On Wed, 2021-10-27 at 09:37 +0200, Milan Crha via evolution-list wrote:
> On Tue, 2021-10-26 at 17:57 -0700, Van Snyder wrote:
> > I have no idea where to paste that into Evolution. An offer to save
> > a
> > password in my keyring is not presented.
> 
>         Hi,
> there's no place to paste it in, the whole process is supposed to run
> inside the credential prompt.

What can I do when the credential prompt doesn't work? As remarked in
the original message, the pop-up says "Login to google..." with a grey
box and a URL, which rapidly disappears. Then the grey box is filled
with an invitation to log in to google, in which nothing works. Any
keystroke or mouse click erases the "log in to google" frame, leaving a
grey pop-up only with "Log in to google..." and the URL pane erased.


I  can't send a screenshot of it having the "Sign in to google"
invitation below the empty URL pane because any keystroke, including
"Print Screen" erases it.

> That it misbehaves is suspicious. Did you
> update WebKitGTK recently?

I have not updated WebKitGTK explicitly. I was unaware of its existence
and role until I read this message. I ran "apt-get update". One is
recommended to do this frequently. I haven't examined the long log to
determine whether WebKitGTK was part of the update.

> I do not know how Debian names it, maybe
> webkit2gtk3 or any other name. I would try to downgrade it.

Downgrading things in Debian is an invitation to get version conflicts,
so that many things suddenly stop working.

> Did you replace an existing value in the Seahorse or the key was not
> there at all?

There was a key in Seahorse when one gmail account was not working, but
not others. Every time I go to google to get a new key, it's different.
I replaced the not-working one in Seahorse, and it still doesn't work.
And there's no entry in Seahorse for the other not-working gmail
account.

> If you replaced it, then it's too late to restore to the
> previous state. The "OAuth2 Secret not found" can also show when the
> evolution-source-registry, or better the  libsecret, lost connection
> to
> the gnome-keyring-daemon.

There was no additional information below "OAuth2 Secret not found" --
just a grey box that fairly quickly filled with the invitation to log
into google, in which nothing worked.

> There usually helps:
>    $ evolution --force-shutdown
> which restarts Evolution and all the evolution-data-server processes,
> thus they reconnect to the (new) gnome-keyring-daemon and other
> background processes, which could restart meanwhile.

I've done that, and rebooted, several times.

For my sbcglobal.net accounts, when they want a password, there is a
pop-up to provide a password. For gmail accounts, all that's produced
is the non-working window that invites me to log in to google and get
something to "paste into your application." Is there a special reason
that Evolution produces a pop-up to request a password only for
sbcglobal.net, and not for gmail.com?

>         Bye,
>         Milan
> 
> _______________________________________________
> evolution-list mailing list
> evolution-list@gnome.org
> To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ...
> https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list

_______________________________________________
evolution-list mailing list
evolution-list@gnome.org
To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ...
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list

Reply via email to