On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 9:49 AM, Peter Lebbing
wrote:
> On 19/07/17 16:30, helices wrote:
> > Unchecking that box and encrypting, this file decrypted and unzipped
> > without incident: Archive.zip.gpg
>
> And if you keep the box checked, does it produce a file named
> Archive.zip.gpg or Archive.z
On 19/07/17 16:30, helices wrote:
> Unchecking that box and encrypting, this file decrypted and unzipped
> without incident: Archive.zip.gpg
And if you keep the box checked, does it produce a file named
Archive.zip.gpg or Archive.zip.tar.gpg? Because IMO, it should be the
latter. A good alternativ
o
process files. Will the UNchecked checkbox for "Archive files with: TAR
(PGP-compatible)" be default now?
~ Mike
On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 8:17 AM, helices wrote:
> How to NOT gnutar files during encryption?
>
>
> Thank you for your responses; but, you are all missing my poi
How to NOT gnutar files during encryption?
Thank you for your responses; but, you are all missing my point - and not
answering my question.
First, before encryption by Kleopatra, the file IS one (1) real ZIP file
(e.g., filename.zip)
After encryption and upload to us, the file is now an
Hi,
On Tuesday, July 18, 2017 4:30:13 PM CEST helices wrote:
> How can this new client NOT gnutar files, and still properly encrypt the
> ZIP file?
The client could create a ZIP Archive with the files and then encrypt that as a
single file. Kleopatra has no built in support for ZIP + Encrypt.
F
On Tue, 18 Jul 2017 23:30, g...@mdsresource.net said:
> Further investigation reveals that Kleopatra is gnuTARring the ZIP file
> prior to encryption.
That should only happen when you select multipe files or a directory.
This invokes the pgp-zip method of encrypting multiple files. Despite
the n
Hi,
On Tue, Jul 18, 2017 at 04:30:13PM -0500, helices wrote:
>
> After many hours troubleshooting, I discovered that the decrypted "zip"
> file is actually inside a TAR file!
>
> Further investigation reveals that Kleopatra is gnuTARring the ZIP file
> prior to encryption.
>
> How can this new
We have a simple process that has worked for thousands of files over the
years:
1) Client ZIPs up a bunch of files
2) Client GPG/PGP encrypts that ZIP file
3) Client uploads that encrypted file to us
4) Our production server automatically decrypts the file
5) Our production server automatically unz