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kwalletcli(1) [debian man page]

KWALLETCLI(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 					     KWALLETCLI(1)

NAME
kwalletcli -- command line interface to the KDE Wallet SYNOPSIS
kwalletcli [-q] -hV kwalletcli [-q] -f folder -e entry [-P | -p password] DESCRIPTION
The kwalletcli utility is a command line interface to KWallet. It will only work if KDE is running (DCOP) and reachable (via X11). kwalletcli can be used to get password entries from the Wallet, or to write them there. The options are as follows: -e entry Define the key (entry) to use when accessing the Wallet. Mandatory. -f folder Set the folder to use when accessing the Wallet. Mandatory. -h Display the usage. -P Read the password to write from standard input. Currently limited to 65535 octets. -p password Write password into the designated location in the Wallet. -q Be more quiet. In combination with -V, do not display anything. -V Display the kwalletcli version information. Default mode of operation, that is, unless -P or -p are used, is to read the password from the Wallet and print it to standard output as-is, without any trailing newline. All input and output is assumed to be in UTF-8. The password string (whether read from standard input or command line) is now converted from ``possibly UTF-8 but binary transparent'' to standards-conformant UTF-8 for the Qt side, and back upon reading out. RETURN VALUES
The kwalletcli utility exits 0 on success or >0 if an error occurred: 1 The entry specified cannot be found (read access). 2 The usage was shown. 3 The Wallet could not be opened. May be a missing DCOP connection. Perhaps DISPLAY is not set. 4 The folder specified cannot be found (read access). 5 The folder specified cannot be opened. 6 The value to the key specified could not be retrieved. 8 An error occured trying to write the value. The exit codes 1 and 4, on reading, are not fatal; they merely indicate that the folder or entry specified does not exist. The other errors are fatal and may be used to indicate the user that the KWallet should not be used any more during the current session. ENVIRONMENT
DISPLAY The X11 display to use for communicating with the KDE Wallet. SEE ALSO
kwalletcli_getpin(1) AUTHORS
kwalletcli was written by Thorsten Glaser <tg@mirbsd.org> mostly for tarent GmbH. CAVEATS
Do not use -p password to store it, unless you absolutely must. It is a security risk, because the command line invocation is public infor- mation in a normal Unix environment. Use -P instead and provide the password on standard input. Beware of trailing newlines, especially outside of mksh(1) scripts! BUGS
If DISPLAY is not set, not valid, or kdeinit or kdeinit4 cannot start for other reasons, kwalletcli may not recover gracefully. In KDE 4 versions, this may even result in a Segmentation fault. The author does not know of a way to catch this early; patches are welcome. There is no way (yet) to set a wallet other than the default wallet. While this is a possible enhancement to the kwalletcli CLI, there is no feasible way to expose this functionality to the various front-ends, such as pinentry-kwallet(1), anyway, so the priority of fixing this is low. BSD
April 9, 2011 BSD

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netrc(4)						     Kernel Interfaces Manual							  netrc(4)

NAME
netrc, .netrc - Specifies automatic login information for ftp SYNOPSIS
$HOME/.netrc DESCRIPTION
The .netrc file contains the information used by the automatic login (autologin) feature of the ftp command. It is a hidden file in your home directory and must be owned by the user logging in, or by the root user. If the .netrc file contains a login password, the file's permissions must be set to 600 (read and write by owner only). The .netrc file can contain the following entries (separated by spaces, tabs, or newlines): Where host is the name of a remote host. This entry begins the definition of the autologin process for the specified host. All following entries up to the next machine entry or the end of the file apply to that host. This is the same as machine, except that default matches any name. There can be only one default token, and it must appear after all machine tokens. This is normally used as follows: default login anonymous password user@site The preceding command line gives the user automatic anonymous ftp login to machines not specified in .netrc. This can be overriden by using the -n flag to disable autologin. Where user is the username to use at the remote host. If this entry is found, the autologin process initiates a login using the specified name. If this entry is missing, the autologin process fails. Where password is the login password to be used. The autologin process supplies this password to the remote server. A login password must be established at the remote host and that pass- word must be entered in this file, or the autologin process fails and you are prompted for the login password. Where password is the account password to be used. If this entry is found and an account password is required at the remote host, the autologin process supplies the password to the remote server. If the remote host requires an account password but this entry is missing, the autologin process prompts for the account password. Where macro is the name of an ftp subcommand macro. The macro definition starts on the following line and is defined to contain all of the following ftp subcommands up to the next blank line. If the macro is named init, ftp executes the macro upon successful completion of the autologin process. FILES
Contains automatic login information. RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: ftp(1). delim off netrc(4)
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