Given that your key has expired.
$ gpg --list-keys
$ gpg --edit-key KEYID
Use the expire command to set a new expire date:
| node: Platform built on V8 to build network applications | |
| git: Distributed revision control system | |
| wget: Internet file retriever | |
| yarn: JavaScript package manager | |
| python3: Interpreted, interactive, object-oriented programming language | |
| coreutils: GNU File, Shell, and Text utilities | |
| pkg-config: Manage compile and link flags for libraries | |
| chromedriver: Tool for automated testing of webapps across many browsers | |
| awscli: Official Amazon AWS command-line interface | |
| automake: Tool for generating GNU Standards-compliant Makefiles |
The following shell transcript shows how to:
It is assumed that the pass package has been installed on both the first and second computers.