OK, this worked in getting the binaries extracted and by setting PATH and DYNLD_LIBRARY_PATH I can get the bins to load and dump version information... SUCCESS...
Now my biggest problem is getting the agent and pinentry (I assume) to talk to gpg. I was hoping I could set bindir, libdir, libexecdir with gpgconf (gpgconf.conf) but I can't seem to figure out how to convice gpg to look in nonstandard paths for binaries and libraries. Seems to be ignoring PATH environment. Suggestions? On Thu, Aug 27, 2015 at 1:31 AM, Patrick Brunschwig <patr...@enigmail.net> wrote: > On 26.08.15 17:16, Dan Bryant wrote: >> I have a monitored OS X laptop that I would like to put GNU Privacy >> Guard (gpg) on. Of course I can't because I don't have Admin rights, >> but I was hoping there is a way to install it in user space through a >> virtual environment or chroot, or some other wizardry, or by exacting >> the package files. >> >> Obviously I only need console access to the app. > > > Just download a DMG file, open (=mount) it, and copy the PKG file to > some temporary location. Then use pkgutil in a terminal to unpack the > PKG file to some temp directory. Then copy whatever you need to your > home directory. > > man pkgutil will tell you how to use it. > > -Patrick _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users