FS#22921 - [subversion] update brings Message: secret service operation failed
Attached to Project:
Arch Linux
Opened by Alf Gaida (agaida) - Thursday, 17 February 2011, 01:11 GMT
Last edited by Ionut Biru (wonder) - Saturday, 18 June 2011, 16:43 GMT
Opened by Alf Gaida (agaida) - Thursday, 17 February 2011, 01:11 GMT
Last edited by Ionut Biru (wonder) - Saturday, 18 June 2011, 16:43 GMT
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Details
Description:
[agaida@archramme gcom-websites]$ svn update ** Message: secret service operation failed: The name org.freedesktop.secrets was not provided by any .service files This behavior is filed in https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=572137 * Bug 572137 - Networkmanager can no longer find secrets service Accordig to this bug a pacman -S gnome-keyring resolved this issue. So IMHO gnome-keyring should be a runtime-dependency for subversion (replacing libgnome-keyring or added to, im not really shure what libgnome-keyring is needed for. Additional info: * package version(s) [agaida@archramme ~]$ LANG=C svn --version svn, version 1.6.15 (r1038135) compiled Dec 19 2010, 17:06:46 * config and/or log files etc. Steps to reproduce: * install subversion * try to update a repository * look at the errors * pacman -S gnome-keyring * try an update again |
This task depends upon
Closed by Ionut Biru (wonder)
Saturday, 18 June 2011, 16:43 GMT
Reason for closing: Works for me
Additional comments about closing: this bug cannot be replicated anymore
Saturday, 18 June 2011, 16:43 GMT
Reason for closing: Works for me
Additional comments about closing: this bug cannot be replicated anymore
Comment by Jan de Groot (JGC) -
Thursday, 17 February 2011, 14:52 GMT
subversion comes with a password storage backend that uses
gnome-keyring or kwallet to store passwords. If kwallet or
gnome-keyring are not available, then it should fallback to the
usual plaintext password storage. Does subversion actually work
still, or does it fail completely when it can't find
gnome-keyring?
Comment by Alf Gaida (agaida) -
Saturday, 19 February 2011, 17:47 GMT
It falls back, is functional but throws ca. 30 Lines of warnings.
Not so nice.