The typical use case for gpg is that if you control a secret key, you mark it with "ultimate" ownertrust. This bizarrely opaque --import-ownertrust mechanism is GnuPG's standard mechanism to set up ultimate ownertrust (the ":6" means "ultimate", for whatever reason). --- test/test-lib.sh | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) This differs from v2 in that it adds the --quiet flag, so that the tests don't have noisy output like "gpg: inserting ownertrust of 6" diff --git a/test/test-lib.sh b/test/test-lib.sh index 70d7dcfe..db3ffd8d 100644 --- a/test/test-lib.sh +++ b/test/test-lib.sh @@ -120,6 +120,7 @@ add_gnupg_home () # Change this if we ship a new test key FINGERPRINT="5AEAB11F5E33DCE875DDB75B6D92612D94E46381" + printf '%s:6\n' "$FINGERPRINT" | gpg --quiet --import-ownertrust } # Each test should start with something like this, after copyright notices: -- 2.20.1 _______________________________________________ notmuch mailing list notmuch@notmuchmail.org https://notmuchmail.org/mailman/listinfo/notmuch