su. den 07. 02. 2016 klokka 12.21 (+0000) skreiv Patrick O'Callaghan:
On Sun, 2016-02-07 at 13:14 +0100, Stig Roar Wangberg wrote:su. den 07. 02. 2016 klokka 11.56 (+0000) skreiv Patrick O'Callaghan:On Sun, 2016-02-07 at 08:27 +0100, Stig Roar Wangberg wrote:People tell me my letters aren't sign, or at least they can't see any sign of it. Here, after sending it, it says "valid signature". When I sing a letter in the terminal, it begins with a Hash: SHA256 and ends with END PGP SIGNATURE. And if I paste in a sign letter from the terminal into Evolution, it says "invalid signature". But I have only one key. I put in my ID under "security". I left the SHA valute to choose my key (I think). Can anyone clarify this for me, please?You CANNOT simply paste a signed message into Evo and expect the signature to be valid. The signature covers the entire message, including the headers Evo adds before sending, so doing this absolutely guarantees that the signature will be bad. To use signed messages in Evo, simply click on PGP Sign (or S/MIME sign if you have the certificate), then hit Send. There's nothing mysterious about it and messing around with cut and paste from a terminal session is completely unnecessary. pocMy key is set to the SHA value of 256. Should also choose that value under 'security' below my key ID too? This is my last question.The key ID is the 8-character value that appears when you run "gpg -- list-keys", or run seahorse. See https://help.gnome.org/users/evolution /3.18/mail-encryption-gpg-set-up.html.en poc
OK, great! Thanks a lot! So I leave the 'signing algorithm (SHA1 to SHA512)' "blank" then, right? ONLY my ID? ('Cause I was wondering if the value should be set as the same as my key's SHA-value.) SRW
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