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Hi,
On 25.07.2012 15:50, Umarzuki Mochlis wrote:
> hi,
>
> can my gpg signature & ssh keys (public & private) be imported to
> a new installation of debian just by synching my home folder (same
> user as in the new system)?
I think that they can,
2012/7/25 Gaël DONVAL :
>
>> can my gpg signature & ssh keys (public & private) be imported to a
>> new installation of debian just by synching my home folder (same user
>> as in the new system)?
>>
>
> Yes. Your public and private ssh keys should be in ~/.ssh
> Your gpg keys should be in ~/.gnupg
> can my gpg signature & ssh keys (public & private) be imported to a
> new installation of debian just by synching my home folder (same user
> as in the new system)?
>
Yes. Your public and private ssh keys should be in ~/.ssh
Your gpg keys should be in ~/.gnupg
As long as you copy these two fo
On 25/07/2012 8:50 PM, Umarzuki Mochlis wrote:
hi,
can my gpg signature & ssh keys (public & private) be imported to a
new installation of debian just by synching my home folder (same user
as in the new system)?
thanks.
The GPG keys should be storedin ~/.gpg and the SSH keys in ~/.ssh so as
I don't know whether you want to include a lot of gpg usage information in your
howto on Mutt and GPG but here's what I had to do to export my key to the key
server and validate that it was exported.
Assuming that the key is created already which may be a big assumption:
gpg --keyserver wwwkeys
Thus spake Eric Brooks ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> Newbie question: Do I need to export my gpg signature to a server in
> order for it to be validated when someone opens my mail or is the
> signature just a data block associated with the email, unverified?
You may upload your public key, which people
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