Il 16/06/2018 19:48, Jeff Martin ha scritto:
> I'm not on Linux. I'm on macOS, which does not come with any built-in
> GPG. I must build GPG from source files. The only way to verify the
> source files in this situation (I think) is by checksum.
You can just fire up a VM booting with an "old enoug
NdK wrote:
> GPG is usually included
I'm not on Linux. I'm on macOS, which does not come with any built-in
GPG. I must build GPG from source files. The only way to verify the
source files in this situation (I think) is by checksum.
On Mon, Jun 11, 2018 at 2:38 AM, NdK wrote:
> Il 09/06/2018 19
Lee wrote:
> So you still need to find a release announcement on 2 or 3 different
> sites to check the signing key fingerprints.
You have hit the heart of my problem. I cannot find these 2 or 3 different sites
That is why I came to this mailing list: for hints on how to find
these other sites.
My
On 6/11/18, NdK wrote:
> Il 09/06/2018 19:08, Jeff Martin ha scritto:
>> For a fresh install of GnuPG, I was following the integrity check
>> directions. I have no prior version for GnuPG.
> Why not fetch some (unrelated) live distributions, possibly some older
> ones and some newer ones?
>
> GPG
Il 09/06/2018 19:08, Jeff Martin ha scritto:
> For a fresh install of GnuPG, I was following the integrity check
> directions. I have no prior version for GnuPG.
Why not fetch some (unrelated) live distributions, possibly some older
ones and some newer ones?
GPG is usually included and you can use
For a fresh install of GnuPG, I was following the integrity check
directions. I have no prior version for GnuPG.
https://gnupg.org/download/integrity_check.html
They read "...find the announcement on several other websites and make
sure the checksum is consistent." This task is difficult to accom