diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/Notes | 6 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/dirmngr.texi | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/gpg.texi | 12 |
3 files changed, 10 insertions, 10 deletions
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ -Add an infor page for watchgnupg. +Add an info page for watchgnupg. > * How to mark a CA certificate as trusted. @@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ or In general you should first import the root certificates and then down to the end user certificate. You may put all into one file and gpgsm -will do the right thing in this case independend of the order. +will do the right thing in this case independent of the order. While verifying a signature, all included certificates are automagically imported. @@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ you get an output like: uid:::::::::CN=Werner Koch,OU=test,O=g10 Code,C=de:: uid:::::::::<[email protected]>:: -This should be familar to advanced gpg-users; see doc/DETAILS in gpg +This should be familiar to advanced gpg-users; see doc/DETAILS in gpg 1.3 (CVS HEAD) for a description of the records. The value in the "grp" tagged record is the so called keygrip and you should find a file ~/.gnupg/private-keys-v1.d/C92DB9CFD588ADE846BE3AC4E7A2E1B11A4A2ADB.key diff --git a/doc/dirmngr.texi b/doc/dirmngr.texi index 76be5286c..f5910a884 100644 --- a/doc/dirmngr.texi +++ b/doc/dirmngr.texi @@ -1096,7 +1096,7 @@ as a binary blob. @c In the end the same fucntionality is used, albeit hidden by a couple @c of indirection and argument and result code mangling. It furthere @c ingetrages OCSP checking depending on options are the way it is -@c called. GPGSM still uses this command but might eventuall switch over +@c called. GPGSM still uses this command but might eventually switch over @c to CHECKCRL and CHECKOCSP so that ISVALID can be retired. @c @c diff --git a/doc/gpg.texi b/doc/gpg.texi index ba1df4bfb..dedb8cc42 100644 --- a/doc/gpg.texi +++ b/doc/gpg.texi @@ -624,9 +624,9 @@ fingerprint (preferred) or their keyid. @end table -@c ******************************************* -@c ******* KEY MANGEMENT COMMANDS ********** -@c ******************************************* +@c ******************************************** +@c ******* KEY MANAGEMENT COMMANDS ********** +@c ******************************************** @node OpenPGP Key Management @subsection How to manage your keys @@ -2623,7 +2623,7 @@ These options are obsolete and have no effect since GnuPG 2.1. @item --force-aead @opindex force-aead Force the use of AEAD encryption over MDC encryption. AEAD is a -modern and faster way to do authenticated encrytion than the old MDC +modern and faster way to do authenticated encryption than the old MDC method. See also options @option{--aead-algo} and @option{--chunk-size}. @@ -2779,7 +2779,7 @@ This option is obsolete; it is handled as an alias for @option{--pgp7} @item --pgp7 @opindex pgp7 -Set up all options to be as PGP 7 compliant as possible. This allowd +Set up all options to be as PGP 7 compliant as possible. This allowed the ciphers IDEA, 3DES, CAST5,AES128, AES192, AES256, and TWOFISH., the hashes MD5, SHA1 and RIPEMD160, and the compression algorithms none and ZIP. This option implies @option{--escape-from-lines} and @@ -3051,7 +3051,7 @@ same thing. @opindex aead-algo Specify that the AEAD algorithm @var{name} is to be used. This is useful for symmetric encryption where no key preference are available -to select the AEAD algorithm. Runing @command{@gpgname} with option +to select the AEAD algorithm. Running @command{@gpgname} with option @option{--version} shows the available AEAD algorithms. In general, you do not want to use this option as it allows you to violate the OpenPGP standard. The option @option{--personal-aead-preferences} is |