Hi Milan, thank you for your message.
On Mon, 2019-10-14 at 09:29 +0200, Milan Crha via evolution-list wrote:
> On Sat, 2019-10-12 at 11:38 +0200, David Hebbeker wrote:
> > *How can I configure my system such as when I compose an e-mail the
> > PGP key for the recipients are automatically retrieved from key
> > servers and added to my keyring?*
>
> As long as you've configured gpg through its .conf file it should be
> working.
I configured gpg through my configuration file [4] and tested the
settings using gpg directly in terminal.
> Maybe except when correct gpg is called. The libcamel can still call
> both gpg1 and gpg2, there's a setting for it in GSettings [1].
I used dconf-editor to set the binary path explicitly to the one used
in terminal.
org.gnome.evolution-data-server.camel-gpg-binary
This had no effect.
> The arguments being passed to the gpg are mentioned here [2]. Which
> are used depends on the actual action. The encrypt part adds these
> arguments [3] to those common.
I checked the arguments compiled by gpg_ctx_get_argv (assuming
`passwd_fd == -1` and `gpg->mode == GPG_CTX_MODE_ENCRYPT`). And tried
the resulting command successfully:
gpg --verbose --no-secmem-warning --no-greeting --no-tty \
--batch --yes --always-trust --encrypt --recipient \
[email protected] -u 6CBE7F49 --output - msg.txt
Is there any other possibility why the ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf [4] might not
be used by libcamel?
Thanks,
David
[4]: https://mail.gnome.org/archives/evolution-list/2019-October/txtb2m
foIm28_.txt
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part
_______________________________________________ evolution-list mailing list [email protected] To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ... https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list
