GNOME Keyring
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A screenshot of GNOME Keyring Manager 2.12.1.
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Developer(s) | GNOME developers |
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Stable release | 3.18 (September 23, 2015[1]) [±] |
Preview release | 3.19.3 (December 16, 2015[±][2] | )
Written in | C |
Operating system | Cross-platform |
Type | |
License | GPL |
Website | wiki |
GNOME Keyring is a daemon application designed to take care of the user's security credentials, such as user names and passwords. The sensitive data is encrypted and stored in a keyring file in the user's home folder. The default keyring uses the login password for encryption, so users don't need to remember yet another password.
GNOME Keyring is implemented as a daemon and uses the process name gnome-keyring-daemon. Applications can store and request passwords by using the libgnome-keyring library.
GNOME Keyring is part of the GNOME desktop.
GNOME Keyring Manager
The GNOME Keyring Manager was a user interface for the GNOME Keyring. As of GNOME 2.22 it is deprecated and replaced entirely with Seahorse.[3]
See also
- KWallet, the KDE equivalent
- Apple Keychain
- KeePass
- NetworkManager
- LastPass
- Seahorse (software)
- Password Safe
- Linux on the desktop
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ GNOME 2.22 Release Notes
External links
- GNOME Keyring Wikipage on wiki.gnome.org
- GNOME Keyring git on git.gnome.org
- Gnome Keyring Security Philosophy
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