When trying to initialize the GnuPG binding in Python, I\'m getting an error message
TypeError: __init__() got an unexpected keyword argument \'gnupghome\'
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There are differnet sources when it comes to documentation, some with homedir, some with gnupghome. I dont know the time they changed it or why. Some trivial code to provide a solution to OP:
import gnupg
print gnupg.__version__
try:
gpg = gnupg.GPG(gnupghome=homedir)
except TypeError:
gpg = gnupg.GPG(homedir=homedir)
Please compare the two following tracebacks. Its the same code in both cases. In one case gnupg.GPG expects 'homedir and in the other case 'gnupghome'. I am working in a virtualenv and have two different distributions of gnupg. In the virtualenv python gnupg was installed via pip:
virtualenv:
Python 2.7.9 (default, Mar 1 2015, 12:57:24)
[GCC 4.9.2] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import gnupg
>>> gnupg.__version__
'2.0.2'
>>> homedir=''
>>> gpg = gnupg.GPG(homedir=homedir)
>>> gpg = gnupg.GPG(gnupghome=homedir)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: __init__() got an unexpected keyword argument 'gnupghome'
global:
Python 2.7.9 (default, Mar 1 2015, 12:57:24)
[GCC 4.9.2] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import gnupg
>>> gnupg.__version__
'0.3.6'
>>> homedir=''
>>> gpg = gnupg.GPG(gnupghome=homedir)
>>> gpg = gnupg.GPG(homedir=homedir)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: __init__() got an unexpected keyword argument 'homedir'
I am concerned by the old gnupg version in jessie, though. Can someone elaborate on the matter?
You should refer to the gnupg
documentation as it uses homedir
at the place of gnupghome
.
Please follow the documentation it might solve your issues: gnupg python documentation
There are at least 3 different versions of the python gnupg module. At least 2 of them are in pip.
If you do pip install gnupg
, you get the older module that uses the homedir argument.
If you do pip install python-gnupg
, you get a newer module. In this case, it was the documentation for that module you were reading.
GnuPG (as command line tool) knows two ways to specify the GnuPG home directory:
Using an environment variable:
GPGHOME=C:\Users\samss\AppData\Roaming\gnupg gpg
Passing it as a parameter (which is also available as homedir
parameter in the configuration file):
gpg --homedir=C:\Users\samss\AppData\Roaming\gnupg
The GnuPG Python binding allows some parameters to be passed during initialization. Because of the initialization syntax, you probably mixed this up with the environment variable version of defining the home directory on the command line.
An additional warning: You probably want to access another system user's GnuPG home directory. GnuPG is very picky about safe permissions. For a development machine, it might be fine to use the GnuPG parameter --no-permission-warning
and privileges that allow rather broad access, but better start with a clean approach from the start and initialize a new GnuPG home directory for your application that can be properly restricted regarding permissions.