Hello, I've tried to use the netrc credential with git-send-email (v1.8.4-rc2), and I've had the following log (running with -d -v): We were given search token protocol and value smtp We were given search token host and value smtp.gmail.com:587 We were given search token username and value apelisse@xxxxxxxxx Searching for host = smtp.gmail.com:587 Searching for password = (any value) Searching for path = (any value) Searching for protocol = smtp Searching for username = apelisse@xxxxxxxxx Using GPG to open /home/antoine/.authinfo.gpg: [gpg --decrypt /home/antoine/.authinfo.gpg] You need a passphrase to unlock the secret key for user: "Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@xxxxxxxxx>" 2048-bit RSA key, ID DE2A8792, created 2010-12-31 (main key ID A066A853) gpg: encrypted with 2048-bit RSA key, ID DE2A8792, created 2010-12-31 "Antoine Pelisse <apelisse@xxxxxxxxx>" compare host [smtp.gmail.com:587] to [smtp.gmail.com:587] (entry: password=secret, username=apelisse@xxxxxxxxx, host=smtp.gmail.com:587) OK: any value satisfies check password OK: any value satisfies check path Use of uninitialized value $_[2] in printf at /home/antoine/code/git/contrib/credential/netrc/git-credential-netrc line 419. compare protocol [] to [smtp] (entry: password=secret, username=apelisse@xxxxxxxxx, host=smtp.gmail.com:587) Use of uninitialized value in string eq at /home/antoine/code/git/contrib/credential/netrc/git-credential-netrc line 378. I can fix the problem by adding a "protocol smtp" to the matching line, but I wonder why this would be necessary ? After all, if host smtp.gmail.com:587 matches, do we need to match the protocol ? Cheers, Antoine -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html