Can someone please remind me of the current approved way of starting gpg-agent at root? Thanks
Anne
On Wednesday 28 January 2009 12:45:16 Peter Kjellstrom wrote:
On Wednesday 28 January 2009, Anne Wilson wrote:
Can someone please remind me of the current approved way of starting gpg-agent at root? Thanks
"as root" or "at boot"?
Sorry - stupid typo. Yes, at boot - or login, to be more precise. I think I used to start it with an eval statement in ~/.bash_profile, but on my backup file I see that it's commented out, so I presume I was told that there is a better way.
Anne
On Wednesday 28 January 2009, Anne Wilson wrote:
On Wednesday 28 January 2009 12:45:16 Peter Kjellstrom wrote:
On Wednesday 28 January 2009, Anne Wilson wrote:
Can someone please remind me of the current approved way of starting gpg-agent at root? Thanks
"as root" or "at boot"?
Sorry - stupid typo. Yes, at boot - or login, to be more precise. I think I used to start it with an eval statement in ~/.bash_profile, but on my backup file I see that it's commented out, so I presume I was told that there is a better way.
I think you'd generally want to start it via your desktop environment (gnome, kde or such). I'm not sure if there is a suggested way for a "clean" CentOS but with the gnupg2 package from epel you get a /etc/kde/env/gpg-agent-startup.sh file.
I'm a kde person so I'd probably use .kde/env/... if my dist didn't handle it.
I've also seen solutions on other dists using /etc/X11/Xsession.d/90gpg-agent
So, sorry, no good clean answer :-(
/Peter
On Wednesday 28 January 2009 14:32:12 Peter Kjellstrom wrote:
On Wednesday 28 January 2009, Anne Wilson wrote:
On Wednesday 28 January 2009 12:45:16 Peter Kjellstrom wrote:
On Wednesday 28 January 2009, Anne Wilson wrote:
Can someone please remind me of the current approved way of starting gpg-agent at root? Thanks
"as root" or "at boot"?
Sorry - stupid typo. Yes, at boot - or login, to be more precise. I think I used to start it with an eval statement in ~/.bash_profile, but on my backup file I see that it's commented out, so I presume I was told that there is a better way.
I think you'd generally want to start it via your desktop environment (gnome, kde or such). I'm not sure if there is a suggested way for a "clean" CentOS but with the gnupg2 package from epel you get a /etc/kde/env/gpg-agent-startup.sh file.
I'm a kde person so I'd probably use .kde/env/... if my dist didn't handle it.
I've also seen solutions on other dists using /etc/X11/Xsession.d/90gpg-agent
So, sorry, no good clean answer :-(
OK. Thanks for answering.
I used to use ~/.kde/env, but somewhere around Fedora 6 I was told not to do that - I don't recall why. I'll experiment. It's no big deal. I was without a mail server for 24 hours as repeated power cuts depleted my ups and I saw my first really trashed system for 7 years. Everything else is working now and I can live without agent for a day or two until I find the best answer.
Anne