Cool, whenever you have the PGP keys entered, I think you can start the release process. The script should take care of most things, and prompt you for various things. If you have any questions you can just leave the script up, and ask here or on IRC.
On 11/9/16 4:05 PM, Pranav Sharma wrote: > Thanks, that really sorted out my doubts :D, will do the rest asap. > > On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 1:28 AM, Dave Brondsema <d...@brondsema.net> wrote: > >> The release script will sign the final Allura release file with PGP. Its >> another way in addition to md5 and sha1 checks to know the release is >> official. >> With PGP keys you can sign each others keys and form a "web of trust" too. >> >> Can you put your public key fingerprint on your account at >> https://id.apache.org/ ? Then it will show up at >> http://people.apache.org/keys/group/allura.asc And I think we'll want >> to copy >> it to http://www.apache.org/dist/allura/KEYS manually too. Then people >> will >> know your key is part of the Allura project. >> >> >> On 11/9/16 11:08 AM, Pranav Sharma wrote: >>> Hi, >>> >>> I have set up PGP keys (locally and on mit pgp server server) as >> required, >>> in the release page, but was wondering what if the actual use for it? >>> Though I know that they are used to encrypt emails. >>> >>> Thanks. >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> Dave Brondsema : d...@brondsema.net >> http://www.brondsema.net : personal >> http://www.splike.com : programming >> <>< >> > -- Dave Brondsema : d...@brondsema.net http://www.brondsema.net : personal http://www.splike.com : programming <><