Hi Dave,

In my experience, you shouldn't need anything more than GnuPG 2.x to verify a 
signature stored in a .asc file.  You should be able to verify the signature 
stored in a .asc file as follows:

gpg --verify [.asc file] [.dmg file]

This assumes that you have the relevant public key in your GnuPG keychain.  If 
you do not have the relevant key in your keychain, you will need to download it 
and import it:

gpg --import [key file]

Best,

-ranga

> On Apr 18, 2023, at 17:08, dave c via macports-users 
> <macports-users@lists.macports.org> wrote:
> 
> I want to verify an installer .dmg file’s signature. I downloaded both files 
> (installer and signature) from the developer’s site.
> 
> I installed gpg tools and discovered that gpg is looking for a .sig file, but 
> the signature file available from the developer is an .asc file.
> 
> I won’t describe the rabbit hole I went down of installing other packages so 
> to install apt-get which requires other packages be installed first… 
> 
> I’m not ignorant nor inexperienced using terminal but this time it was just 
> too far.
> 
> Looking for help to the shortest distance to my goal of verifying a signature.
> 
> Thanks,
> Dave
> macOS 10.12.6 Sierra

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