On 24/05/13 18:49, irak wrote: > I don't understand your answer. If I understand correctly, it is the /sender/ who chooses how /you/ will see the line endings. If they send it using the --textmode switch or the PGP equivalent option, the .pgp file will be marked to instruct your GnuPG to convert the line endings to local form, which is just LF. If the sender does not use --textmode or its equivalent, you will get the EOL's that the original file of the sender had. If they are using Windows, that will be CR-LF.
> Is there any control over the gpg decipher process that says don't default > to the local EOR but use what was stored in the file? I don't think so. HHH mentioned PGP might have this option. The alternative, as Werner said, is to convert it yourself. As long as the file is consistent in its line-endings, this shouldn't be a problem. HTH, Peter. -- I use the GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG) in combination with Enigmail. You can send me encrypted mail if you want some privacy. My key is available at <http://digitalbrains.com/2012/openpgp-key-peter> _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users