Xubuntu: Disable gnome-keyring





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4















I'm using Xubuntu, since GNOME and Unity are too heavy for my netbook.



I want to disable 'gnome-keyring' prompts.



I tried sudo apt-get remove gnome-keyring which results:



The following packages will be REMOVED:
gnome-keyring oneconf python-ubuntu-sso-client software-center
ubuntu-sso-client ubuntu-sso-client-gtk xubuntu-desktop
Do you want to continue [Y/n]?


and of course I didn't confirm that!

Because it will remove the whole xubuntu-desktop and software-center !!



Can someone help?










share|improve this question

























  • Software dependencies are fatal...

    – Zlatan
    Jan 15 '13 at 10:02











  • Possible duplicate of askubuntu.com/questions/24770/…

    – aquaherd
    Jan 15 '13 at 12:31


















4















I'm using Xubuntu, since GNOME and Unity are too heavy for my netbook.



I want to disable 'gnome-keyring' prompts.



I tried sudo apt-get remove gnome-keyring which results:



The following packages will be REMOVED:
gnome-keyring oneconf python-ubuntu-sso-client software-center
ubuntu-sso-client ubuntu-sso-client-gtk xubuntu-desktop
Do you want to continue [Y/n]?


and of course I didn't confirm that!

Because it will remove the whole xubuntu-desktop and software-center !!



Can someone help?










share|improve this question

























  • Software dependencies are fatal...

    – Zlatan
    Jan 15 '13 at 10:02











  • Possible duplicate of askubuntu.com/questions/24770/…

    – aquaherd
    Jan 15 '13 at 12:31














4












4








4


1






I'm using Xubuntu, since GNOME and Unity are too heavy for my netbook.



I want to disable 'gnome-keyring' prompts.



I tried sudo apt-get remove gnome-keyring which results:



The following packages will be REMOVED:
gnome-keyring oneconf python-ubuntu-sso-client software-center
ubuntu-sso-client ubuntu-sso-client-gtk xubuntu-desktop
Do you want to continue [Y/n]?


and of course I didn't confirm that!

Because it will remove the whole xubuntu-desktop and software-center !!



Can someone help?










share|improve this question
















I'm using Xubuntu, since GNOME and Unity are too heavy for my netbook.



I want to disable 'gnome-keyring' prompts.



I tried sudo apt-get remove gnome-keyring which results:



The following packages will be REMOVED:
gnome-keyring oneconf python-ubuntu-sso-client software-center
ubuntu-sso-client ubuntu-sso-client-gtk xubuntu-desktop
Do you want to continue [Y/n]?


and of course I didn't confirm that!

Because it will remove the whole xubuntu-desktop and software-center !!



Can someone help?







xubuntu xfce gnome-keyring






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 15 '13 at 11:10







Seyed Mohammad

















asked Jan 15 '13 at 9:57









Seyed MohammadSeyed Mohammad

2,24572639




2,24572639













  • Software dependencies are fatal...

    – Zlatan
    Jan 15 '13 at 10:02











  • Possible duplicate of askubuntu.com/questions/24770/…

    – aquaherd
    Jan 15 '13 at 12:31



















  • Software dependencies are fatal...

    – Zlatan
    Jan 15 '13 at 10:02











  • Possible duplicate of askubuntu.com/questions/24770/…

    – aquaherd
    Jan 15 '13 at 12:31

















Software dependencies are fatal...

– Zlatan
Jan 15 '13 at 10:02





Software dependencies are fatal...

– Zlatan
Jan 15 '13 at 10:02













Possible duplicate of askubuntu.com/questions/24770/…

– aquaherd
Jan 15 '13 at 12:31





Possible duplicate of askubuntu.com/questions/24770/…

– aquaherd
Jan 15 '13 at 12:31










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















3














UPDATE (with question)



Program apt-get on Ubuntu has fatal dependencies. Use aptitude



sudo apt-get install aptitude && sudo aptitude remove gnome-keyring


Old



Install seahorse. That's Passwords and Keys. Some programs on Ubuntu is renamed, but packages is same.



sudo apt-get install seahorse


After that, go to Gnome keyring section and disable it (you can than disable it in Unity with Passwords and Keys).






share|improve this answer


























  • So installing seahorse disables the keyring automatically? Is it some sort of black magic gig?

    – Bruno Pereira
    Jan 15 '13 at 10:24











  • No, no. He wants program for disabling it. He know how to do it in Unity/GNOME with seahorse. I will update answer if you want...

    – Zlatan
    Jan 15 '13 at 10:25











  • @ZDroid Thanks! This brings the Passwords and Keys app to Xubuntu. According to my searches, I thought one can disable gnome-keyring with this app, but now I see this is not the solution. I will edit my question. My mistake!

    – Seyed Mohammad
    Jan 15 '13 at 11:10






  • 1





    @ZDroid I checked it out, and aptitude had no difference with apt-get. Aptitude also wants to remove both xubuntu-desktop and software-center.

    – Seyed Mohammad
    Jan 15 '13 at 12:53











  • LOL... I don't see any same.

    – Zlatan
    Jan 15 '13 at 12:56



















1














Seyed, this answer is just to address "Because it will remove the whole xubuntu-desktop ...".



xubuntu-desktop is a metapackage: you can take a look at What are the downsides of removing ubuntu-desktop metapackage?. The answer is as relevant to Xubuntu as it is to Ubuntu.



I have a couple of references about metapackages which you may find useful even though they're not about Xubuntu:




  • Metapackages

  • http://www.mail-archive.com/lubuntu-desktop@lists.launchpad.net/msg03490.html


I routinely remove the desktop metapackage (as a consequence of purging unwanted software) because I always do a clean install and not an in situ upgrade to a higher version of *buntu.



In your specific case, it appears that not just the xubuntu-desktop metapackage but other possibly important software would be removed.






share|improve this answer

































    0














    Open System Monitor, in processes tab scroll down and select gnome-keyring-daemon, and click end process.



    I am using Kali GNU/Linux Rolling and it worked for me.






    share|improve this answer































      0














      Solution in this post [1]Change keyring password on Xubuntu?:



      tl;dr?



      sudo apt install seahorse


      This program can delete/change/create keyring-password. At least it was helpful for me.






      share|improve this answer


























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        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes








        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        3














        UPDATE (with question)



        Program apt-get on Ubuntu has fatal dependencies. Use aptitude



        sudo apt-get install aptitude && sudo aptitude remove gnome-keyring


        Old



        Install seahorse. That's Passwords and Keys. Some programs on Ubuntu is renamed, but packages is same.



        sudo apt-get install seahorse


        After that, go to Gnome keyring section and disable it (you can than disable it in Unity with Passwords and Keys).






        share|improve this answer


























        • So installing seahorse disables the keyring automatically? Is it some sort of black magic gig?

          – Bruno Pereira
          Jan 15 '13 at 10:24











        • No, no. He wants program for disabling it. He know how to do it in Unity/GNOME with seahorse. I will update answer if you want...

          – Zlatan
          Jan 15 '13 at 10:25











        • @ZDroid Thanks! This brings the Passwords and Keys app to Xubuntu. According to my searches, I thought one can disable gnome-keyring with this app, but now I see this is not the solution. I will edit my question. My mistake!

          – Seyed Mohammad
          Jan 15 '13 at 11:10






        • 1





          @ZDroid I checked it out, and aptitude had no difference with apt-get. Aptitude also wants to remove both xubuntu-desktop and software-center.

          – Seyed Mohammad
          Jan 15 '13 at 12:53











        • LOL... I don't see any same.

          – Zlatan
          Jan 15 '13 at 12:56
















        3














        UPDATE (with question)



        Program apt-get on Ubuntu has fatal dependencies. Use aptitude



        sudo apt-get install aptitude && sudo aptitude remove gnome-keyring


        Old



        Install seahorse. That's Passwords and Keys. Some programs on Ubuntu is renamed, but packages is same.



        sudo apt-get install seahorse


        After that, go to Gnome keyring section and disable it (you can than disable it in Unity with Passwords and Keys).






        share|improve this answer


























        • So installing seahorse disables the keyring automatically? Is it some sort of black magic gig?

          – Bruno Pereira
          Jan 15 '13 at 10:24











        • No, no. He wants program for disabling it. He know how to do it in Unity/GNOME with seahorse. I will update answer if you want...

          – Zlatan
          Jan 15 '13 at 10:25











        • @ZDroid Thanks! This brings the Passwords and Keys app to Xubuntu. According to my searches, I thought one can disable gnome-keyring with this app, but now I see this is not the solution. I will edit my question. My mistake!

          – Seyed Mohammad
          Jan 15 '13 at 11:10






        • 1





          @ZDroid I checked it out, and aptitude had no difference with apt-get. Aptitude also wants to remove both xubuntu-desktop and software-center.

          – Seyed Mohammad
          Jan 15 '13 at 12:53











        • LOL... I don't see any same.

          – Zlatan
          Jan 15 '13 at 12:56














        3












        3








        3







        UPDATE (with question)



        Program apt-get on Ubuntu has fatal dependencies. Use aptitude



        sudo apt-get install aptitude && sudo aptitude remove gnome-keyring


        Old



        Install seahorse. That's Passwords and Keys. Some programs on Ubuntu is renamed, but packages is same.



        sudo apt-get install seahorse


        After that, go to Gnome keyring section and disable it (you can than disable it in Unity with Passwords and Keys).






        share|improve this answer















        UPDATE (with question)



        Program apt-get on Ubuntu has fatal dependencies. Use aptitude



        sudo apt-get install aptitude && sudo aptitude remove gnome-keyring


        Old



        Install seahorse. That's Passwords and Keys. Some programs on Ubuntu is renamed, but packages is same.



        sudo apt-get install seahorse


        After that, go to Gnome keyring section and disable it (you can than disable it in Unity with Passwords and Keys).







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Feb 12 at 13:32









        Hizqeel

        1,75951321




        1,75951321










        answered Jan 15 '13 at 10:04









        ZlatanZlatan

        2,03132443




        2,03132443













        • So installing seahorse disables the keyring automatically? Is it some sort of black magic gig?

          – Bruno Pereira
          Jan 15 '13 at 10:24











        • No, no. He wants program for disabling it. He know how to do it in Unity/GNOME with seahorse. I will update answer if you want...

          – Zlatan
          Jan 15 '13 at 10:25











        • @ZDroid Thanks! This brings the Passwords and Keys app to Xubuntu. According to my searches, I thought one can disable gnome-keyring with this app, but now I see this is not the solution. I will edit my question. My mistake!

          – Seyed Mohammad
          Jan 15 '13 at 11:10






        • 1





          @ZDroid I checked it out, and aptitude had no difference with apt-get. Aptitude also wants to remove both xubuntu-desktop and software-center.

          – Seyed Mohammad
          Jan 15 '13 at 12:53











        • LOL... I don't see any same.

          – Zlatan
          Jan 15 '13 at 12:56



















        • So installing seahorse disables the keyring automatically? Is it some sort of black magic gig?

          – Bruno Pereira
          Jan 15 '13 at 10:24











        • No, no. He wants program for disabling it. He know how to do it in Unity/GNOME with seahorse. I will update answer if you want...

          – Zlatan
          Jan 15 '13 at 10:25











        • @ZDroid Thanks! This brings the Passwords and Keys app to Xubuntu. According to my searches, I thought one can disable gnome-keyring with this app, but now I see this is not the solution. I will edit my question. My mistake!

          – Seyed Mohammad
          Jan 15 '13 at 11:10






        • 1





          @ZDroid I checked it out, and aptitude had no difference with apt-get. Aptitude also wants to remove both xubuntu-desktop and software-center.

          – Seyed Mohammad
          Jan 15 '13 at 12:53











        • LOL... I don't see any same.

          – Zlatan
          Jan 15 '13 at 12:56

















        So installing seahorse disables the keyring automatically? Is it some sort of black magic gig?

        – Bruno Pereira
        Jan 15 '13 at 10:24





        So installing seahorse disables the keyring automatically? Is it some sort of black magic gig?

        – Bruno Pereira
        Jan 15 '13 at 10:24













        No, no. He wants program for disabling it. He know how to do it in Unity/GNOME with seahorse. I will update answer if you want...

        – Zlatan
        Jan 15 '13 at 10:25





        No, no. He wants program for disabling it. He know how to do it in Unity/GNOME with seahorse. I will update answer if you want...

        – Zlatan
        Jan 15 '13 at 10:25













        @ZDroid Thanks! This brings the Passwords and Keys app to Xubuntu. According to my searches, I thought one can disable gnome-keyring with this app, but now I see this is not the solution. I will edit my question. My mistake!

        – Seyed Mohammad
        Jan 15 '13 at 11:10





        @ZDroid Thanks! This brings the Passwords and Keys app to Xubuntu. According to my searches, I thought one can disable gnome-keyring with this app, but now I see this is not the solution. I will edit my question. My mistake!

        – Seyed Mohammad
        Jan 15 '13 at 11:10




        1




        1





        @ZDroid I checked it out, and aptitude had no difference with apt-get. Aptitude also wants to remove both xubuntu-desktop and software-center.

        – Seyed Mohammad
        Jan 15 '13 at 12:53





        @ZDroid I checked it out, and aptitude had no difference with apt-get. Aptitude also wants to remove both xubuntu-desktop and software-center.

        – Seyed Mohammad
        Jan 15 '13 at 12:53













        LOL... I don't see any same.

        – Zlatan
        Jan 15 '13 at 12:56





        LOL... I don't see any same.

        – Zlatan
        Jan 15 '13 at 12:56













        1














        Seyed, this answer is just to address "Because it will remove the whole xubuntu-desktop ...".



        xubuntu-desktop is a metapackage: you can take a look at What are the downsides of removing ubuntu-desktop metapackage?. The answer is as relevant to Xubuntu as it is to Ubuntu.



        I have a couple of references about metapackages which you may find useful even though they're not about Xubuntu:




        • Metapackages

        • http://www.mail-archive.com/lubuntu-desktop@lists.launchpad.net/msg03490.html


        I routinely remove the desktop metapackage (as a consequence of purging unwanted software) because I always do a clean install and not an in situ upgrade to a higher version of *buntu.



        In your specific case, it appears that not just the xubuntu-desktop metapackage but other possibly important software would be removed.






        share|improve this answer






























          1














          Seyed, this answer is just to address "Because it will remove the whole xubuntu-desktop ...".



          xubuntu-desktop is a metapackage: you can take a look at What are the downsides of removing ubuntu-desktop metapackage?. The answer is as relevant to Xubuntu as it is to Ubuntu.



          I have a couple of references about metapackages which you may find useful even though they're not about Xubuntu:




          • Metapackages

          • http://www.mail-archive.com/lubuntu-desktop@lists.launchpad.net/msg03490.html


          I routinely remove the desktop metapackage (as a consequence of purging unwanted software) because I always do a clean install and not an in situ upgrade to a higher version of *buntu.



          In your specific case, it appears that not just the xubuntu-desktop metapackage but other possibly important software would be removed.






          share|improve this answer




























            1












            1








            1







            Seyed, this answer is just to address "Because it will remove the whole xubuntu-desktop ...".



            xubuntu-desktop is a metapackage: you can take a look at What are the downsides of removing ubuntu-desktop metapackage?. The answer is as relevant to Xubuntu as it is to Ubuntu.



            I have a couple of references about metapackages which you may find useful even though they're not about Xubuntu:




            • Metapackages

            • http://www.mail-archive.com/lubuntu-desktop@lists.launchpad.net/msg03490.html


            I routinely remove the desktop metapackage (as a consequence of purging unwanted software) because I always do a clean install and not an in situ upgrade to a higher version of *buntu.



            In your specific case, it appears that not just the xubuntu-desktop metapackage but other possibly important software would be removed.






            share|improve this answer















            Seyed, this answer is just to address "Because it will remove the whole xubuntu-desktop ...".



            xubuntu-desktop is a metapackage: you can take a look at What are the downsides of removing ubuntu-desktop metapackage?. The answer is as relevant to Xubuntu as it is to Ubuntu.



            I have a couple of references about metapackages which you may find useful even though they're not about Xubuntu:




            • Metapackages

            • http://www.mail-archive.com/lubuntu-desktop@lists.launchpad.net/msg03490.html


            I routinely remove the desktop metapackage (as a consequence of purging unwanted software) because I always do a clean install and not an in situ upgrade to a higher version of *buntu.



            In your specific case, it appears that not just the xubuntu-desktop metapackage but other possibly important software would be removed.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:24









            Community

            1




            1










            answered Nov 16 '13 at 5:59







            user25656






























                0














                Open System Monitor, in processes tab scroll down and select gnome-keyring-daemon, and click end process.



                I am using Kali GNU/Linux Rolling and it worked for me.






                share|improve this answer




























                  0














                  Open System Monitor, in processes tab scroll down and select gnome-keyring-daemon, and click end process.



                  I am using Kali GNU/Linux Rolling and it worked for me.






                  share|improve this answer


























                    0












                    0








                    0







                    Open System Monitor, in processes tab scroll down and select gnome-keyring-daemon, and click end process.



                    I am using Kali GNU/Linux Rolling and it worked for me.






                    share|improve this answer













                    Open System Monitor, in processes tab scroll down and select gnome-keyring-daemon, and click end process.



                    I am using Kali GNU/Linux Rolling and it worked for me.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Mar 12 '18 at 6:10









                    SmshrimantSmshrimant

                    33




                    33























                        0














                        Solution in this post [1]Change keyring password on Xubuntu?:



                        tl;dr?



                        sudo apt install seahorse


                        This program can delete/change/create keyring-password. At least it was helpful for me.






                        share|improve this answer






























                          0














                          Solution in this post [1]Change keyring password on Xubuntu?:



                          tl;dr?



                          sudo apt install seahorse


                          This program can delete/change/create keyring-password. At least it was helpful for me.






                          share|improve this answer




























                            0












                            0








                            0







                            Solution in this post [1]Change keyring password on Xubuntu?:



                            tl;dr?



                            sudo apt install seahorse


                            This program can delete/change/create keyring-password. At least it was helpful for me.






                            share|improve this answer















                            Solution in this post [1]Change keyring password on Xubuntu?:



                            tl;dr?



                            sudo apt install seahorse


                            This program can delete/change/create keyring-password. At least it was helpful for me.







                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited Feb 12 at 12:06

























                            answered Feb 12 at 11:56









                            Vitaliy HVitaliy H

                            11




                            11






























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