Matthew Saltzman wrote:
On Sat, 10 Mar 2007, Philip Walden wrote:
Matthew Saltzman wrote:
On Sat, 10 Mar 2007, Philip Walden wrote:
Philip Walden wrote:
Well after much fiddling, I was unable to get a reliable activation
of eth1.
So I switched to NetworkManager, as I had not had much luck with it
in FC5 with a different wireless card and had stopped using.
Well again after some fiddling, NetworkManager seems to connect
reliably on login. It is annoying that it asks for the keyring
password just after entering the login password. A rudimentary
attempt to stop it doing this by editing the /etc/pam.d/gdm file
were unsuccessful. Oh well it is good enough for now.
$ yum search pam_keyring
pam_keyring.i386 0.0.8-3.fc6 extras
Matched from:
pam_keyring
The pam_keyring module allows GNOME users to automatically unlock
their default keyring using their system password when they log in.
This allows the data in the default keyring to be used more
transparently. Ideally, users should only every have to enter one
password (or physical token, etc.): the password they use to
authenticate themselves to the system when they log in.
I installed it and rebooted, but I was still prompted the keyring
password.
I read somewhere that this is a NetworkManager issue, not a keyring
problem.
Works fine for me.
Do you have these lines in /etc/pam.d/gdm:
auth optional pam_keyring.so try_first_pass
session optional pam_keyring.so
Is your keyring password the same as your login password?
Yes, passwords are the same. Here is my gdm file, the identical entries
are at the end:
#%PAM-1.0
auth required pam_env.so
auth include system-auth
account required pam_nologin.so
account include system-auth
password include system-auth
session optional pam_keyinit.so force revoke
session include system-auth
session required pam_loginuid.so
session optional pam_console.so
# added to prevent NetworkManager second login
auth optional pam_keyring.so try_first_pass
session optional pam_keyring.so