I would just backup the expired and revoked keys, then delete them.  I
personally never have used  my revoked keys.  I mean maybe once in a very
great while, I come across a file encrypted with my old key on my hard
drive, but that's happened maybe twice in the last ten years.
On Dec 27, 2014 1:54 PM, "Sandeep Murthy" <s.mur...@mykolab.com> wrote:

> Hi
>
> I have GnuPG/MacGPG2 (v. 2.0.26) on my system (OS X 10.10.1), installed
> via GPG Tools Suite.
>
> I have four keypairs associated with my main email, two of which are
> revoked and one expired. But if I
> try to edit the main key associated with email by
>
> $ gpg --edit-key <email>
>
> then it invokes gpg and points to one of the revoked keys rather than the
> active key. I have to explicitly
> give the short ID of the active key to edit that key and get its
> fingerprint.
>
> Is there a way to change this, or I am doing something wrong?
>
> Sandeep Murthy
> s.mur...@mykolab.com
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Gnupg-users mailing list
> Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
> http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users
>
>
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