Hi David,

Which version did you upgrade from?  I don't think it should have
forgotten your user details... anyway.  Are there any specific OpenID
providers that you use?  I implemented the OpenID signon feature
partly as a learning exercise for myself to understand OpenID.  I
myself wanted to use it with Google, so I added the built in Google
option.  But I haven't got any feedback from anyone about wanting to
use other providers.

Cheers,

James

On 8 April 2012 19:13, David Brown <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hello James, please ignore the previous email comments.
>
> Basically, the wrong WEB-IN/lib !
>
> Sorry about the noise.
>
> Regards, David.
>
>
> On Sun, 2012-04-08 at 11:26 -0500, David Brown wrote:
>> Hello James, thanks for this little trick.
>>
>> I will put this in the toolbox.
>>
>> As it turned out I suspect because of the all-new upgrade to 2.6.2 I
>> also got a new default username in the properties file.
>>
>> I tried the default password and it let me in.
>>
>> I of course was able to recreate my old usename and the exported .zip
>> restored all of my old entries after one year just as if I had never
>> gone offline.
>>
>> Thanks to the Pebble community!
>>
>> BTW: I now have an unusual issue with this error:
>>
>> ***************************************************************
>> Error while starting e-mail subscription listener - add mail.jar and
>> activation.jar to the server classpath if you want to enable this
>> listener.
>> ***************************************************************
>>
>> I ran a find on the Tomcat directory at (dot) . and this is what was
>> returned:
>>
>> ***************************************************************
>> ./webapps/WEB-INF/lib/activation.jar
>> ./webapps/WEB-INF/lib/mail.jar
>> ***************************************************************
>>
>> Please advise, David.
>>
>>
>> On Sun, 2012-04-08 at 14:20 +0200, James Roper wrote:
>> > Hi David,
>> >
>> > To change your password via the command line, you first need to
>> > generate a password hash.  This can be done by running:
>> >
>> > echo -n 'yournewpassword{yourusername}' | openssl dgst -sha1
>> >
>> > for example, for username "james" and password "abc123":
>> >
>> > echo -n 'abc123{james}' | openssl dgst -sha1
>> >
>> > That will produce something like this:
>> >
>> > (stdin)= fc1c32f46e7b64df8d5ff8014d1c23d3b71612ef
>> >
>> > Then, in the file $PEBBLEHOME/realm/yourusername.properties, there is
>> > a password property.  Replace the value with the hex number above, eg,
>> > in james.properties:
>> >
>> > password=fc1c32f46e7b64df8d5ff8014d1c23d3b71612ef
>> >
>> > Cheers,
>> >
>> > James
>> >
>> > On 7 April 2012 23:26, David Brown <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > > Hey Olaf, James and Pebblers, after a couple of years with my pebble off
>> > > the server I recently found my old entries exported as a .zip.
>> > >
>> > > Congrats to all. The export .zip works perfectly with the new 2.6.2. All
>> > > entries appear to be in place.
>> > >
>> > > The only gotcha is after the past 2 or 3 years w/o logging in I have
>> > > forgotten my password and though the new 2.6.2 has the modern login with
>> > > OpenID and Google I would rather avoid that approach.
>> > >
>> > > I have my new Pebble on a so-called cloud slice with ssh access.
>> > >
>> > > Is there some hack or direct option I can invoke to change the password
>> > > at the shell command-line?
>> > >
>> > > The particulars follow.
>> > >
>> > > Thanks in advance and please advise, David.
>> > >
>> > > **********************************************************************
>> > > Pebble: 2.6.2
>> > > Tomcat: 6.0.29
>> > > JDK: 1.6.0_26
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> > > For Developers, A Lot Can Happen In A Second.
>> > > Boundary is the first to Know...and Tell You.
>> > > Monitor Your Applications in Ultra-Fine Resolution. Try it FREE!
>> > > http://p.sf.net/sfu/Boundary-d2dvs2
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>> >
>> > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> > For Developers, A Lot Can Happen In A Second.
>> > Boundary is the first to Know...and Tell You.
>> > Monitor Your Applications in Ultra-Fine Resolution. Try it FREE!
>> > http://p.sf.net/sfu/Boundary-d2dvs2
>> > _______________________________________________
>> > Pebble-user mailing list
>> > [email protected]
>> > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/pebble-user
>>
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> For Developers, A Lot Can Happen In A Second.
>> Boundary is the first to Know...and Tell You.
>> Monitor Your Applications in Ultra-Fine Resolution. Try it FREE!
>> http://p.sf.net/sfu/Boundary-d2dvs2
>> _______________________________________________
>> Pebble-user mailing list
>> [email protected]
>> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/pebble-user
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> For Developers, A Lot Can Happen In A Second.
> Boundary is the first to Know...and Tell You.
> Monitor Your Applications in Ultra-Fine Resolution. Try it FREE!
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/Boundary-d2dvs2
> _______________________________________________
> Pebble-user mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/pebble-user

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