Thus spake Corey Halpin ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):

>   Does anybody know how gpg selects which of the keyring files you
>   specify to it to attempt to write to?

This from the man page: 

        --keyring file

        Add file to the list of keyrings. If file begins with a tilde
        and a slash, these are replaced by the HOME directory. If the
        filename does not contain a slash, it is assumed to be in the
        home-directory ("~/.gnupg" if --homedir is not used). The
        filename may be prefixed with a scheme: 

        "gnupg-ring:" is the default one. 

        "gnupg-gdbm:" may be used for a GDBM ring. Note that GDBM is
        experimental and likely to be removed in future versions. 

        It might make sense to use it together with
        --no-default-keyring. 

I think you may want to try the "gnupg-ring:" prefix.  I'm going to do
so now, as I did not know that the debian keyring was available on my
system :-)

-- 
Justin R. Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
PGP/GnuPG Key ID 0xC9C40C31 (preferred)

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