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On 17-08-14 05:58 PM, Daniel Kahn Gillmor wrote: > On Mon 2017-08-14 13:25:58 -0300, Duane Whitty wrote: >> Thanks for your response. So, what you are saying is that the >> man page is wrong ;-) > > I didn't think that was what i was saying, but there have certainly > been bugs in the documentation in the past. Is there specific text > that you think is wrong? do you have a suggestion about what it > should be changed to? > > --dkg > The situation is a little more clear since your last response. If I may quote you: "the trouble with these two invocations of gpg is that they offer no command. Each invocation of GnuPG is supposed to include exactly one command and zero or more options. ..." I ran gpg2 --with-fingerprint oracle_vbox.asc which did what I wanted and I received no complaints. I did not and still do not want to import the oracle_vbox public key into my key ring. I am happy to download it and check it each time. When I looked at the man page for how to do this it looked like gpg2 - --fingerprint oracle_vbox.asc should do the job but as you have pointed out gpg expects a key in my keyring to perform that action on. After reading the man page several times for the 1.4 and 2.0 versions I can see nothing that would make me believe that I needed to provide the program with a key from my keyring. That's fine though, I'm still learning. Now that you point it out I can see that --with-fingerprint is an option under the section "Key related options" and so it makes sense that a command should be entered as well. I am not sure I understand why it would be bad to do the following, which implies not importing the key to a keyring: gpg --with-fingerprint --fingerprint < public-key-file.asc where I substituted --fingerprint for --import However if I do that it's the same as running: gpg2 --with-fingerprint --fingerprint and the oracle_vbox.asc file containing the key is completely ignored and there are no warnings that it was ignored. Before I go down the road on offering an opinion on how the man page should be "fixed" (maybe it's not really broken) can you explain why it would be bad to let gpg generate and display the fingerprint of a key in an ascii armoured file? By the way, I really appreciate the assistance you're giving me in helping me to understand this. I know your busy. Best Regards, Duane - -- Duane Whitty du...@nofroth.com -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJZkh4hAAoJEOJfpr8UVxtkwj0H/0bPfVYbKMlbvLBsF+9pTFPW 9PwNRA47dARN8eBwtRr106br0iCLFxs31ObXyh80M+cGJFTIQN61y3FfD8GsEv9/ BS9xzjHv4q/sO+pF2yOy2ygmjoxouvbPIL86yobhJA+bKBw4piH9UxaPnQmO+SLC j450uLxl2C7ZWOcSI4bi0myHTnsZkvkbrPlYfo0zjbyJXIP+3DonRZhhVR2nzUwr DNX1K5TRy2Dw4NN430o0q9Bcef05XywExJFpCaxFWDOJdTgwVOkrfodDoaXKotjx M+nqD9sduQHXiCeXR1cN7aZ9rYCJ301xeFAiRJTOHl/sTUpoEdP2sj5i3Fog+pQ= =mBYf -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users