> I created ~/bin/gpg2 > > #!/bin/bash > > echo $* > /home/lordbah/args.txt > > What appears in args.txt is: > > --verbose --no-secmem-warning --no-greeting --no-tty --batch --yes -- > status-fd=85 --verify-options show-photos --photo-viewer > /usr/libexec/camel-gpg-photo-saver --state "/tmp/camel-gpg-photo-state- > WDV3J0" --photo "%i" --keyid "%K" --type "%t" --verify /tmp/evolution- > pgp.FCM3J0 - >
I suspect that not all those are discrete arguments - try doing something like this for word in "$@"; do echo "$word"; done this will put each argument on a different line. > > Hmm, the "bad" message has both a text/plain part and a text/html part, > wherease the "good" message has only a text/plain. I wonder if that's > an issue. > > gpg version is 2.2.12. > In the structure of the message, does the GPG section cover the whole of the message or just one section? If you save the message and run it through GPG manually, does it verify? Is it possible that GPG is actually telling you the truth and that something has modified the message in transit - it's not unknown that ISPs modify HTML in messages to add web bugs, there were some free mail providers in the past that added their own advertising banners into HTML mail. P. _______________________________________________ evolution-list mailing list evolution-list@gnome.org To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ... https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list