The ssh key breakage is worse than not handling certain key types.  If
the user has ECDSA key, then "ssh-add"  will fail to add ANY keys,
including RSA and DSA.

Do we really need the "acroread" of security key agents, with so many
features that none of it is reliably secure?

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You received this bug notification because you are a member of Desktop
Packages, which is subscribed to gnome-keyring in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1387303

Title:
  regression: gnome-keyring components can't be disabled anymore

Status in “gnome-keyring” package in Ubuntu:
  Won't Fix

Bug description:
  To disable user session gnome-keyring upstart job:

  $ echo manual ~/.config/upstart/gnome-keyring.override

  ======

  
  GNOME Keyring is by default a rather invasive service, which meddles with 
security sensitive processes invasively. This may or may not be wise depending 
on a users situation.

  One particular case is GNOME Keyring's gpg-agent implementation, which
  is incomplete and therefore doesn't support GPG's OpenPGP smartcard
  support. gpg simply fails (with smartcards) when GNOME Keyring is
  impersonating gpg-agent...

  So to be able to use OpenPGP smartcards on Ubuntu, one needs to
  disable GNOME Keyring from impersonating gpg-agent, which for quite
  some time now has been trivial to effectively do:

  echo 'X-GNOME-Autostart-enabled=false' >> /etc/xdg/autostart/gnome-
  keyring-gpg.desktop

  With GNOME Keyring's recent update (3.10.1-1ubuntu4.1) in Trusty, this
  seems to have been broken by the addition of:

  /usr/share/upstart/sessions/gnome-keyring.conf

  So it seems the /etc/xdg/autostart/gnome-keyring files are either
  being ignored, or the started process is supplanted by the process
  started by the upstart session config.

  What is unclear to me is what the upstart session configuration is
  supposed to achieve? And if it is meant to supplant the xdg/autostart
  files, those should probably have been removed to prevent them from
  causing any confusion as to how gnome-keyring is started/managed.

  Presuming the upstart session is meant to stay, I would suggest to
  remove the /etc/xdg/autostart/gnome-keyring-*.desktop files to prevent
  confusion as mentioned above. And in my opinion a mechanism should be
  provided so users can control which gnome-keyring components '--
  components=pkcs11,secrets,ssh,gpg' are activated using some
  configuration file in /etc, as files in /usr aren't meant to be user
  edited.

  ProblemType: Bug
  DistroRelease: Ubuntu 14.04
  Package: gnome-keyring 3.10.1-1ubuntu4.1
  ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 3.13.0-39.66-generic 3.13.11.8
  Uname: Linux 3.13.0-39-generic x86_64
  ApportVersion: 2.14.1-0ubuntu3.5
  Architecture: amd64
  CurrentDesktop: Unity
  Date: Wed Oct 29 18:14:57 2014
  EcryptfsInUse: Yes
  InstallationDate: Installed on 2014-04-07 (205 days ago)
  InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 14.04 LTS "Trusty Tahr" - Beta amd64 (20140326)
  SourcePackage: gnome-keyring
  UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install)
  mtime.conffile..etc.xdg.autostart.gnome.keyring.gpg.desktop: 
2014-04-09T19:49:03.884840

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