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mirror of git://git.gnupg.org/gnupg.git synced 2024-11-10 21:38:50 +01:00
This commit is contained in:
Werner Koch 2005-07-26 19:11:51 +00:00
parent a7ea40e4f8
commit a5a5acb93a

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@ -425,9 +425,7 @@ functionality is also available as the subcommand "passwd" with the
@item --sign-key @code{name}
Signs a public key with your secret key. This is a shortcut version of
the subcommand "sign" from --edit. You may also want to consider the
option --no-interactive-selection which will drop you into the regular
menu when not all keys shall be signed.
the subcommand "sign" from --edit.
@item --lsign-key @code{name}
Signs a public key with your secret key but marks it as
@ -621,18 +619,16 @@ used, the default key is the first key found in the secret keyring.
Note that -u or --local-user overrides this option.
@item -r, --recipient @code{name}
@itemx
Encrypt for user id @code{name}. If this option or --hidden-recipient
is not specified, GnuPG asks for the user-id unless
--default-recipient is given.
@item -R, --hidden-recipient @code{name}
@itemx
Encrypt for user id @code{name}, but hide the keyid of the key. This
option hides the receiver of the message and is a countermeasure
against traffic analysis. If this option or --recipient is not
specified, GnuPG asks for the user-id unless --default-recipient is
given.
Encrypt for user ID @code{name}, but hide the key ID of this user's
key. This option helps to hide the receiver of the message and is a
limited countermeasure against traffic analysis. If this option or
--recipient is not specified, GnuPG asks for the user ID unless
--default-recipient is given.
@item --default-recipient @code{name}
Use @code{name} as default recipient if option --recipient is not used and
@ -714,11 +710,6 @@ Don't make any changes (this is not completely implemented).
@item -i, --interactive
Prompt before overwriting any files.
@item --no-interactive-selection
Do not use interactive selection mode in certain menues but require
a selection in advance. This is currently only used with the "sign"
subcommand of --edit-key.
@item --batch
@itemx --no-batch
Use batch mode. Never ask, do not allow interactive commands.
@ -980,6 +971,12 @@ to no.
Compact (remove all signatures from) user IDs on the key being
exported if the user IDs are not usable. This is the same as running
the --edit-key command "clean uids" before export. Defaults to no.
@item export-reset-subkey-passwd
When using the "--export-secret-subkeys" command, this option resets
the passphrases for all exported subkeys to empty. This is useful
when the exported subkey is to be used on an unattended amchine where
a passphrase won't make sense. Defaults to no.
@end table
@item --list-options @code{parameters}
@ -1096,6 +1093,8 @@ Sets a list of directories to search for photo viewers and keyserver
helpers. If not provided, keyserver helpers use the compiled-in
default directory, and photo viewers use the $PATH environment
variable.
Note, that on W32 system this value is ignored when searching for
keyserver helpers.
@item --show-keyring
Display the keyring name at the head of key listings to show which
@ -1446,11 +1445,12 @@ disables this option.
@item --throw-keyids
@itemx --no-throw-keyids
Do not put the recipient keyid into encrypted packets. This option
hides the receiver of the message and is a countermeasure against
traffic analysis. It may slow down the decryption process because all
available secret keys are tried. --no-throw-keyids disables this
option.
Do not put the recipient key IDs into encrypted messages. This helps
to hide the receivers of the message and is a limited countermeasure
against traffic analysis. On the receiving side, it may slow down the
decryption process because all available secret keys must be tried.
--no-throw-keyids disables this option. This option is essentially
the same as using --hidden-recipient for all recipients.
@item --not-dash-escaped
This option changes the behavior of cleartext signatures
@ -1642,6 +1642,23 @@ is accessing those files. A bootable floppy with a stand-alone
encryption system will probably use this. Improper usage of this
option may lead to data and key corruption.
@item --exit-on-status-write-error
This option will cause write errors on the status FD to immediately
terminate the process. That should in fact be the default but it
never worked this way and thus we need an option to enable this, so
that the change won't break applications which close their end of a
status fd connected pipe too early. Using this option along with
--enable-progress-filter may be used to cleanly cancel long running
gpg operations.
@item --limit-card-insert-tries @code{n}
With @code{n} greater than 0 the number of prompts asking to insert a
smartcard gets limited to N-1. Thus with a value of 1 gpg won't at
all ask to insert a card if none has been inserted at startup. This
option is useful in the configuration file in case an application does
not know about the smartcard support and waits ad infinitum for an
inserted card.
@item --no-random-seed-file
GnuPG uses a file to store its internal random pool over invocations.
This makes random generation faster; however sometimes write operations