Re: gnome-keyring vs. nodm
- From: Weiwu Zhang <zhangweiwu realss com>
- To: 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson <jidanni jidanni org>
- Cc: "Neal H. Walfield" <neal walfield org>, gnome-keyring-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: gnome-keyring vs. nodm
- Date: Wed, 9 Aug 2017 10:37:53 +1000
Synchronising data across multiple seahorse installations or providing
same set of passwords across multiple machines seem to be a separate
problem belonging to the same project.
Can you re-start the discussion under a different subject? I found
doing so is helps organising the project (I also have projects that
involve multiple problems.)
Either-way, if it is a managed environment, I often find public-key
based methods (e.g. ssh with ED25519) or Kerberos ticketing systems
easier to deploy because of the existing tools supporting them.
2017-08-09 1:12 GMT+10:00 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson <jidanni jidanni org>:
"NHW" == Neal H Walfield <neal walfield org> writes:
NHW> You can use seahorse to set the password to be the empty string.
NHW> (Start seahorse, right click on the login keyring, and choose change
NHW> password.) Then GNOME Keyring won't prompt you for a passphrase.
Thanks but I want to do this programmaticly for many of my machines.
I don't want to have to install megabytes just to change one line in
some file somewhere. I looked into "secret-tool" as a batch job solution
but frankly am not sure how related it is, but would be happy to use it
if it is.
Anyway can I write a shell script to achieve the same effect of the
above seahorse operation? Thanks.
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