Hi all, I just wanted to give a heads up on the apt-key deprecation. As you should know by now, apt-key will last be available in 22.04.
To prevent people from having leftover keys in trusted.gpg that they can't easily remove, apt will soon start to - verify keys using trusted.gpg.d only. - If this fails, it will retry with trusted.gpg - If that succeeded, it will print a warning at the end of the run that trusted.gpg was needed to verify the repository and instruct you migrate the key, pointing at documentation, and hinting at signed-by. This work is happening in merge request 209: https://salsa.debian.org/apt-team/apt/-/merge_requests/209/diffs (note that the message does not contain proper hints at the docs and signed-by yet) In 22.10 I expect to complete the transition by removing the apt-key executable, and removing the fallback to trusted.gpg from apt. At the beginning of the cycle would probably be best. -- debian developer - deb.li/jak | jak-linux.org - free software dev ubuntu core developer i speak de, en -- ubuntu-devel mailing list ubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel