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On Friday 15 September 2006 15:19, Anders Johansson wrote:
On Friday 15 September 2006 04:22, Bob S wrote:
Thanks Anders,
You are preaching to the preacher.
I'm glad to hear it
The solution is simple: either get the key (if you know and trust the publisher) and import it into rpm, or don't install the package.
Not simple at all. If you read the error message it states that the key was successfully imported.
It does look odd. Have you tried adding a trust to the key in the keyring manually with gpg?
Hello Anders, Sorry for the slow reply. Had a family emergency with one of my children. There is life beyond SuSE Linux. Anyway, don't know how to add "trust" to the key in the keyring. I have no gpg at all running on this computer. I go on line download my email and go off line. Rarely surf the Internet except for stuff that is brought up in the lists. and shut down when I am finished. Maybe on-line 15 or 20 minutes a day. Didn't think I would need gpg, and have a firewall on my router.
Perhaps they want you to answer Yes instead of y, since the message says "If you answer "Yes"..." :)
Welllllll.... I tried it two ways. At the CLI I would type "y" but at the smart GUI there is a little box marked "yes" which I would click on. Both ways failed. This is getting "hairy" now because I have two versions of some uploaded and updated packages in the cache which are eligible for upgrade. One slightly newer than the other. Guess I will have to review them package by package to delete the oldest version. Could this problem be that I don't have the basic gpg packages installed? Bob S.