# osc maintainer sddm Server returned an error: HTTP Error 401: Unauthorized What must I do to get the desired result? I set an account up many years ago, rarely use it. I tried first osc maintainer inxi, because I thought I might like to try becoming a maintainer for this simple purpose of making a non-antique inxi available to Leap users. Its maintainer doesn't seem interested in non-broken inxi except for TW users, making forum support seriously annoying to provide to Leap users. -- Evolution as taught in public schools is, like religion, based on faith, not based on science. Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 ** a11y rocks! Felix Miata
On 10/28/21 08:03, Felix Miata wrote:
# osc maintainer sddm Server returned an error: HTTP Error 401: Unauthorized
What must I do to get the desired result? I set an account up many years ago, rarely use it. I tried first osc maintainer inxi, because I thought I might like to try becoming a maintainer for this simple purpose of making a non-antique inxi available to Leap users. Its maintainer doesn't seem interested in non-broken inxi except for TW users, making forum support seriously annoying to provide to Leap users.
Open Build Service changed passwords along with bugzilla so the first thing to check if you haven't used it for a long time is to check you have the right password. ~/.config/osc/oscrc or on really old systems it might be ~/.oscrc if you clear the password field osc should prompt you for a new one. -- Simon Lees (Simotek) http://simotek.net Emergency Update Team keybase.io/simotek SUSE Linux Adelaide Australia, UTC+10:30 GPG Fingerprint: 5B87 DB9D 88DC F606 E489 CEC5 0922 C246 02F0 014B
On 2021-10-28 08:56:45 +1030, Simon Lees wrote: <SNIP>
Open Build Service changed passwords along with bugzilla so the first thing to check if you haven't used it for a long time is to check you have the right password. ~/.config/osc/oscrc or on really old systems it might be ~/.oscrc if you clear the password field osc should prompt you for a new one.
You can also use "osc config https://api.opensuse.org --change-password" (or another apiurl/alias) to change the password. (Note: it will also ask where to store the password (usually, the default is the "Config file credentials manager").) Marcus
Simon Lees composed on 2021-10-28 08:56 (UTC+1030):
Open Build Service changed passwords along with bugzilla so the first thing to check if you haven't used it for a long time is to check you have the right password. ~/.config/osc/oscrc or on really old systems it might be ~/.oscrc if you clear the password field osc should prompt you for a new one.
~/.oscrc had my old password. Now it works! :) -- Evolution as taught in public schools is, like religion, based on faith, not based on science. Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 ** a11y rocks! Felix Miata
participants (3)
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Felix Miata
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Marcus Hüwe
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Simon Lees