On Tue, 19 Jun 2018 22:31, fe...@crowfix.com said: > I tried both these steps, and neither changed anything. Import said it > imported, but I have a saved copy of .gnupg, and there was no difference after
Did it say that an secret key was imported? You check your secret keys using gpg -K [USERIDs] if you add --debug=ipc you will how gpg asks gpg-agent whether a secret key is available for a given public key. Here the so-called keygrips are used and not the fingerprints of the key. In the directory ".gnupg/private-keys-v1.d" you should find files of the form "KEYGRIP.key. These store the private keys. Do you have some? To see the keygrips of a key you used gpg --with-keygrip -k [USERIDs] Youy can used --debug=ipc also with --import which then shows how gpg sends the private keys to gpg-agent. Does it all look fine or do you see "ERR" lines? Salam-Shalom, Werner -- # Please read: Daniel Ellsberg - The Doomsday Machine # Die Gedanken sind frei. Ausnahmen regelt ein Bundesgesetz.
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