On Fri, 2009-01-09 at 10:47 -0600, Jerry Amundson wrote: > On Fri, Jan 9, 2009 at 10:39 AM, Matthias Clasen <mclasen@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, 2009-01-09 at 09:12 -0500, John W. Linville wrote: > >> On Thu, Jan 08, 2009 at 07:43:15PM -0500, Matthias Clasen wrote: > >> > On Thu, 2009-01-08 at 23:42 +0100, nodata wrote: > >> > > Am Donnerstag, den 08.01.2009, 17:21 -0500 schrieb Ricky Zhou: > >> > > > On 2009-01-08 11:02:14 PM, nodata wrote: > >> > > > > I'm wondering when this changed (F10)? I'm sure it didn't act like this > >> > > > > in F9. > >> > > > > > >> > > > > In F9, I would only be prompted to enter my passphrase if I sshed to a > >> > > > > box that accepted pubkey authentication and a ssh-agent did not already > >> > > > > have the key. > >> > > > > In F10 it asks earlier: when ssh-add is run. > >> > > > When you run ssh-add, you are *asking* for the passphrase to be stored > >> > > > with ssh-agent, so of course, it has to ask for your passphrase. This > >> > > > is the very purpose of ssh-add. Could you be confusing ssh-add with > >> > > > something else? > >> > > > >> > > No, I'm just getting annoyed that a GUI is popping up when I am using a > >> > > command line app. Not sure of the point of it, it seems counter > >> > > intuitive. > >> > > >> > If you don't want this, you can turn it off with > >> > gconftool-2 -s -t bool /apps/gnome-keyting/daemon-components/ssh false > >> > >> Sorry for the troll, but I just had to admire this. One has to love > >> the easy discoverability of GNOME configuration methods... :-) > > > > If you prefer, setting > > > > SSH_AUTH_SOCK= > > > > in your shell works just as well. How is that for discoverability ? > > Now my system (new F10 from KDE Live) is *not* popping up the GUI window. > [jerry@jerry-opti755 ~]$ gconftool-2 -g > /apps/gnome-keyring/daemon-components/ssh > true > [jerry@jerry-opti755 ~]$ env | grep SSH > SSH_AGENT_PID=2320 > SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/tmp/ssh-bfNSeF2292/agent.2292 > SSH_ASKPASS=/usr/libexec/openssh/gnome-ssh-askpass > > Is this a bug? :-) No, this means you are running the regular openssh ssh-agent and not a gnome-keyring as replacement for ssh-agent. -- Tomas Mraz No matter how far down the wrong road you've gone, turn back. Turkish proverb -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list