-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 Hi
On Wednesday 10 November 2010 at 3:21:21 PM, in <mid:201011101621.21613.mailinglis...@hauke-laging.de>, Hauke Laging wrote: > AFAIK gpg takes the (compatible) subkey which is valid > for the longest remaining period. I thought Gunpg used the largest available subkey for the task, and multiple appropriate sukeys were of the same size the newest would be used. > Unfortunately you > cannot even force gpg to use a certain subkey > (directly): Giving a subkey ID as encryption target > triggers a strange process: gpg looks for the main key > of this ID and then selects the subkey as if the main > key ID had been given... What happens when you specify the subkey with an exclamation mark (!) after the key id? - -- Best regards MFPA mailto:expires2...@ymail.com I think not, said Descartes, and promptly disappeared -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQCVAwUBTNrp5aipC46tDG5pAQqlcQP/dvWwOaVDF/lyiCWoBldcv9pzW1N+HHFs 9do67HxnBnVK9nEkTPc8g/rMxhb75JjBnbTcfFYfozFtjmfitDbT7/qjCY2GbGnj YrLnVDv8IGT3zFLcDAZYZoMtmGhGDQrrwyGrmEmhMh+DqrL3y271dgDrumezbDRL 3QCC20nJAJA= =6Zdf -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users