On Jun 23, 2010, at 12:03 AM, Dan Mahoney, System Admin wrote: >>> Are you sure about that? "clean" strips off useless signatures (useless >>> being defined as an invalid signature, a superseded signature, a revoked >>> signature, and a signature from a key that isn't present on the keyring). >>> Signatures from keys that are present, but have no trust value are not >>> stripped off. >> >> Let me double check. I saw it earlier today when transferring my work sig >> to my personal one. But it might just have been that my coworkers did not >> have sigs present. It's entirely possible I mangled the windows. > > Yup, that's what happened. I had imported my work key to my personal > machine, but didn't have the keys of all my coworkers on my personal box, so > "clean" decided to be helpful. > > I pulled it off the keyserver again, and then pulled down the keys of all my > coworkers, and was good.
Ah, good. I'm glad. > On a related subject, is there a way to say "pull down the keys of all keyids > who have signed key X"? Not directly, but you can do something like this: gpg --recv-keys `gpg --with-colons --fixed-list-mode --list-sigs $THE_KEY | egrep '^sig:' | cut -f5 -d: | sort -u` David _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users