Dan Williams wrote: > 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? Should I? I only did the procedure as described below. (selecting my wlan in nm's wlan-list. I never have been prompted for keyring manager or such applications. > 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. I will give this procedure a try :-) > > 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. I do *not* have this file. Thanks, Uwe -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list