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* gpg.texi (OpenPGP Options): Update the personal-foo-preferences

documentation a bit.
This commit is contained in:
David Shaw 2007-04-15 05:01:22 +00:00
parent 6ae6e18d5f
commit 2be1afb5aa
2 changed files with 28 additions and 23 deletions

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@ -1,3 +1,8 @@
2007-04-15 David Shaw <dshaw@jabberwocky.com>
* gpg.texi (OpenPGP Options): Update the personal-foo-preferences
documentation a bit.
2007-04-10 Werner Koch <wk@g10code.com>
* gpg.texi (GPG Configuration Options): Document --batch, no-tty,

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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
@c Copyright (C) 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005
@c 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@c Copyright (C) 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006,
@c 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@c This is part of the GnuPG manual.
@c For copying conditions, see the file gnupg.texi.
@ -1866,31 +1866,31 @@ using this option, the encrypted message becomes vulnerable to a
message modification attack.
@item --personal-cipher-preferences @code{string}
Set the list of personal cipher preferences to @code{string}, this list
should be a string similar to the one printed by the command "pref" in
the edit menu. This allows the user to factor in their own preferred
algorithms when algorithms are chosen via recipient key preferences.
The most highly ranked cipher in this list is also used for the
@option{--symmetric} encryption command.
Set the list of personal cipher preferences to @code{string}. Use
@command{@gpgname --version} to get a list of available algorithms,
and use @code{none} to set no preference at all. This allows the user
to factor in their own preferred algorithms when algorithms are chosen
via recipient key preferences. The most highly ranked cipher in this
list is also used for the @option{--symmetric} encryption command.
@item --personal-digest-preferences @code{string}
Set the list of personal digest preferences to @code{string}, this list
should be a string similar to the one printed by the command "pref" in
the edit menu. This allows the user to factor in their own preferred
algorithms when algorithms are chosen via recipient key preferences.
The most highly ranked digest algorithm in this list is algo used when
signing without encryption (e.g. @option{--clearsign} or
@option{--sign}). The default value is SHA-1.
Set the list of personal digest preferences to @code{string}. Use
@command{@gpgname --version} to get a list of available algorithms,
and use @code{none} to set no preference at all. This allows the user
to factor in their own preferred algorithms when algorithms are chosen
via recipient key preferences. The most highly ranked digest
algorithm in this list is algo used when signing without encryption
(e.g. @option{--clearsign} or @option{--sign}). The default value is
SHA-1.
@item --personal-compress-preferences @code{string}
Set the list of personal compression preferences to @code{string}, this
list should be a string similar to the one printed by the command
"pref" in the edit menu. This allows the user to factor in their own
preferred algorithms when algorithms are chosen via recipient key
preferences. The most highly ranked algorithm in this list is also
used when there are no recipient keys to consider (e.g. @option{--symmetric}).
Set the list of personal compression preferences to @code{string}.
Use @command{@gpgname --version} to get a list of available
algorithms, and use @code{none} to set no preference at all. This
allows the user to factor in their own preferred algorithms when
algorithms are chosen via recipient key preferences. The most highly
ranked compression algorithm in this list is algo used when there are
no recipient keys to consider (e.g. @option{--symmetric}).
@item --s2k-cipher-algo @code{name}
Use @code{name} as the cipher algorithm used to protect secret keys.