On Wed, Jun 22, 2016 at 12:44 PM, Stefan G. Weichinger <li...@xunil.at> wrote: > Am 2016-06-22 um 06:50 schrieb J. García: > >> Apparently they are stored in the gnome-keyring if you set up the >> conection to >> 'Store the password for this user' when using nm-applet, but stored in >> /etc/NewtorkManager/system-connections/ as plain text when you select >> 'all >> users may connect to this network' (I don't know the exact options >> name, I'm >> using networkd, so I couldn't check) but look at this[1] >> I guess there should be a way to backup and restore the gnome-keyring. >> >> [1] https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NetworkManager#Encrypted_Wi-Fi >> _passwords > > > added one ESSID today, with "share with others" (or similar, german here) > ... nothing in /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections > > If I open my keyring-application I can't see any SSIDs/PSKs. > > What ever. I can re-add them step by step. > > Ah, nm-connection-editor shows them! > But which files does it read/write? > > using Neil's suggestion with the "find -newer" ... > > /home/sgw/.local/share/keyrings/user.keystore looks suspicious. > > I will backup that one and sync it over from another laptop. > > Is that what they call "hacking" already? :-P
Stefan, could you please show us the contents of /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf? In the early stages of systemd's integration in Gentoo, it was necessary to disable some plugins that tried to set /etc/conf.d/network as configuration file for NetworkManager. I don't know if it's related to your system connections not appearing in /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections. Regards. -- Dr. Canek Peláez Valdés Profesor de Carrera Asociado C Departamento de Matemáticas Facultad de Ciencias Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México