On Sun 12 Jul 2009 at 08:23:59 PDT Daniel Underwood wrote:
gnupg's binary is gpg2, and man gpg2 exists. :)
I see. Thanks, that works.
For a list of all the files installed by a package, including manpages,
use
pkg_list -L
If you're not sure which version of the package you have installe
> gnupg's binary is gpg2, and man gpg2 exists. :)
I see. Thanks, that works.
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Daniel Underwood wrote:
> Coming from Linux, I'm accustomed to using gpg. I installed the gnupg
> port (which I assume is virtually the same as Linux gpg).
>
> Doing
> $ man gnupg
> returns nothing. Doing
> $ which gnupg
> reveals that the port (or at least the binary) is in fact installed.
> But w
gnupg's binary is gpg2, and man gpg2 exists. :)
Daniel Underwood wrote:
> Coming from Linux, I'm accustomed to using gpg. I installed the gnupg
> port (which I assume is virtually the same as Linux gpg).
>
> Doing
> $ man gnupg
> returns nothing. Doing
> $ which gnupg
> reveals that the port (or
Coming from Linux, I'm accustomed to using gpg. I installed the gnupg
port (which I assume is virtually the same as Linux gpg).
Doing
$ man gnupg
returns nothing. Doing
$ which gnupg
reveals that the port (or at least the binary) is in fact installed.
But where are the gnupg man pages? If truly no