On May 3, 2009, at 8:17 AM, Simon Ruderich wrote:
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On Sat, May 02, 2009 at 09:45:11AM -0400, David Shaw wrote:
On May 2, 2009, at 6:25 AM, Simon Ruderich wrote:
The short answer is that you can only use a 160-bit hash with your
default DSA key. Th
Hmm, that would spoil things.
reading this
http://www.velocityreviews.com/forums/t365339-p-write-eof-without-closing.html
the opinion there is that sending control-Z is just a signal from the
keyboard to the shell which the shell uses to cut the flow to the
application listening on stdin, it do
Under DOS, redirecting from the standard output of A to the standard
input of B meant the contents were stored in a temporary file somewhere,
due to DOS's inability to multitask. It's worth checking to be sure
Windows still doesn't do that when running those at the command line.
James
On Sun May
I spent a little time coding in windows today (using lazarus).
I have come to the conclusion that you can pipe stuff to gpg from inside
dos window, but that if you try to pipe stuff directly from the pascal
program it fails.
I actually got my program to work by piping to cmd.exe with "echo Mary
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On Sat, May 02, 2009 at 09:45:11AM -0400, David Shaw wrote:
> On May 2, 2009, at 6:25 AM, Simon Ruderich wrote:
>
> The short answer is that you can only use a 160-bit hash with your
> default DSA key. That means SHA-1 or RIPEMD/160. There is a featu
2009/5/1 Atom Smasher :
> On Thu, 30 Apr 2009, David Shaw wrote:
>
>> http://eurocrypt2009rump.cr.yp.to/837a0a8086fa6ca714249409ddfae43d.pdf
>>
>> There is not much hard information yet, but the two big quotes are "SHA-1
>> collisions now 2^52" and "Practical collisions are within resources of a
>>
reflum,
On Sun, 2009-05-03 at 10:22 +0100, Philip wrote:
> So far I have figured out that on windows if I enter the command
> gpg -eat -r [recipient key]
>
> I get a prompt on the console
> If I then type a message, followed by control-Z
> then gpg will encrypt the message and dump the pgp text
On Sun, 03 May 2009 10:22:49 +0100
Philip wrote:
Hello Philip,
> Does anyone know the official, correct console way to get pgp to
> terminate and output the encrypted text from console?
> I'm amazed that it just doesn't seem to be documented anywhere.
Through trial and error, I found D works.
So far I have figured out that on windows if I enter the command
gpg -eat -r [recipient key]
I get a prompt on the console
If I then type a message, followed by control-Z
then gpg will encrypt the message and dump the pgp text to the screen,
or to a file if I used the -o [filename] option.
Howe