Paul Miller writes: > Ok.. I installed cfinger and created the .pgpkey file. When I finger it > shows a different output (because of cfinger -- its working) but it > doesn't show whats in the .plan or .pgpkey, only user's real name. In the > /etc/inetd.conf it runs it as root, so access shouldn't be a problem... > what could be? -- try fingering [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > - -Paul > > On Mon, 4 Aug 1997, Martin Schulze wrote: > > > On Aug 4, Paul Miller wrote > > > > > How can I set up my system so people can finger for pgp keys? I have no > > > idea where to start, but there must be a template file somewhere. > > > > Very easy. Install cfingerd and extract you pgp key into ~/.pgpkey > > (don't forget to chmod 644 it) ^^^^^^^^^
Did you take care of this? If so, please take a look at /etc/cfingerd/cfingerd.conf. One can configure which information should be given out. If you grep for -i pgp in it you should see something like: PGP_KEY = ".pgpkey", +PGP = [TRUE, TRUE], PGPKEY = "PGP Public Key:", cfingerd performs some logging so you should be able to read some messages from syslog. Regards Joey -- / Martin Schulze * Debian Linux Maintainer * [EMAIL PROTECTED]/ / http://www.debian.org/ http://home.pages.de/~joey/ -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .