Hi.
As far as I remember Opera for Linux will integrate with your system
keyring if it's present.
Last time I used it I was asked for system keyring password eventually
when I started to set up some settings or tried to save some password.
Do you have gnome-keyring or something alike installed?
Alexey Eschenko wrote:
> Hi.
>
> As far as I remember Opera for Linux will integrate with your system
> keyring if it's present.
>
> Last time I used it I was asked for system keyring password eventually
> when I started to set up some settings or tried to save some password.
>
> Do you have
It would probably be better to add "--no-*" options for each probe
section. For example:
--no-fstab
--no-lsblk
--no-xorg-conf
--no-xorg-log
--no-dmesg
And to have the page in the hw-probe wiki where these sections (and
disable parameters) are documented. And then link to this page could be
added
27.10.2018, 17:56, "Dale" :
> Andrey Ponomarenko wrote:
>> 27.10.2018, 02:18, "Dale" :
>>> Alexey Eschenko wrote:
Is there any way to disable sending some parts of the collected data?
I've seen some of the last probes and found that there may be some
potentially sensitive
I recently started using Opera browser. According to the manuals it should be
possible to
store web site passwords locally protected by a 'master' password (I don't want
to create
an opera account). On my ~amd64 installation there is an entry in the Settings
menu
showing the stored passwords
Alexey Eschenko wrote:
> It would probably be better to add "--no-*" options for each probe
> section. For example:
>
> --no-fstab
> --no-lsblk
> --no-xorg-conf
> --no-xorg-log
> --no-dmesg
>
> And to have the page in the hw-probe wiki where these sections (and
> disable parameters) are
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