Todd Zullinger wrote:
Robert Nichols wrote:
The process at the other end of $SSH_AUTH_SOCK is
"gnome-keyring-daemon -d -login". That process gets created when I
log in. Killing it doesn't strike me as a good idea. Indeed, other
keyring related stuff breaks if I do that.
You can tell the keyring daemon not to provide ssh-agent services.
Perhaps doing that and using the ssh-agent from openssh (which I
believe is still started automatically if no agent is running
already).
To disable ssh services in gnome-keyring-daemon:
gconftool-2 --set -t bool /apps/gnome-keyring/daemon-components/ssh false
Some very thin documentation on gnome-keyring-daemon's ssh handling is
at: http://live.gnome.org/GnomeKeyring/Ssh
Again, thanks for the effort, but NO-GO!
I tried changing the setting for that boolean to false, both with
gconftool-2 and with the GUI gconf-editor, and also by running
gconftool-2 as root. No change, nada, zip! Log out, log back in,
reboot, ..., no change at all. Unsetting the environment variable
for SSH_ASKPASS (edited /etc/profile.d/gnome-ssh-askpass.sh so that
the variable never gets set) changes nothing. The only thing that
has an effect is unsetting SSH_AUTH_SOCK, and doing that means that
the passphrase is required _every_time_.
If SSH_AUTH_SOCK is unset or the socket is not present, ssh-add
fails with "Could not open a connection to your authentication agent."
Looks like the only options are (a) use gnome-keyring-daemon and
accept that the key is unlocked forever, or (b) use nothing and
enter the passphrase every time.
--
Bob Nichols "NOSPAM" is really part of my email address.
Do NOT delete it.
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