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[[!comment format=mdwn
username="guilhem"
ip="129.16.20.209"
subject="comment 3"
date="2013-08-19T13:44:35Z"
content="""
AES-NI acceleration will be used by default providing you're using
the new modularized GnuPG (v2.x) and libgcrypt ≥ 1.5.0. Of course it
only speeds up AES encryption, while GnuPG uses CAST by default; you can
either set `personal-cipher-preferences` to AES or AES256 in your
`gpg.conf` or, as joeyh hinted at, set `remote.<name>.annex-gnupg-options`
as described in the manpage.
By the way, I observed a significant speed up when using `--compress-algo none`.
Image, music and video files are typically hard to compress further, and it seems
that's where gpg spent most of its time, at least on the few files I benchmarked.
"""]]
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