On Tue, Sep 05, 2006 at 01:33:19PM +0200, martin f krafft wrote:
> FWIW, this works for me, but I set
> 
>   use-agent
> 
> in ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf. I don't know of a use-gpg-agent option.

Sorry, I have use-agent too, not use-gpg-agent :-)

> ii  gnupg          1.4.5-1        GNU privacy guard - a free PGP replacement
> ii  gnupg-agent    1.9.20-2       GNU privacy guard - password agent
> ii  pinentry-gtk2  0.7.2-3        GTK+-2-based PIN or pass-phrase entry dialog

ii  gnupg              1.4.5-1        GNU privacy guard - a free PGP replacement
ii  gnupg-agent        1.9.20-2       GNU privacy guard - password agent
ii  pinentry-curses    0.7.2-3        curses-based PIN or pass-phrase entry 
dialog
ii  pinentry-gtk2      0.7.2-3        GTK+-2-based PIN or pass-phrase entry 
dialog

> Does gpg-agent work for you if you just call
> 
>   echo test | gpg --sign

No:

You need a passphrase to unlock the secret key for
user: "Julien Danjou <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>"
1024-bit DSA key, ID C2FEE5CD, created 2002-02-18

gpg: cancelled by user
gpg: no default secret key: bad passphrase
gpg: signing failed: bad passphrase

But if it works for you, it might mean it's a configure issue on my
side. :-/

Thanks for your attention.

Cheers,
-- 
Julien Danjou
.''`.  Debian Developer
: :' : http://julien.danjou.info
`. `'  http://people.debian.org/~acid
  `-   9A0D 5FD9 EB42 22F6 8974  C95C A462 B51E C2FE E5CD

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: Digital signature

Reply via email to