Invalid packet/keyring. How to find out what's responsible?
Kevin Gallagher
kevin at z.cash
Wed Oct 19 23:41:06 CEST 2016
That'll do it! Thanks.
On 10/19/2016 02:22 PM, Daniel Kahn Gillmor wrote:
> Hi Kevin--
>
> On Wed 2016-10-19 12:45:42 -0400, Kevin Gallagher wrote:
>> I've been seeing this error lately both with one of my local GPG
>> keyrings, and with apt.
>>
>> gpg: [don't know]: invalid packet (ctb=2d)
>> gpg: keydb_get_keyblock failed: Value not found
>> gpg: [don't know]: invalid packet (ctb=2d)
>> gpg: /tmp/tmp.rObzKgJEj5/pubring.gpg: copy to
>> '/tmp/tmp.rObzKgJEj5/pubring.gpg.tmp' failed: Invalid packet
>> gpg: error writing keyring '/tmp/tmp.rObzKgJEj5/pubring.gpg':
>> Invalid packet
>> gpg: [don't know]: invalid packet (ctb=2d)
>> gpg: error reading '-': Invalid packet
>> gpg: import from '-' failed: Invalid packet
>>
>> In the latter case, I solved it by exporting all my keys and importing
>> them back again. But that doesn't work this time:
>>
>> apt-key exportall says: gpg: key export failed: Invalid keyring
>>
>> How can I figure out which specific key is corrupted or responsible for
>> this, so I can repair my keyring?
> what version of apt? what version of gpg? it sounds to me like you
> have some public keyring that is ascii-armored instead of raw. you
> might manually (individually) test /etc/apt/trusted.gpg and
> /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/*.gpg to see whether they're ascii-armored or
> not.
>
> for example:
>
> grep 'BEGIN PGP' /etc/apt/trusted.gpg /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/*.gpg
>
> hth,
>
> --dkg
More information about the Gnupg-users
mailing list