Le dimanche 20 janvier 2008 à 20:07 -0800, Leo L. Schwab a écrit : > Package: seahorse > Version: 2.20.3-1 > Severity: important > > seahorse-agent upon startup appears to sniff through my ~/.ssh > directory, find any SSH identity keys, and automagically add them to > ssh-agent. This appears to be default behavior, and is really, really > wrong.
This setup is far from being the standard, even among people heavily using SSH keys. This problem will exist only for a very small minority, for which the preferences are here to deactivate the behavior. Frankly, I think you should talk about that with upstream, on seahorse-list at gnome.org. This is far beyond the things we are ready to change for the Debian package. > After some Googling around, I discovered this broken behavior > can be disabled via seahorse-preferences, so my immediate issue is > solved. Nevertheless, I contend this, at the very least, should not be > default behavior, and in fact should be seriously reconsidered. There > is absolutely no way for seahorse-agent to know the policy > considerations attached to any keys it may find lurking in ~/.ssh, and > therefore should not -- by default, anyway -- be trying to do anything > "clever" or "helpful" with them. Seahorse is precisely here for doing helpful things with, among other things, SSH keys. The behavior you find annoying is helpful for people with a sane setup. So, we are not going to change the default unless something useful arises from your discussion with upstream. Cheers, -- .''`. : :' : We are debian.org. Lower your prices, surrender your code. `. `' We will add your hardware and software distinctiveness to `- our own. Resistance is futile.
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