On Wed, 18 Dec 2019 11:51, john doe said:
> By any chance, could something like the following be implemented?:
>
> $ gpg -K --print-fingerprint-only test
I doubt that this helps because the only way to get a single result is
to use the fingerprint for . Thus a second info item would be
required t
On 12/18/19 10:56 , Andrew Gallagher wrote:
> On 18/12/2019 09:32, Werner Koch via Gnupg-users wrote:
>> The -F:: is an interesting hack but Andrew's or my variant works
>> with all AWK implementations:
>>
>>awk -F: '$1=="fpr" {print $10}' | head -1
> Aha, I forgot about handling multiple
On 12/18/2019 10:56 AM, Andrew Gallagher wrote:
> On 18/12/2019 09:32, Werner Koch via Gnupg-users wrote:
>> The -F:: is an interesting hack but Andrew's or my variant works
>> with all AWK implementations:
>>
>>awk -F: '$1=="fpr" {print $10}' | head -1
>
> Aha, I forgot about handling mul
On 18/12/2019 09:32, Werner Koch via Gnupg-users wrote:
> The -F:: is an interesting hack but Andrew's or my variant works
> with all AWK implementations:
>
>awk -F: '$1=="fpr" {print $10}' | head -1
Aha, I forgot about handling multiple results. Note that you don't need
head if you're a
On Wed, 18 Dec 2019 08:19, john doe said:
> In other words, why '--quick-set-expire' requires a fingerprint and does
> not accept a .
Only the fingerprint is a unique identifier for the keyblock (aka
certificate, public key). Allowing a User-id would require extra code
in gpg and by the caller t
On 18/12/2019 07:19, john doe wrote:
> $ gpg --quick-set-expire $(gpg --with-colons -k test | awk -F:
> 'NR==3{print substr($2,1,length($2)-1)}') 1d
>
> I'm just wondering if there isn't a better, programatically, way to go
> about it?
Your awk looks awkward to me. What about this instead?
Hi,
I'm using the following command to get the fingerprint to quickly change
the expiration date on a key.
$ gpg --quick-set-expire $(gpg --with-colons -k test | awk -F:
'NR==3{print substr($2,1,length($2)-1)}') 1d
I'm just wondering if there isn't a better, programatically, way to go
a