Ok.. So now I seem to have everything right messed up. :-(
My old key expired. I wanted to have interoperability between Linux
and Windows, so I generated my next key with PGP for Windows, and then
imported it into GPG.
Unfortunately, GPG seems to still like my old key (even if I disable
it). Although I get warnings when I decrypt that my key has expired,
when I encrypt it seems to still want to use the old key.
I think it'd be doing the same thing with signatures but for the fact
that I specified the default-key option to my new key.
Is there some way to get around this problem that doesn't involve
dumping my old key from my keyring (still handy for reading old
messages)?
--Chris
My old key expired. I wanted to have interoperability between Linux
and Windows, so I generated my next key with PGP for Windows, and then
imported it into GPG.
Unfortunately, GPG seems to still like my old key (even if I disable
it). Although I get warnings when I decrypt that my key has expired,
when I encrypt it seems to still want to use the old key.
I think it'd be doing the same thing with signatures but for the fact
that I specified the default-key option to my new key.
Is there some way to get around this problem that doesn't involve
dumping my old key from my keyring (still handy for reading old
messages)?
--Chris