El día miércoles, mayo 31, 2017 a las 10:55:10p. m. +0200, Matthias Apitz 
escribió:

> I figured out how the netto data is passed to the gpg2 for --verify:
> 
> $ od -c data.asc
> 0000000    C   o   n   t   e   n   t   -   T   y   p   e   :       t   e
> 0000020    x   t   /   p   l   a   i   n   ;       c   h   a   r   s   e
> 0000040    t   =   u   t   f   -   8  \r  \n   C   o   n   t   e   n   t
> 0000060    -   D   i   s   p   o   s   i   t   i   o   n   :       i   n
> 0000100    l   i   n   e  \r  \n  \r  \n   h   e   l   l   o  \r  \n  \r
> 0000120   \n
> 0000121
> 
> and then it is fine:
> 
> $ gpg2 --verify signature.asc data.asc
> gpg: Signature made Wed May 31 21:40:19 2017 CEST
> gpg:                using RSA key 5E69FBAC1618562CB3CBFBC147CCF7E476FE9D11
> gpg: Good signature from "Matthias Apitz (GnuPG CCID) <g...@unixarea.de>" 
> [ultimate]
> 

From a discussion in the GnuPG mailing list I know now that the verify
is done based on a  "PGP-MIME" format, as refined in
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3156 and not on the "netto" body text.

Is there a way in 'mutt' to export a body part in this way?

        matthias


-- 
Matthias Apitz, ✉ g...@unixarea.de, ⌂ http://www.unixarea.de/  ☎ 
+49-176-38902045
Public GnuPG key: http://www.unixarea.de/key.pub
8. Mai 1945: Wer nicht feiert hat den Krieg verloren.
8 de mayo de 1945: Quien no festeja perdió la Guerra.
May 8, 1945: Who does not celebrate lost the War.

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: PGP signature

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