I have logged into my computer today to find that owncloud is asking for a password every time it opens! I have checked the kde wallet and the password in there is correct. I have tried re-adding the kde wallet password. I have tried removing and re-installing oencloud I have tried using snapper to roll back to yesterday (when it worked fine) I am using owncloud 1.7.1 and opensuse 13.2 64-bit Everything is fine on my work computer and my laptop using the same versions. I am assuming that something is wrong in the owncloud settings for my user. When I re-installed owncloud it remembered all the settings. I want to try and do a complete clean install but there is no .owncloud folder in my home directory. Does anyone know how I can completely remove owncloud-client and all of it's settings from my system and home folder so that I am able to perform a completely clean install? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 01/22/2015 10:20 AM, Paul Groves wrote:
I have logged into my computer today to find that owncloud is asking for a password every time it opens!
I have checked the kde wallet and the password in there is correct. I have tried re-adding the kde wallet password. I have tried removing and re-installing oencloud I have tried using snapper to roll back to yesterday (when it worked fine)
I am using owncloud 1.7.1 and opensuse 13.2 64-bit
Everything is fine on my work computer and my laptop using the same versions.
I am assuming that something is wrong in the owncloud settings for my user. When I re-installed owncloud it remembered all the settings. I want to try and do a complete clean install but there is no .owncloud folder in my home directory.
Does anyone know how I can completely remove owncloud-client and all of it's settings from my system and home folder so that I am able to perform a completely clean install?
Do you have an encrypted home directory? -- After all is said and done, more is said than done. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Johannes, unfortunately I would not call this normal behaviour because it is only happening on this one computer. On all of the other computers I have tried (2 on openSUSE 13.2, 1 on mac 10.10 and 1 windows 7) it remembers the password successfully. Dylan, no there is no .config/owncloud directory John, no the home directory is not encrypted on the computer with the issue, however the two other openSUSE 13.2 computers remember the password just fine and one of those is encrypted the other is not. I just cannot work out where owncloud client is storing its configuration for my user. On 22 January 2015 at 19:25, John Andersen <jsamyth@gmail.com> wrote:
On 01/22/2015 10:20 AM, Paul Groves wrote:
I have logged into my computer today to find that owncloud is asking for a password every time it opens!
I have checked the kde wallet and the password in there is correct. I have tried re-adding the kde wallet password. I have tried removing and re-installing oencloud I have tried using snapper to roll back to yesterday (when it worked fine)
I am using owncloud 1.7.1 and opensuse 13.2 64-bit
Everything is fine on my work computer and my laptop using the same versions.
I am assuming that something is wrong in the owncloud settings for my user. When I re-installed owncloud it remembered all the settings. I want to try and do a complete clean install but there is no .owncloud folder in my home directory.
Does anyone know how I can completely remove owncloud-client and all of it's settings from my system and home folder so that I am able to perform a completely clean install?
Do you have an encrypted home directory?
-- After all is said and done, more is said than done. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
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Le 22/01/2015 21:38, Paul Groves a écrit : search the web... http://doc.owncloud.org/desktop/1.5/advancedusage.html On Linux it can be found in: $HOME/.local/share/data/ownCloud/owncloud.cfg that said I have the very same problem you have and no solution (yet) jdd -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Le 22/01/2015 21:46, jdd a écrit :
that said I have the very same problem you have and no solution (yet)
seems to be a time problem (owncloud ask for pass before the keychain is up) http://forum.owncloud.org/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=22141 "Im using Linux Mint 17 and had the same problem. I solved my problem by adding a delay of 20 seconds before starting ownCloud sync client." how is it possible to do this in opensuse 13.2? jdd -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
I tried deleting $HOME/.local/share/data/ownCloud/owncloud.cfg I closed and opened owncloud and success! I logged off and on. Success! (Even with auto startup) I rebooted... and its broken again. (asks for password) Again, I deleted $HOME/.local/share/data/ownCloud/owncloud.cfg I set it not to start automatically I logged off and on. It works fine I rebooted again Owncloud did not start (just as expected) so I started it manually and it asks for a password! >:$ I have rolled back to 1.7.0 and the issue happens here as well but only on this one computer! I have also tried making another user and it still happens on that new user but only on the one computer! I am seriously considering re-installing from scratch because of this and my dropbox issue, it is really annoying and there seems to be no obvious solution at present. On 22 January 2015 at 20:57, jdd <jdd@dodin.org> wrote:
Le 22/01/2015 21:46, jdd a écrit :
that said I have the very same problem you have and no solution (yet)
seems to be a time problem (owncloud ask for pass before the keychain is up)
http://forum.owncloud.org/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=22141
"Im using Linux Mint 17 and had the same problem. I solved my problem by adding a delay of 20 seconds before starting ownCloud sync client."
how is it possible to do this in opensuse 13.2?
jdd
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Am Donnerstag, 22. Januar 2015 23:08 CET, Paul Groves <paul.groves.787@gmail.com> schrieb:
I tried deleting $HOME/.local/share/data/ownCloud/owncloud.cfg I closed and opened owncloud and success! I logged off and on. Success! (Even with auto startup) I rebooted... and its broken again. (asks for password) Again, I deleted $HOME/.local/share/data/ownCloud/owncloud.cfg I set it not to start automatically I logged off and on. It works fine I rebooted again Owncloud did not start (just as expected) so I started it manually and it asks for a password! >:$
Did you have a look into the file? Maybe there is an option which you can change; my guess is that the file is created from some default but it won't change if you modify it. Regards, -- Aaron "Optimizer" Digulla a.k.a. Philmann Dark "It's not the universe that's limited, it's our imagination. Follow me and I'll show you something beyond the limits." http://blog.pdark.de/ -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
If it helps out any, I'm running the OC client on my oS laptops (one 12.3, one 13.1,) and don't get prompted on each login. The contents of my owncloud.cfg file are as follows: [General] CaCertificates="@ByteArray(-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----\n[[[cert removed]]]\n-----END CERTIFICATE-----\n\n)" optionalDesktopNotifications=true [ownCloud] url=https://server.mydomain.com/owncloud authType=http user=my_username http_user=my_username [Proxy] type=0 [Settings] geometry=@ByteArray(\x1\xd9\xd0\xcb\0\x1\0\0\0\0\t\v\0\0\x2\a\0\0\v\xc9\0\0\x3\xf0\0\0\t\x10\0\0\x2#\0\0\v\xc4\0\0\x3\xeb\0\0\0\0\0\0) [ActivityListHeader] geometry=@ByteArray(\0\0\0\xff\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\x2\xb9\0\0\0\x5\x1\0\0\x1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\x64\xff\xff\xff\xff\0\0\0\x81\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\x5\0\0\0\x64\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\xcc\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\x64\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\xc1\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\x64\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\0) -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Le 22/01/2015 21:46, jdd a écrit :
that said I have the very same problem you have and no solution (yet)
I try to solve the problem, step by step. The first difficulty nI have is to understand *how* the owncloud *client* is started... I use kde / 13.2 * on the owncloud config, start at boot is *disabled* * I do *not* have anything in the kde config automatic start * I have "start with empty desktop" in kde config * I close the owncloud client before rebooting and I have still the owncloud client starting and asking for passwd. what do I miss? thanks jdd -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 01/23/2015 01:19 AM, jdd wrote:
Le 22/01/2015 21:46, jdd a écrit :
that said I have the very same problem you have and no solution (yet)
I try to solve the problem, step by step.
The first difficulty nI have is to understand *how* the owncloud *client* is started...
I use kde / 13.2
* on the owncloud config, start at boot is *disabled* * I do *not* have anything in the kde config automatic start * I have "start with empty desktop" in kde config * I close the owncloud client before rebooting
and I have still the owncloud client starting and asking for passwd.
what do I miss? thanks jdd
Maybe: journalctl --system -- After all is said and done, more is said than done. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Le 23/01/2015 20:00, John Andersen a écrit :
Maybe: journalctl --system
restricting the text to line with "owncloud", I have mostly packagekit updates (last jan 12), last: janv. 12 09:22:33 linux-uegt PackageKit[8159]: in /4_badddbdb for update-packages package owncloud;7.0_20141225-1.25;noarch;isv:ownCloud:community:nightly was installing for uid 1000 and old kernel lines 0 déc. 15 13:00:00 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 235897 2726 192 1686 0 owncloud déc. 15 13:49:57 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 236600 1543 195 2939 0 owncloud déc. 15 13:49:57 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 236600 1543 195 2939 0 owncloud doesn't mean anything for me :-( jdd -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Ok, I managed to get round to re-installing 13.2 on my machine. I created a clean home directory for my user and... it still asks for the bleeping password at login! This is crazy because on my laptop and work computer no issues on clean install of 13.2! I have a suspicion that this may be caused by the Nvidia (or Noveau) driver because the other two computers i mentioned and ATI and Intel, but this is just a hunch. I am stumped at this point. Can anyone advise what to try next? On 23 January 2015 at 19:07, jdd <jdd@dodin.org> wrote:
Le 23/01/2015 20:00, John Andersen a écrit :
Maybe: journalctl --system
restricting the text to line with "owncloud", I have mostly packagekit updates (last jan 12), last:
janv. 12 09:22:33 linux-uegt PackageKit[8159]: in /4_badddbdb for update-packages package owncloud;7.0_20141225-1.25;noarch;isv:ownCloud:community:nightly was installing for uid 1000
and old kernel lines
0 déc. 15 13:00:00 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 235897 2726 192 1686 0 owncloud déc. 15 13:49:57 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 236600 1543 195 2939 0 owncloud déc. 15 13:49:57 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 236600 1543 195 2939 0 owncloud
doesn't mean anything for me :-(
jdd
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* Paul Groves <paul.groves.787@gmail.com> [02-15-15 12:05]:
Ok, I managed to get round to re-installing 13.2 on my machine. I created a clean home directory for my user and... it still asks for the bleeping password at login!
This is crazy because on my laptop and work computer no issues on clean install of 13.2!
I have a suspicion that this may be caused by the Nvidia (or Noveau) driver because the other two computers i mentioned and ATI and Intel, but this is just a hunch.
I am stumped at this point. Can anyone advise what to try next?
On 23 January 2015 at 19:07, jdd <jdd@dodin.org> wrote:
Le 23/01/2015 20:00, John Andersen a écrit :
Maybe: journalctl --system
restricting the text to line with "owncloud", I have mostly packagekit updates (last jan 12), last:
janv. 12 09:22:33 linux-uegt PackageKit[8159]: in /4_badddbdb for update-packages package owncloud;7.0_20141225-1.25;noarch;isv:ownCloud:community:nightly was installing for uid 1000
and old kernel lines
0 déc. 15 13:00:00 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 235897 2726 192 1686 0 owncloud déc. 15 13:49:57 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 236600 1543 195 2939 0 owncloud déc. 15 13:49:57 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 236600 1543 195 2939 0 owncloud
doesn't mean anything for me :-(
jdd
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Why would the video driver have anything to do with requiring a password to access your system? Having a "clean" home has also nothing to do with asking for a "bleeping" password to log onto your gui. Nor can I imagine does owncloud, but... My main system uses an nvidia driver but has used nouveau and does require a passwrd. I have locally six other boxes with varying equipment and video drivers which all require passwords but none now have owncloud. And I am able to change them all to provide logon access w/o requiring a password (but cannot see any reason not to require one). Following is my recall of the install screens (gui) for openSUSE: When you installed openSUSE 13.2, you were presented a gui screen where you assign the user a password, were asked whether to use the user's pw for root and whether to require a password upon logging into the gui. You must have missed it or disregarded it, apparently twice. I believe but not using gnome, cannot be sure the above applies to other than KDE. And I may even be wrong/mis-informed/crazy on all accounts, ymmv. But my statement is guarenteed w/o *any* warranty. Normal disclaimers apply. -- (paka)Patrick Shanahan Plainfield, Indiana, USA @ptilopteri http://en.opensuse.org openSUSE Community Member facebook/ptilopteri http://wahoo.no-ip.org Photo Album: http://wahoo.no-ip.org/gallery2 Registered Linux User #207535 @ http://linuxcounter.net -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
This computer is set up exactly the same as the two that work. Apart from the graphics hardware. I have just tried re-installing with the on-board graphics card and it works fine no password request from owncloud once logged in. I have installed my NVIDIA card now and official NVIDIA drivers (after the os is installed) it now works! NO password request from owncloud at login. (very happy :D). To confirm this I changed the hard disk in the machine and installed the OS again with the graphics card installed. I installed owncloud and logged into it, waited for the sync and rebooted. It asks for the password every login again! I have re-installed my original hard disk and everything is working fine now, but it seems that there is some incompatibility with owncloud and the official NVIDIA driver. I have no idea why this is the case. Unless someone can shed some light on this I will just have to remove the graphics card if I have the need to re-install. Note, this only happens on 13.2 64-bit (not tried 32-bit). 13.1 works fine still and so does ubuntu and windows 7 (all using official nvidia drivers). On 15 February 2015 at 17:30, Patrick Shanahan <paka@opensuse.org> wrote:
* Paul Groves <paul.groves.787@gmail.com> [02-15-15 12:05]:
Ok, I managed to get round to re-installing 13.2 on my machine. I created a clean home directory for my user and... it still asks for the bleeping password at login!
This is crazy because on my laptop and work computer no issues on clean install of 13.2!
I have a suspicion that this may be caused by the Nvidia (or Noveau) driver because the other two computers i mentioned and ATI and Intel, but this is just a hunch.
I am stumped at this point. Can anyone advise what to try next?
On 23 January 2015 at 19:07, jdd <jdd@dodin.org> wrote:
Le 23/01/2015 20:00, John Andersen a écrit :
Maybe: journalctl --system
restricting the text to line with "owncloud", I have mostly packagekit updates (last jan 12), last:
janv. 12 09:22:33 linux-uegt PackageKit[8159]: in /4_badddbdb for update-packages package owncloud;7.0_20141225-1.25;noarch;isv:ownCloud:community:nightly was installing for uid 1000
and old kernel lines
0 déc. 15 13:00:00 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 235897 2726 192 1686 0 owncloud déc. 15 13:49:57 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 236600 1543 195 2939 0 owncloud déc. 15 13:49:57 linux-uegt kernel: [ 1728] 1000 1728 236600 1543 195 2939 0 owncloud
doesn't mean anything for me :-(
jdd
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Why would the video driver have anything to do with requiring a password to access your system?
Having a "clean" home has also nothing to do with asking for a "bleeping" password to log onto your gui. Nor can I imagine does owncloud, but...
My main system uses an nvidia driver but has used nouveau and does require a passwrd. I have locally six other boxes with varying equipment and video drivers which all require passwords but none now have owncloud. And I am able to change them all to provide logon access w/o requiring a password (but cannot see any reason not to require one).
Following is my recall of the install screens (gui) for openSUSE: When you installed openSUSE 13.2, you were presented a gui screen where you assign the user a password, were asked whether to use the user's pw for root and whether to require a password upon logging into the gui. You must have missed it or disregarded it, apparently twice.
I believe but not using gnome, cannot be sure the above applies to other than KDE.
And I may even be wrong/mis-informed/crazy on all accounts, ymmv. But my statement is guarenteed w/o *any* warranty. Normal disclaimers apply.
-- (paka)Patrick Shanahan Plainfield, Indiana, USA @ptilopteri http://en.opensuse.org openSUSE Community Member facebook/ptilopteri http://wahoo.no-ip.org Photo Album: http://wahoo.no-ip.org/gallery2 Registered Linux User #207535 @ http://linuxcounter.net -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
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When your owncloud instance is configured to encrypt your data this is the normal behaviour for technical reasons. Am 22.01.15 um 19:20 schrieb Paul Groves:
I have logged into my computer today to find that owncloud is asking for a password every time it opens!
I have checked the kde wallet and the password in there is correct. I have tried re-adding the kde wallet password. I have tried removing and re-installing oencloud I have tried using snapper to roll back to yesterday (when it worked fine)
I am using owncloud 1.7.1 and opensuse 13.2 64-bit
Everything is fine on my work computer and my laptop using the same versions.
I am assuming that something is wrong in the owncloud settings for my user. When I re-installed owncloud it remembered all the settings. I want to try and do a complete clean install but there is no .owncloud folder in my home directory.
Does anyone know how I can completely remove owncloud-client and all of it's settings from my system and home folder so that I am able to perform a completely clean install?
-- Johannes Weberhofer Weberhofer GmbH, Austria, Vienna -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 01/22/2015 07:20 PM, Paul Groves wrote:
I have logged into my computer today to find that owncloud is asking for a password every time it opens!
I have checked the kde wallet and the password in there is correct. I have tried re-adding the kde wallet password. I have tried removing and re-installing oencloud I have tried using snapper to roll back to yesterday (when it worked fine)
I am using owncloud 1.7.1 and opensuse 13.2 64-bit
Everything is fine on my work computer and my laptop using the same versions.
I am assuming that something is wrong in the owncloud settings for my user. When I re-installed owncloud it remembered all the settings. I want to try and do a complete clean install but there is no .owncloud folder in my home directory.
Does anyone know how I can completely remove owncloud-client and all of it's settings from my system and home folder so that I am able to perform a completely clean install?
Hi, can you check if you have kwalletd5 installed, and if not, install it and check if this solves the problem.
participants (9)
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Aaron Digulla
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Christopher Myers
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Dylan
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Florian Gleixner
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jdd
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Johannes Weberhofer
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John Andersen
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Patrick Shanahan
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Paul Groves