On Samstag, 12. April 2025 07:36:18 Mitteleuropäische Sommerzeit Andreas Metzler wrote: > On 2025-04-10 Ingo Klöcker <kloec...@kde.org> wrote: > > Hmm, the default should be "no-grab" according to the man page. According > > to the history "no-grab" is default since gnupg 2.1.23 (released almost 8 > > years ago). Maybe Debian decided that "grab" is better for you. > > that default somehow does not seem to be set as it should be. > > I have just rebuilt 2.5.5 with: > ./configure --enable-maintainer-mode --prefix=/tmp/GNUPG/usr > --sysconfdir=/tmp/GNUPG/etc --localstatedir=/tmp/GNUPG/var > --runstatedir=/tmp/GNUPG/run --disable-gpgtar --disable-bzip2 && make -j5 > && make install > > testit@argenau:~$ /tmp/GNUPG/usr/bin/gpgconf --list-options gpg-agent | > grep grab > grab:8:2:let PIN-Entry grab keyboard and mouse:0:0::::
Looks correct to me. The format is name:flags:level:description:type:alt-type:argname:default:argdef:value Type 0 (= none) indicates that this is an option that's either set or not set. A default is not defined, but if an option is not set explicitly then it's considered unset. And the value is empty which means that the option is not set explicitly. > The respective test user has no ~/.gnupg/ and /tmp/GNUPG/etc does not > even exist. What do you get when you run the same gpgconf command for the gnupg provided by Debian for your user account with and without the no-grab option in your gpg-agent.conf? Regards, Ingo
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