On Mon 2016-08-01 15:12:21 -0400, Peter Lebbing wrote: > On 01/08/16 19:53, Johan Wevers wrote: >> It does not. If you want to be able to read pgp 2.x encoded archives you'd >> better go for 1.4. > > Incidentally, for this use case I'd personally recommend to use 2.1 for > everything except accessing those ancient archives, and just use 1.4 for that, > if that is something that works for you. > >> I think the interface of 2.0 is more stable so if you use scripting, a 2.1 >> update might break it. > > I'm sure you know, but the OP might not: in this case, you're scripting in a > way > not approved by the GnuPG devs, i.e., using interfaces meant for humans > instead > of machines. > > 2.1 even has some functions that 2.0 does not with regard to easy scripting > (--quick-add-[stuff] and friends). I don't know whether there is stuff that > 2.0 > can do that 2.1 can't at the moment, though (which is different from > stability, > it's feature completeness).
fwiw, i agree with Peter that 2.1 appears at the moment to be better for all use cases except for parsing archives of old documents that use formats we currently believe to be at least partially broken. --dkg _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users