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From: | Stefan Monnier |
Subject: | bug#15552: 24.3.50; epa-file-cache-passphrase-for-symmetric-encryption not respected with GnuPG 2.x |
Date: | Tue, 08 Oct 2013 23:01:58 -0400 |
User-agent: | Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.3.50 (gnu/linux) |
> It used to work like that with gpg1. However, gpg2's implementation > choice is that it does not leak the indication that gpg2 (actually > gpg-agent) requires passphrase and it does not allow other tools than > pinentry to inject passphrase. IOW epa-file-cache-passphrase-for-symmetric-encryption only works for gpg1 and not for gpg2? > IMO that's a good idea for security (as pinentry uses secmem). There are many situations where local security is not nearly as important as convenience. But IIUC with gpg2 the general answer is "use gpg-agent to do the caching", and it's supposed to work fine (i.e. it's just as convenient as caching the password in Emacs). >> Stefan "Also confused about what "symmetric" has to do with it" > Perhaps you could try the above recipe under gpg-agent is properly set up: > $ echo abc > file > $ gpg --symmetric file > $ eval `gpg-agent --daemon` > $ gpg2 < file.gpg > $ gpg2 < file.gpg > You won't be asked for the passphrase at the second time, because > gpg-agent remembers passphrase based on the file content. That doesn't really explain to me why epa-file-cache-passphrase-for-symmetric-encryption has "symmetric" in its name and more specifically why caching of passphrases would be different for symmetric than for public key cryptography. Stefan
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