[opensuse] Thunderbird 78.2.1 available for testing in mozilla:beta
Am 30.08.20 um 19:23 schrieb Wolfgang Rosenauer:
Hi,
Am 30.08.20 um 15:07 schrieb Mathias Homann:
thunderbird 78.2.0 is out and has working gpg integration now, I think it's safe to upgrade the package in /mozilla...
for the mozilla projet I think so as well. So when can we get it?
oh, wait, I guess I just asked myself. This mail - in case it arrives for you - has been sent with Thunderbird 78.2.1 on openSUSE Leap 15.2 using the package in mozilla:beta. I'm not planning to upgrade Tumbleweed within the next few days but give people the chance to test this one and send feedback / open bugreports. Please also keep in mind that the OpenPGP integration in TB 78 does not use system GPG and also not the regular keyring but has its own keymanagement only right now. Wolfgang -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Am 2020-08-31 13:57, schrieb Wolfgang Rosenauer:
Am 30.08.20 um 19:23 schrieb Wolfgang Rosenauer:
Hi,
Am 30.08.20 um 15:07 schrieb Mathias Homann:
thunderbird 78.2.0 is out and has working gpg integration now, I think it's safe to upgrade the package in /mozilla...
for the mozilla projet I think so as well. So when can we get it?
oh, wait, I guess I just asked myself.
This mail - in case it arrives for you - has been sent with Thunderbird 78.2.1 on openSUSE Leap 15.2 using the package in mozilla:beta.
I'm not planning to upgrade Tumbleweed within the next few days but give people the chance to test this one and send feedback / open bugreports.
Please also keep in mind that the OpenPGP integration in TB 78 does not use system GPG and also not the regular keyring but has its own keymanagement only right now.
By now it's directly in the mozilla project... :) What's very important to know is that TB does not let you roll back to a previous version. Once you run this version you can NOT go back to an earlier one, unless you have a backup of your profile... so... BACK UP YOUR PROFILE before trying this version! @admins: if your user's $HOME is on a central NFS share (or otherwise synced) make sure you uprade ThunderBird on ALL desktop systems at the same time. cheers Mathias -- Mathias Homann Mathias.Homann@openSUSE.org telegram: https://telegram.me/lemmy98 irc: [lemmy] on freenode and ircnet obs: lemmy04 gpg key fingerprint: 8029 2240 F4DD 7776 E7D2 C042 6B8E 029E 13F2 C102
On 9/1/20 1:26 AM, Mathias Homann wrote:
Am 2020-08-31 13:57, schrieb Wolfgang Rosenauer:
Am 30.08.20 um 19:23 schrieb Wolfgang Rosenauer:
Hi,
Am 30.08.20 um 15:07 schrieb Mathias Homann:
thunderbird 78.2.0 is out and has working gpg integration now, I think it's safe to upgrade the package in /mozilla...
for the mozilla projet I think so as well. So when can we get it?
oh, wait, I guess I just asked myself.
This mail - in case it arrives for you - has been sent with Thunderbird 78.2.1 on openSUSE Leap 15.2 using the package in mozilla:beta.
I'm not planning to upgrade Tumbleweed within the next few days but give people the chance to test this one and send feedback / open bugreports.
Please also keep in mind that the OpenPGP integration in TB 78 does not use system GPG and also not the regular keyring but has its own keymanagement only right now.
By now it's directly in the mozilla project... :)
What's very important to know is that TB does not let you roll back to a previous version.
Once you run this version you can NOT go back to an earlier one, unless you have a backup of your profile... so...
BACK UP YOUR PROFILE before trying this version!
@admins: if your user's $HOME is on a central NFS share (or otherwise synced) make sure you uprade ThunderBird on ALL desktop systems at the same time.
cheers Mathia
Until 78 has gpg/gnupg "working" as a replacement for enigmail, you will likely upgrade to a TB version that cannot do either. If you work, lists, etc... require signed messages, the current TB 78 cannot do either based on the last Mozilla update. Those that package for openSUSE, make sure this is fixed and make sure there is a clear migration path from Enigmail to whatever TB 78 has dreamed up as a replacement. This is kind of a BIGGIE. -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E.
Am 01.09.20 um 10:27 schrieb David C. Rankin:
Until 78 has gpg/gnupg "working" as a replacement for enigmail, you will likely upgrade to a TB version that cannot do either. If you work, lists, etc... require signed messages, the current TB 78 cannot do either based on the last Mozilla update.
do you have a pointer? According to my information 78.2.1 has "working" OpenPGP support. I'm running it only since yesterday so I haven't tested everything myself yet.
Those that package for openSUSE, make sure this is fixed and make sure there is a clear migration path from Enigmail to whatever TB 78 has dreamed up as a replacement. This is kind of a BIGGIE.
If upstream seems unable to provide a full migration path I'm not sure how we should be able to add this on top. As written earlier. Thunderbird provides its own keyring and you need to manually import public and private keys into it as desired. Wolfgang -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 9/1/20 4:02 AM, Wolfgang Rosenauer wrote:
do you have a pointer? According to my information 78.2.1 has "working" OpenPGP support. I'm running it only since yesterday so I haven't tested everything myself yet.
https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird:OpenPGP "As of the Thunderbird 78.0 release, the OpenPGP functionality is experimental, and disabled by default." This page was last modified on 29 August 2020, at 12:53. and https://9to5linux.com/quick-tip-how-to-enable-openpgp-support-in-mozilla-thu... "That’s also why the OpenPGP functionality is currently disable by default in Thunderbird 78, but also because it’s not yet finished." If you can send/receive signed/encrypted messages -- then things are looking up. But I haven't heard of any success stories. -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Am 02.09.20 um 08:20 schrieb David C. Rankin:
On 9/1/20 4:02 AM, Wolfgang Rosenauer wrote:
do you have a pointer? According to my information 78.2.1 has "working" OpenPGP support. I'm running it only since yesterday so I haven't tested everything myself yet.
https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird:OpenPGP
"As of the Thunderbird 78.0 release, the OpenPGP functionality is experimental, and disabled by default."
This page was last modified on 29 August 2020, at 12:53.
and
https://9to5linux.com/quick-tip-how-to-enable-openpgp-support-in-mozilla-thu...
"That’s also why the OpenPGP functionality is currently disable by default in Thunderbird 78, but also because it’s not yet finished."
If you can send/receive signed/encrypted messages -- then things are looking up. But I haven't heard of any success stories.
Then read the releasenotes for 78.2.1 where the OpenPGP functionality was enabled by default for everyone. I know that the Thunderbird guys work on a FAQ for the transition. And this mail should be signed via TB 78.2.1 hopefully. Wolfgang
On 9/2/20 1:51 AM, Wolfgang Rosenauer wrote:
Then read the releasenotes for 78.2.1 where the OpenPGP functionality was enabled by default for everyone. I know that the Thunderbird guys work on a FAQ for the transition.
And this mail should be signed via TB 78.2.1 hopefully.
Wolfgang
Hey, hey, Your key came though and was imported by 68 -- that part is looking good. So 78.2.1 is the release where we have opengpg enabled. Thank you -- let's put this thing through its paces -- because god knows the first time something new is "enable" things don't always go as planned. I also see they have Enigmail for Tbird 78 as well (but just to migrate gpg keys to openpgp) -- this might just work. -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E.
On 02/09/2020 08.51, Wolfgang Rosenauer wrote:
And this mail should be signed via TB 78.2.1 hopefully.
TB 68 imported the key on request, and verified the email fine. However, I see no icon signalling the verification status, I think it worked in the past. It doesn't verify in Alpine, because it only detects inline PGP - no change here. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.1 x86_64 at Telcontar)
I see your mail as signed but invalid signature... could that be because of the mailinglist? This is TB 78.2.1 from the mozilla repo, on leap 15.2 Cheers MH On 02.09.20 08:51, Wolfgang Rosenauer wrote:
Am 02.09.20 um 08:20 schrieb David C. Rankin:
On 9/1/20 4:02 AM, Wolfgang Rosenauer wrote:
do you have a pointer? According to my information 78.2.1 has "working" OpenPGP support. I'm running it only since yesterday so I haven't tested everything myself yet.
https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird:OpenPGP
"As of the Thunderbird 78.0 release, the OpenPGP functionality is experimental, and disabled by default."
This page was last modified on 29 August 2020, at 12:53.
and
https://9to5linux.com/quick-tip-how-to-enable-openpgp-support-in-mozilla-thu...
"That’s also why the OpenPGP functionality is currently disable by default in Thunderbird 78, but also because it’s not yet finished."
If you can send/receive signed/encrypted messages -- then things are looking up. But I haven't heard of any success stories.
Then read the releasenotes for 78.2.1 where the OpenPGP functionality was enabled by default for everyone. I know that the Thunderbird guys work on a FAQ for the transition.
And this mail should be signed via TB 78.2.1 hopefully.
Wolfgang
-- Mathias Homann Mathias.Homann@openSUSE.org Jabber (XMPP): lemmy@tuxonline.tech IRC: [Lemmy] on freenode and ircnet (bouncer active) telegram: https://telegram.me/lemmy98 keybase: https://keybase.io/lemmy gpg key fingerprint: 8029 2240 F4DD 7776 E7D2 C042 6B8E 029E 13F2 C102
On 02/09/2020 11.10, Mathias Homann wrote:
I see your mail as signed but invalid signature... could that be because of the mailinglist?
Did you import the key?
This is TB 78.2.1 from the mozilla repo, on leap 15.2
-- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.1 x86_64 at Telcontar)
participants (5)
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Carlos E. R.
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David C. Rankin
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Mathias Homann
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Mathias Homann
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Wolfgang Rosenauer