On Sun, 31 Aug 2014 16:00, paul.le...@quadensemble.com said:
> I'd like to use the card manager function, but whenever I invoke it the
> application returns the error "Error accessing the card", and the
> status bar reports "Checking for card .. "
I have actually thank you for raising this issu
On Sun, 31 Aug 2014 18:03, gn...@iam.tj said:
> to see how to do is set the keyring file to use. There doesn't appear to be
> any function that provides for setting an existing key ring; the best I could
> find is gpgme_op_import_keys() which talks about:
The keyring is an internal propery of Gnu
On Sun, 31 Aug 2014 23:27, tristan.sant...@internexusconnect.net said:
> Yes the card can have a 4096bit Auth, Sign and Encryption key. You have
Correct.
> to generate them on a machine though, not on card.
The cards generate them just fine.
Note that this is only true for the ZeitControl as c
On 31/08/14 18:31, Jonathan Brown wrote:
> Can an OpenPGP 2.0 smart card hold 3 4096 keys at the same-time?
> Additionally could an OpenPGP 2.0 Smart card hold 4 4096 keys as well?
>
> This is assuming you are using a GPG version that supports this. Sorry
> I couldnt find this answer online.
>
>
>
Can an OpenPGP 2.0 smart card hold 3 4096 keys at the same-time?
Additionally could an OpenPGP 2.0 Smart card hold 4 4096 keys as well?
This is assuming you are using a GPG version that supports this. Sorry I
couldnt find this answer online.
___
Gnupg-us
I hope this is the correct list to raise this issue at?
The GNU Privicy assistant seems to be working fine, when I start it I
can see a list of my keys.
I'd like to use the card manager function, but whenever I invoke it the
application returns the error "Error accessing the card", and the
st
On 31/08/14 01:47, Ingo Klöcker wrote:
On Saturday 30 August 2014 23:11:17 TJ wrote:
On 30/08/14 22:20, Ingo Klöcker wrote:>
I strongly suggest that you have a look at using some Python binding for
gpgme instead of messing around with gpg. gpgme is _the_ library for
using GnuPG in other program
On Sat, 30 Aug 2014 19:08, free10...@gmail.com said:
> I would say that they are both good tools for separating the secret
> keys from the computer. I have both kinds. The great thing about the
> Crypto Stick is that it combines the card reader with the OpenPGP card
> in one discrete package and
Hello,
The two patches below against gpg-agent (gnupg2-2.0.26) [1] and scute-1.4.0
[2] allow ssl/tls auth using an opengpg card with 2048 rsa key.
The patch against gpg-agent basically allow a hash length of 51 bytes for
signing. And the patch against scute increases a string buffer to be able