Updated Encryption (markdown)
@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ Basically you dont have to do anything or worry about anything.
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Things get more interesting if you want to change the encryption-state of a dataset during transfer:
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Things get more interesting if you want to change the encryption-state of a dataset during transfer:
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* If you want to decrypt encrypted datasets before sending them, you should use the `--decrypt` option. Datasets will then be stored plain at the target.
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* If you want to decrypt encrypted datasets before sending them, you should use the `--decrypt` option. Datasets will then be stored plain at the target.
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* If you want to encrypt plain datasets when they are received, you should use the `--encrypt` option. Datasets will then be stored encrypted at the target. (Datasets that are already encrypted will still be sent over unaltered in raw-mode.)
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* If you want to encrypt plain datasets when they are received, you should use the `--encrypt` option. Datasets will then be stored encrypted at the target. Datasets that are already encrypted will still be sent over unaltered in raw-mode.
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* If you also want re-encrypt encrypted datasets with the target-side encryption you can use both options.
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* If you also want re-encrypt encrypted datasets with the target-side encryption you can use both options.
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Note 1: The --encrypt option will rely on inheriting encryption parameters from the parent datasets on the target side. You are responsible for setting those up and loading the keys. So --encrypt is no guarantee for encryption: If you dont set it up, it cant encrypt.
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Note 1: The --encrypt option will rely on inheriting encryption parameters from the parent datasets on the target side. You are responsible for setting those up and loading the keys. So --encrypt is no guarantee for encryption: If you dont set it up, it cant encrypt.
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