FW: svn password -gnome- keyring

2016-08-14 Thread Ivan Gomes de Miranda
Hello,
I have once made a password, after ran `svn udpdate`, it required me for a 
password keyring, so I made one.
I noted it somewhere, now it's lost and I can't work with svn anymore because I 
can't update anything. (it's not about the project host password).
I exported the working copy to another location, checkout, when update it asked 
again.
How could I reset/remove/troubleshoot it?

What is it for, anyway?

Have a great time.

Saudações,
Ivan de Miranda


To: ivang...@hotmail.com
From: supp...@beanstalkapp.com
Subject: Re: I'm confused about how something works
Date: Mon, 4 Jul 2016 13:48:48 +










Hi Ivan, 

Thanks for writing in. Hope you had a pleasant weekend. :-)

Unfortunately, I'm no Lubuntu expert, but I did find something that could 
explain the dialog box you're seeing.

See: 
http://askubuntu.com/questions/184266/what-is-unlock-keyring-and-how-do-i-get-rid-of-it.

It sounds like this is a way to store password and encryption keys. I'd 
recommend keeping that password somewhere safe, in case you come across it 
again. I hope that helps but please let me know if you have any other questions.

Thanks!


--
Ashley Harpp
Customer Success, Wildbit
Beanstalk, DeployBot, Postmark



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{#HS:222685451-212706#}






On Sun, Jul 3, 2016 at 
1:24 PM EDT, Ivan GM  wrote:


  Hello Beanstalk!

I checked out a beanstalk repository at terminal - on a lubuntu - and inserted 
my username and password as usual. When I succeed to do that, prompted a dialog 
box with something about a key ring password, don't remember the message. So I 
made one and different from my beanstalk password. What is that ? Should I keep 
it ? When I will use it again?


  





  

Re: FW: svn password -gnome- keyring

2016-08-15 Thread Stefan Hett

Hi Ivan,

Hello,
I have once made a password, after ran `svn udpdate`, it required me 
for a password keyring, so I made one.
I noted it somewhere, now it's lost and I can't work with svn anymore 
because I can't update anything. (it's not about the project host 
password).
I exported the working copy to another location, checkout, when update 
it asked again.

How could I reset/remove/troubleshoot it?

What is it for, anyway?

Have a great time.

Saudações,
Ivan de Miranda



To: ivang...@hotmail.com
From: supp...@beanstalkapp.com
Subject: Re: I'm confused about how something works
Date: Mon, 4 Jul 2016 13:48:48 +

Hi Ivan,

Thanks for writing in. Hope you had a pleasant weekend. :-)

Unfortunately, I'm no Lubuntu expert, but I did find something that 
could explain the dialog box you're seeing.


See: 
http://askubuntu.com/questions/184266/what-is-unlock-keyring-and-how-do-i-get-rid-of-it.


It sounds like this is a way to store password and encryption keys. 
I'd recommend keeping that password somewhere safe, in case you come 
across it again. I hope that helps but please let me know if you have 
any other questions.


Thanks!

--
Ashley Harpp
Customer Success, Wildbit 
Beanstalk , DeployBot 
, Postmark 



How would you rate my reply?
Top Notch 
 
Fair 
 
Not Good 


{#HS:222685451-212706#}
On Sun, Jul 3, 2016 at 1:24 PM EDT, Ivan GM  wrote:

Hello Beanstalk!
I checked out a beanstalk repository at terminal - on a lubuntu -
and inserted my username and password as usual. When I succeed to
do that, prompted a dialog box with something about a key ring
password, don't remember the message. So I made one and different
from my beanstalk password. What is that ? Should I keep it ? When
I will use it again?



This is a bit off topic here. As Ivan already proposed, most likely the 
password dialog you are seeing is the dialog box for getting access to 
your keyring. I'm not familiar with lubuntu, but normally there's no way 
to restore a keyring for which you've lost your password, afaik.


SVN seems to be setup on the server to require some means of 
authentication. You should get in touch with your administrator to 
determine the means to get access to your repository again (normally, 
he'd reset your credentials so you can reset your key pair or get 
alternative means to authenticate yourself).


--
Regards,
Stefan Hett