Hi Daniel, I don't usually like to copy my private key all over the place. Group keys are a good way of doing this.
The gpg commands for making that happen are kind of odd. I was confused too at first. But, take a look at ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf. There should be comments in there that let you make a group my specifying it in the file. If yours is without comments, here are mine: # Group names may be defined like this: # group mynames = paige 0x12345678 joe patti # # Any time "mynames" is a recipient (-r or --recipient), it will be # expanded to the names "paige", "joe", and "patti", and the key ID # "0x12345678". Note there is only one level of expansion - you # cannot make an group that points to another group. Note also that # if there are spaces in the recipient name, this will appear as two # recipients. In these cases it is better to use the key ID. #group mynames = paige 0x12345678 joe patti Hope this helps. Jason _______________________________________________ Password-Store mailing list [email protected] http://lists.zx2c4.com/listinfo.cgi/password-store-zx2c4.com
