On 03/06/13 14:41, Branko Majic wrote: > Does anyone utilise this kind of schema?
I do this as well. The primary key is on a different card than the subkeys. Unlike Pete, I had to resort to some key splitting and recombination tricks to get GnuPG to recognise the situation. Perhaps this has since improved and is no longer needed. The thing is that when I stuck one smartcard in the computer and ran --card-status, it would create a stub private key which only referred to the card I had inserted. So far, this is obvious and correct. However, once I gave it the other smartcard, I could not get GnuPG to update the private key stub to refer to that smartcard as well. Generating two stubs, one for each smartcard, 'gpgsplit'ting the secret key stubs and recombining them to have stubs for both smartcards in one key, fixed the situation for me. If this happens to you as well, I can give detailed instructions. Good luck, 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