That was it! Many thanks. May I suggest that, as a value-add feature,
the Red Hat GPG public key get installed along with the GPG package?
I don't remember having explicitly added the RH 5.2 pgp signature
on my former setup, but it was a long time ago. Again, thank you.
- Stephen P. Schaefer
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On 24 May, Victor R. Cardona wrote:
> Have you downloaded their key yet? They have a key for pgp and another for gpg. If
>you are using gpg all you need to do is type "gpg --import <filename>" without the
>quotes. I'm sorry, but I don't know what the commands are for pgp.
>
> Victor
>
> On Wed, May 24, 2000 at 06:48:16PM -0400, Stephen P. Schaefer wrote:
>> I've got RH 6.2 installed on an intel (well, AMD) box, and I downloaded
>> gmp-2.0.2-13.src.rpm from rawhide.redhat.com. An rpm --checksig says
>>
>> gmp-2.0.2-13.src.rpm: md5 GPG NOT OK
>>
>> Now, I understand perfectly that I can't expect any assurance of
>> correctness whatsoever, by Red Hat or any other author, but I would like
>> to know that this was a good faith effort by someone (almost anyone).
>> So: How do I find and add the necessary public keys to the keyring used
>> by rpm? RPM documentation references /etc/rpm/.pgp and /etc/rpm/macros,
>> but neither of those are on my system, after a (supposedly) complete
>> install. I don't see a GPG pubring.gpg on my system, either -- the
>> manpage doesn't mention GPG at all, although I see several references to
>> it in the rpm binary. Can anyone here save me from having to read the
>> rpm source code?
>>
>> Or did I get a trojan copy?
>>
>> As a manipulator of large numbers, gmp does have bearing on
>> crypto applications -- though not gpg, to judge from
>>
>> rpm --requires gnupg
>>
>> - Stephen P. Schaefer
>>
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