeys
into a running ssh-agent.
Why is it that GnuPG can
On 07/10/2009 08:22 PM, Ingo Krabbe wrote:
[from monkeyspere documentation]
Then hand off the authentication subkey to the agent (Note: the GnuTLS library
supports this operation as of version 2.6, but earlier versions do not):
$ monkeysphere subkey-to-ssh-agent
[eof monkeyspere
Hi,
I now tried to use the gpg-agent as a ssh-agent too, as I always started both
agents anyway. Now I wonder if I could also use my GnuPG Key as a key for a
ssh session too, which would be quite convenient.
Actually I wonder why the gpg-agent runs in ssh-agent mode, if the latter isn't
On Fri, Jul 10, 2009 at 05:25:09PM +0100, Benjamin Donnachie wrote:
2009/7/10 Ingo Krabbe ingo.kra...@eoa.de:
I now tried to use the gpg-agent as a ssh-agent too, as I always started
both
agents anyway. Now I wonder if I could also use my GnuPG Key as a key for a
ssh session too, which
On 07/10/2009 12:41 PM, Ingo Krabbe wrote:
Of course I read that (multiple times to find the hidden secret), but that
doesn't answers the question, as I want to use my GnuPG Identity for the SSH
Identity.
If you have an authentication-capable subkey on your OpenPGP key, you
might be interested
On Fri, Jul 10, 2009 at 12:58:16PM -0400, Daniel Kahn Gillmor wrote:
On 07/10/2009 12:41 PM, Ingo Krabbe wrote:
Of course I read that (multiple times to find the hidden secret), but that
doesn't answers the question, as I want to use my GnuPG Identity for the SSH
Identity.
If you have an