Hi Larry,

On Sun, 4 Mar 2018, Larry Hunter wrote:

> There is bug using "git log --show-signature" in my installation
> 
>     git 2.16.2.windows.1
>     gpg (GnuPG) 2.2.4
>     libgcrypt 1.8.2

The gpg.exe shipped in Git for Windows should say something like this:

        $ gpg --version
        gpg (GnuPG) 1.4.22
        Copyright (C) 2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
        License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later
        <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
        This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
        There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

        Home: ~/.gnupg
        Supported algorithms:
        Pubkey: RSA, RSA-E, RSA-S, ELG-E, DSA
        Cipher: IDEA, 3DES, CAST5, BLOWFISH, AES, AES192, AES256, TWOFISH,
                CAMELLIA128, CAMELLIA192, CAMELLIA256
        Hash: MD5, SHA1, RIPEMD160, SHA256, SHA384, SHA512, SHA224
        Compression: Uncompressed, ZIP, ZLIB, BZIP2

Therefore, the GNU Privacy Guard version you use is not the one shipped
and supported by the Git for Windows project.

> that prints (with colors) an extra ^M (carriage return?) at the end of
> the gpg lines. As an example, the output of "git log --show-signature
> HEAD" looks like:
> 
>     $ git log --show-signature HEAD
>     commit 46c490188ebd216f20c454ee61108e51b481844e (HEAD -> master)
>     gpg: Signature made 03/04/18 16:53:06 ora solare Europa occidentale^M
>     gpg:                using RSA key ...^M
>     gpg: Good signature from "..." [ultimate]^M
>     Author: ... <...>
>     Date:   Sun Mar 4 16:53:06 2018 +0100
>     ...
> 
> To help find a fix, I tested the command "git verify-commit HEAD" that
> prints (without colors) the same lines without extra ^M characters.
> 
>     $ git verify-commit HEAD
>     gpg: Signature made 03/04/18 16:53:06 ora solare Europa occidentale
>     gpg:                using RSA key ...
>     gpg: Good signature from "..." [ultimate]

My guess is that the latter command simply does not go through the pager
while the former does.

Do you see the ^M in the output of `git -p verify-commit HEAD`?

Ciao,
Johannes

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