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1.1.1.3 ! root 1: # Sample config.txt file for PGP 2.2. 1.1.1.2 root 2: # Blank lines are ignored, as is anything following a '#'. 3: # Keywords are not case-sensitive. 4: 5: # MyName is substring of default user ID for secret key to make signatures. 6: # If not set, PGP will use the first key on your secret keyring (the last 7: # key you created) if you don't specify the user with -u 8: # MyName = "Bullwinkel" 9: 10: # The language we will be using for displaying messages to the user. 11: # 12: # Available languages: 13: # en = English (default), es = Spanish, fr = French, 14: # de = German, nl = Dutch, it = Italian, esp = Esperanto, 1.1.1.3 ! root 15: # lv = Latvian, lt3 = Lithuanian, sv = Swedish, ru = Russian 1.1.1.2 root 16: # 17: # Languages not yet available: 18: # fi = Finnish, hu = Hungarian, no = Norwegian, pt = Portugese, 1.1.1.3 ! root 19: # pt - Portugese, da = Danish, is = Icelandic, 1.1.1.2 root 20: # zh = Chinese, ko = Korean, ar = Arabic, iw = Hebrew, 21: # el = Greek, tr = Turkish, ja = Japanese 22: # 23: # Most of these codes are the ISO 639-1988 2-letter "Codes for 24: # Representation of Names of Languages" 25: # 26: Language = en 27: 28: # Character set for displaying messages and for conversion of text files. 29: # If you set this variable to cp850, ascii or alt_codes, PGP will do 30: # character set conversions if TextMode = on or if you specify the -t 31: # option when encrypting or signing a file. 32: # 33: # Available character sets: 34: # latin1, cp850, alt_codes, koi8, ascii 35: # 36: # For MSDOS with a standard character set you should use cp850 to get 37: # correct character translations. Russian character sets for MSDOS are 38: # usually alt_codes. 39: # 40: # The default for CharSet is "noconv" which means no character conversion. 41: # Note that noconv, latin1, and koi8 are all treated as equivalent. 42: # 43: # CharSet = cp850 44: 45: # TMP is the directory name for PGP scratch files, usually a RAM disk. 46: # TMP = "e:\" # Can be overridden by environment variable TMP 47: 48: # Pager is the file viewing program used for viewing messages with -m 49: # If not set or set to "pgp", a built-in pager will be used. The pager set 50: # in config.txt will override the environment variable PAGER. 51: # Pager = "list" 52: 53: # ArmorLines is the maximum number of lines per packet when creating a 54: # transport armored file. Set to 0 to disable splitting in parts. 55: Armorlines = 720 56: 1.1.1.3 ! root 57: # Uncomment any of the following to do as the comment says instead of ! 58: # the default. 1.1.1.2 root 59: 60: # Armor = on # Use -a flag for ASCII armor whenever applicable 61: # TextMode = on # Attempt to use -t option where applicable 62: # KeepBinary = on # Decrypt will not delete intermediate .pgp file 1.1.1.3 ! root 63: # verbose = 2 # verbose diagnostic messages ! 64: # verbose = 0 # turn off all non-essential output 1.1.1.2 root 65: # compress = off # off means suppress compression to aid debugging 66: # showpass = on # Echo password when user types it 1.1.1.3 ! root 67: # interactive = on # Prompt before adding each key to pubring.pgp 1.1.1.2 root 68: 69: 70: # BakRing is the path to a backup copy of your secret keyring, usually 71: # on floppy disk. Your secret keys will be compared with the backup copy 72: # when doing a keyring check (pgp -kc) 73: # BakRing = "a:\secring.pgp" 74: 75: # Number of completely trusted signatures needed to make a key valid. 76: Completes_Needed = 1 77: 78: # Number of marginally trusted signatures needed to make a key valid. 79: Marginals_Needed = 2 80: 81: # How many levels of introducers may introduce other introducers. 82: Cert_Depth = 4 83: 84: 85: # TZFix is hours to add to time() to get GMT, for GMT timestamps. 86: # Since MSDOS assumes local time is US Pacific time, and pre-corrects 87: # Pacific time to GMT, make TZFix=0 for California, -1 for Colorado, 88: # -2 for Chicago, -3 for NY, -8 for London, -9 for Amsterdam. 89: # However, if your MSDOS environmental variable TZ is properly defined 90: # for your timezone, you can leave TZFix=0. Unix systems probably 91: # shouldn't need to worry about setting TZFix. 92: # TZFix = 0
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