I'm wondering where exactly Seahorse is storing the keyring data?
Most available information points to ~/.gnome2/keyrings/, however, this directory contains only two very small files (login.keyring, 105 bytes and user.keystore, 207 bytes) which are definitely not large enough to contain the over 20 keys stored in my login keyring.
I just have a nice upgrade to 13.04. The same old problem, now more annoying than ever!!!
I don't need keyring, i will never use it! I have auto login so nothing works except leaving a blank password for keyrings. Even if i delete all keyrings a application wants to create a keyring (like Chrome).
I'm trying to get Seahorse to remember the password for an existing RSA key I've copied across from another computer.
When I use the key rather than Gnome Keyring prompting me for the password and storing it on the keyring I have to enter the password in terminal and the password isn't remembered?
How do I use Seahorse to save my SSH key password?
Since libgnome-keyring was added to makedepends, chromium is built with support to gnome-keyring. But that doesn't mean it will use gnome keyring by default.I have seahorse, gnome-keyring, installed. This happened in my computer at work, but it works at my home computer.
Dear all,
As stated in the following link, a window will popup for the user to input the keyring password when it is autologin:
https://answers.launchpad.net/ubuntu...question/85771:
If you are autologin'ing to your machine, gdm uses su to become your user, without ever using the password.
How do I change my default keyring password in F11?
The instructions from here no longer work:
Code:
$ yum search gnome-keyring-manager
Loaded plugins: dellsysidplugin2, fastestmirror, refresh-packagekit
You Will Need:
2 USB thumb drives OR 1 thumb drive + 1 blank CD
ISO of Fedora 10 LIVE in your preferred architecture
1) Create Fedora 10 LiveCD or LiveUSB
Burn live CD or create live USB using LiveUSB Creator <https://fedorahosted.org/liveusb-creator/>
2) Put required WPA2 files on thumb drive
How do I change gnome-keyring password in Lubuntu 11.04?
gnome-keyring did not prompt me to choose a password when I used the application for the first time.
The default password is the same as my login. I would like to change it and make it stronger.
I would like to use different random passwords for the various accounts I have. However, as I won't always have my computer there will be times were I need to retrieve a user/pass remotely (via ssh).To start this process, I've been playing around with gnome-keyring and firefox-gnome-keyring. I can store all my login credentials for websites in a encrypted password protected keyring.