On Thu, 2009-04-02 at 15:49 +0200, Uwe Kiewel wrote: > Julian Aloofi wrote: > > In general it should save your password automatically (I assume you use > > Fedora 10). > > Oh, my fault: It's Rawhide :-) > > > Maybe you should delete your WLAN from the connection list, > > connect, enter your password and just reboot and see whether it worked > > automatically. > > I have had also this idea, but it didn't help. Did you ever deny nm-applet or nm-connection-editor access to the Gnome Keyring? Run 'gnome-keyring-manager' or 'seahorse' ('yum install gnome-keyring-manager seahorse' if you don't have them installed) and see if nm-applet and nm-connection-editor has access to the key in question. If all else fails, you can use the atom-bomb approach and 'rm -rf ~/.gnome2/keyrings' and then try to set the passphrase in nm-connection-editor again. Dan > > Thnaks, > Uwe > > > > > Am Mittwoch, den 01.04.2009, 21:14 +0200 schrieb Uwe Kiewel: > >> Hi, > >> > >> I cannot store the pass phrase for my wireless lan in NetworkManager. > >> > >> Procedure: > >> - left click on NM icon > >> - selecting my wireless lan > >> - entering my pass phrase > >> - connect successful > >> > >> Later: > >> - right click on NM icon > >> - edit connection -> wireless > >> - selecting my connection -> Edit -> wireless security > >> - box for pass phrase is empty > >> - entering my pass phrase > >> - clicking apply > >> - closing window > >> > >> Repeating this procedure, the in wireless security, there is no pass > >> phase :-( > >> > >> Is this a bug or is there an error in my procedure? > >> > >> > >> Thanks, > >> Uwe > >> > -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list