El día domingo, diciembre 31, 2023 a las 05:34:42p. m. +0100, Ingo Klöcker escribió:
> On Samstag, 30. Dezember 2023 23:30:39 CET Felix E. Klee wrote: > > Line 25: “sec>” means secret primary key. Where does the key ID come > > from? Is it read from the card? Or it read from the public key ring on > > disk? > > > > Line 27: “ssb>” means secret sub key. > > > > Line 29: “ssb#” means secret sub key, but without the matching secret > > key on the card. This I just learned from Ingo Klöcker in another > > thread. > > The meaning of ">" and "#" is documented in the description of the command > `--list-secret-keys` in the manual page of gpg. > > Regards, > Ingo It seems from the man page that only '#' is documented: man gpg ... --list-secret-keys -K List all keys from the secret keyrings, or just the ones given on the command line. A # after the letters sec means that the secret key is not usable (for example, if it was created via --export-secret-subkeys). What does '>' means? Thanks matthias -- Matthias Apitz, ✉ g...@unixarea.de, http://www.unixarea.de/ +49-176-38902045 Public GnuPG key: http://www.unixarea.de/key.pub I am not at war with Russia. Я не воюю с Россией. Ich bin nicht im Krieg mit Russland. _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org https://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users