After a few days of using a fresh F11 setup, upon login I was told nm-applet wants to access default keyring, but it's locked. Enter password.
Hm. Don't know what password. Tried my account and root password, no luck. Searched help for how to change keyring password, nope. Ah, found Preferences -> Encryption and Keyrings, that will help. Uhm... no.
Tried a restart, same question. Tried to add another network connection to get my net working, but still NM wants to know the default keyring password. I want that too :) Finally I tried my initial account password used on install (which I changed a few days later), that was it!
Could this behaviour be changed to: when a keyring needs to be setup, prompt user with a dialog explaining what a keyring is and ask for a password.
(about my recent posts - I've been influenced in the last 2 years by working together with a few professional UX folks. However, I'm not a person with UX studies/certifications. I just hope to show you the experience of a new Linux user)
On Fri, 2009-09-18 at 22:19 +0300, Marius Andreiana wrote:
After a few days of using a fresh F11 setup, upon login I was told nm-applet wants to access default keyring, but it's locked. Enter password.
Hm. Don't know what password. Tried my account and root password, no luck. Searched help for how to change keyring password, nope. Ah, found Preferences -> Encryption and Keyrings, that will help. Uhm... no.
Tried a restart, same question. Tried to add another network connection to get my net working, but still NM wants to know the default keyring password. I want that too :) Finally I tried my initial account password used on install (which I changed a few days later), that was it!
That means there was a problem with your installation. Changing the user's password is supposed to change the default GNOME keyring password to match as well.
in /etc/pam.d/passwd: -password optional pam_gnome_keyring.so
So, how did you change your password?
Could this behaviour be changed to: when a keyring needs to be setup, prompt user with a dialog explaining what a keyring is and ask for a password.
Huh.
(about my recent posts - I've been influenced in the last 2 years by working together with a few professional UX folks. However, I'm not a person with UX studies/certifications. I just hope to show you the experience of a new Linux user)
Tried a restart, same question. Tried to add another network connection to get my net working, but still NM wants to know the default keyring password. I want that too :) Finally I tried my initial account password used on install (which I changed a few days later), that was it!
That means there was a problem with your installation. Changing the user's password is supposed to change the default GNOME keyring password to match as well.
in /etc/pam.d/passwd: -password optional pam_gnome_keyring.so
So, how did you change your password?
as root: passwd user
So why not ask (or hint about) your account password, rather than default keyring password?
Could this behaviour be changed to: when a keyring needs to be setup, prompt user with a dialog explaining what a keyring is and ask for a password.
Huh.
desktop@lists.fedoraproject.org