44 lines
1.3 KiB
Text
44 lines
1.3 KiB
Text
[default]
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# whether gpg-mailgate should add a header after it has processed an email
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# this may be useful for debugging purposes
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add_header = yes
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# whether we should only sign emails if they are explicitly defined in
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# the key mappings below ([keymap] section)
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# this means gpg-mailgate won't automatically detect PGP recipients
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keymap_only = no
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[gpg]
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# the directory where gpg-mailgate public keys are stored
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# (see INSTALL for details)
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keyhome = /var/gpg/.gnupg
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[logging]
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# file to log to
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file = /tmp/gpg-mailgate.log
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[relay]
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# the relay settings to use for Postfix
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# gpg-mailgate will submit email to this relay after it is done processing
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# unless you alter the default Postfix configuration, you won't have to modify this
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host = 127.0.0.1
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port = 10028
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[database]
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# uncomment the settings below if you want
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# to read keys from a gpg-mailgate-web database
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#enabled = yes
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#name = gpgmw
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#host = localhost
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#username = gpgmw
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#password =
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[keymap]
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# You can find these by running the following command:
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# gpg --list-keys --keyid-format long user@example.com
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# Which will return output similar to:
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# pub 1024D/AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA 2007-10-22
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# uid Joe User <user@example.com>
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# sub 2048g/BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB 2007-10-22
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# You want the AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA not BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB.
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#user@example.com = <gpg key id>
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