> From: Peter Lebbing [mailto:pe...@digitalbrains.com]
>
> On 25/08/17 16:08, Fiedler Roman wrote:
> > I tried to use the agent support that way. One reason for low adoption
> > might
> > be, that using the provided documentation, it is just not possible to get
> > a
> > simple batch scenario
On Fri, 4 Aug 2017 14:36, roman.fied...@ait.ac.at said:
> Ah, that's great - and actually the first nice gpg-agent feature apart from
> gpg-agent being little annoying when running it on RAM-disks in early boot.
(And the ssh-agent support, which is one of the mos useful features I
have on my
> Von: Gnupg-users [mailto:gnupg-users-boun...@gnupg.org] Im Auftrag von
>
> On 04/08/17 14:39, Matthias Apitz wrote:
> > But this implies that everyone with priv access on the remote host
> could
> > abuse your secret key on your localhost, especially when a GnuPG-card
> is
> > used and you
> Von: Matthias Apitz [mailto:g...@unixarea.de]
>
> El día viernes, agosto 04, 2017 a las 01:59:57p. m. +0200, Werner Koch
> escribió:
>
> > On Wed, 2 Aug 2017 15:52, roman.fied...@ait.ac.at said:
> >
> > > How to decrypt large files, e.g. gpg-encrypted backups, without
> copying them to the
> Von: Werner Koch [mailto:w...@gnupg.org]
>
> On Wed, 2 Aug 2017 15:52, roman.fied...@ait.ac.at said:
>
> > How to decrypt large files, e.g. gpg-encrypted backups, without
> copying them to the machine with the GPG private key?
>
> With GnuPG 2.1 this is easy: You use ssh's socket forwarding