> mutt: 2.0.4
> pinentry: 1.1.0_7
> pinentry-tty: 1.1.0
> spamass-milter: 0.4.0_4
> spamassassin: 3.4.4
> subversion: 1.14.0
>
> I've looked through he config for all of these and not seen anything about
> PIN entry, and
gpgme: 1.15.1
> mimedefang: 2.83_3
> mutt: 2.0.4
> pinentry: 1.1.0_7
> pinentry-tty: 1.1.0
> spamass-milter: 0.4.0_4
> spamassassin: 3.4.4
> subversion: 1.14.0
>
> I've looked through he config for all of these and
I ma trying to figure out why pin entry and pinetnry-tty are installed. If I
try to remove it, I get a list of post that are to be deleted.
Installed packages to be REMOVED:
gnupg: 2.2.27
gpgme: 1.15.1
mimedefang: 2.83_3
mutt: 2.0.4
pinentry: 1.1.0_7
Hello,
I use security/pinentry-qt5 in KDE5 on FreeBSD CURRENT (all from SVN
HEAD, compiled by my own, ports with poudriere on February, 11).
security/pinentry-qt5 is used to unlock my OpenPGP card. In the past the
pinentry-qt5 pop-up window have had automatically the focus, now the
focus stays
At Tue, 23 Dec 2014 00:36:24 +0300 (MSK),
Dmitry Morozovsky ma...@rinet.ru wrote:
pinentry currently brokes if WITHOUT_X11 (or, by new world orderm
OPTIONS_UNSET+=X11) is set.
You can use security/pinentry-curses if you don't want Qt/GTK+ gui.
Ah I see. Maybe then security/gnupg
Jun-SAN,
On Sun, 28 Dec 2014, Jun Kuriyama wrote:
At Tue, 23 Dec 2014 00:36:24 +0300 (MSK),
Dmitry Morozovsky ma...@rinet.ru wrote:
pinentry currently brokes if WITHOUT_X11 (or, by new world orderm
OPTIONS_UNSET+=X11) is set.
You can use security/pinentry-curses if you don't
FreeBSD 10.1-RELEASE #0 r274401
When attempting to build pinentry-qt4, I am receiving the following error
message:
=== Staging for pinentry-0.9.0_1
=== pinentry-0.9.0_1 depends on executable: pinentry-qt4 - not found
===Verifying install for pinentry-qt4 in /usr/ports/security/pinentry
On Tue, 23 Dec 2014, Chris H wrote:
It looks as though it would be feasible to write an extremely
lightweight pinentry-compatible program to depend on so we can kill the
dependency bloat and have a simple shell-based password entry option.
Anyone up for a weekend challenge
On Wed, 24 Dec 2014 12:23:38 +0300 Dmitry Morozovsky wrote:
On Tue, 23 Dec 2014, Chris H wrote:
It looks as though it would be feasible to write an extremely
lightweight pinentry-compatible program to depend on so we can kill the
dependency bloat and have a simple shell-based password
On Wed, 24 Dec 2014 11:00:26 + Max Brazhnikov wrote:
On Wed, 24 Dec 2014 12:23:38 +0300 Dmitry Morozovsky wrote:
On Tue, 23 Dec 2014, Chris H wrote:
It looks as though it would be feasible to write an extremely
lightweight pinentry-compatible program to depend on so we can kill
Max,
On Wed, 24 Dec 2014, Max Brazhnikov wrote:
It looks as though it would be feasible to write an extremely
lightweight pinentry-compatible program to depend on so we can kill
the
dependency bloat and have a simple shell-based password entry option.
Anyone up
On Wed, 24 Dec 2014 12:23:38 +0300 (MSK) Dmitry Morozovsky ma...@rinet.ru
wrote
On Tue, 23 Dec 2014, Chris H wrote:
It looks as though it would be feasible to write an extremely
lightweight pinentry-compatible program to depend on so we can kill the
dependency bloat and have a simple
On Mon, Dec 22, 2014, at 03:46, Matt Smith wrote:
On Dec 22 22:33, Jonathan Chen wrote:
Hi,
Once upon a time, installing gnupg didn't require pinentry, and I
could run it quite happily on the command line. However, nowadays if I
install the port it drags in pinentry and a whole set
On Dec 23 07:44, Mark Felder wrote:
It looks as though it would be feasible to write an extremely
lightweight pinentry-compatible program to depend on so we can kill the
dependency bloat and have a simple shell-based password entry option.
Anyone up for a weekend challenge? :-)
There has
On Tue, 23 Dec 2014 13:51:11 + Matt Smith f...@xtaz.co.uk wrote
On Dec 23 07:44, Mark Felder wrote:
It looks as though it would be feasible to write an extremely
lightweight pinentry-compatible program to depend on so we can kill the
dependency bloat and have a simple shell-based
Hi,
Once upon a time, installing gnupg didn't require pinentry, and I
could run it quite happily on the command line. However, nowadays if I
install the port it drags in pinentry and a whole set of graphical
libraries that I don't really need on a headless box. Is pinentry
really required
On Dec 22 22:33, Jonathan Chen wrote:
Hi,
Once upon a time, installing gnupg didn't require pinentry, and I
could run it quite happily on the command line. However, nowadays if I
install the port it drags in pinentry and a whole set of graphical
libraries that I don't really need on a headless
On Fri, 19 Dec 2014 15:26:27 +0300 Dmitry Morozovsky wrote:
Max,
pinentry currently brokes if WITHOUT_X11 (or, by new world orderm
OPTIONS_UNSET+=X11) is set.
You can use security/pinentry-curses if you don't want Qt/GTK+ gui.
what do you think about the following patch?
Feel free
On Mon, 22 Dec 2014, Max Brazhnikov wrote:
pinentry currently brokes if WITHOUT_X11 (or, by new world orderm
OPTIONS_UNSET+=X11) is set.
You can use security/pinentry-curses if you don't want Qt/GTK+ gui.
Ah I see. Maybe then security/gnupg should detect headless config and switch
Max,
pinentry currently brokes if WITHOUT_X11 (or, by new world orderm
OPTIONS_UNSET+=X11) is set.
what do you think about the following patch?
marck@castor:/FreeBSD/ports/ports/security/pinentry svn diff
Index: Makefile
On 19/12/2014 11:26 PM, Dmitry Morozovsky wrote:
Max,
pinentry currently brokes if WITHOUT_X11 (or, by new world orderm
OPTIONS_UNSET+=X11) is set.
what do you think about the following patch?
marck@castor:/FreeBSD/ports/ports/security/pinentry svn diff
Index: Makefile
Tobias Rehbein wrote:
Or is there some way to use gpg without pinentry?
You could use security/gnupg1 instead (which is still developed, just
a seperate branch), which doens't require pinentry.
Ciao,
Johan
pgp2IwUtXegLB.pgp
Description: PGP signature
Hi all.
Perhaps someone can share his wisdom with me. I just installed security/gnupg
and tried to create a key pair using gpg --gen-key. After issuing the command
gnupg barfed at me that pinentry could not be started. Now I wonder why pinentry
is not a dependency of gpg as it seems to rely
On Sun, 22 Jun 2008 17:25:56 +0200
Tobias Rehbein [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Perhaps someone can share his wisdom with me. I just installed security/gnupg
and tried to create a key pair using gpg --gen-key. After issuing the
command
gnupg barfed at me that pinentry could not be started. Now I
On Wed, 15 Aug 2007, Rakhesh Sasidharan wrote:
BTW, I ask coz I don't know: as a matter of etiquette, is it a good idea to
cc the author/ maintainer of the port even if he/ she is subscribed to the
list?
I think that both tradition and expediency say yes. You happened to
catch me on a night
Doug Barton wrote:
On Wed, 15 Aug 2007, Rakhesh Sasidharan wrote:
BTW, I ask coz I don't know: as a matter of etiquette, is it a good idea to
cc the author/ maintainer of the port even if he/ she is subscribed to the
list?
I think that both tradition and expediency say yes. You happened to
Hi there!
I installed mail/pine and security/gnupg from ports. While trying to use
gnupg, whenever it needed to ask me for the passphrase, I ran into errors
such as the below:
gpg-agent[86284]: can't connect server: `ERR 67109133 can't exec
`/usr/local/bin/pinentry': No such file
`/usr/local/bin/pinentry': No such file or directory'
The pkg-message for gnupg clearly says that you need to have a pinentry
program. Glad you figured that bit out.
--8-- Two questions here:
1) Why isn't security/pinentry pulled in as a dependency of security/gnupg?
Shouldn't that have been
exec
`/usr/local/bin/pinentry': No such file or directory'
The pkg-message for gnupg clearly says that you need to have a pinentry
program. Glad you figured that bit out.
Now that you mention, yeah, it does! Funny I missed it out. Since it
mentions pinentry there, that's fine, no need
Hello,
I've updated GnuPG to latest version (2.0.3) from ports, and it stopped
working until I installed security/pinentry. This is what it was displaying
prior to installing pinentry:
% gpg --clearsign configure bla
Warning: using insecure memory!
You need a passphrase to unlock the secret
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