Hi

Can someone tell the how to disable pinentry?  I'd like to be able to run gpg 
--edit-key, or to open a password encrypted file without a GUI.  I was able to 
do that in RHEL5, but so far, not in RHEL6 or CentOS 6.

I have gpg 2.0.14 on CentOS 6.6 and RHEL6U6.

I've tried to disable pinentry, without success, with the following
        1. comment out use-agent in ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf
        2. unset the following variables
                GPG_AGENT_INFO
                SSH_ASKPASS

I've had less success on RHEL6 box as there is not a default line, use-agent, 
in the gpg.conf file.  On the CentOS box, when I try to run the passwd command 
in gpg --edit-key, I get the message:
        can't connect to /home/foo/.gnupg/S.gpg-agent': No such file or 
directory

I did not see a gpg-agent daemon running on either box.  I ran a ps command 
while the gpg-edit-key was running.


Thank you.


Cathy
---
Cathy L. Smith
IT Engineer

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Operated by Battelle for the
U.S. Department of Energy

Phone:      509.375.2687
Fax:        509.375.2330
Email:      cathy.sm...@pnnl.gov


-----Original Message-----
From: gnupg-users-boun...@gnupg.org [mailto:gnupg-users-boun...@gnupg.org] On 
Behalf Of Robert J. Hansen
Sent: Wednesday, March 23, 2011 12:32 PM
To: gnupg-users@gnupg.org
Subject: Re: Deniability

On 3/23/11 3:06 PM, Mark H. Wood wrote:
> My suspicion is that we never had anywhere near as much privacy as 
> many believe.  A hundred years ago...

I grew up in a small town of under 5,000, where the nearest city of more than 
20,000 was an hour's drive away.  Forget "a hundred years ago":
having been back there recently for a funeral, I can tell you small towns are 
still that same way today.

In a sense, I think this validates my thesis.  In a small town the cost of 
sharing information about people within the town, to people within the town, is 
just about nil: you wind up having these conversations while you're at the 
service station filling up your tank, when you're in line at the grocery store, 
when you're ... etc.  But having these same conversations with people outside 
the town involves effort, which in turn means that you can travel 100 miles and 
be reasonably confident nobody there has heard of you.

I agree that the small-town phenomenon argues against the idea of an idyllic 
privacy past.  I just think modern communications means the entire world is 
turning into a small-town phenomena.

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