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How come deja-dup doesn't ask me for a password to restore?

ma flag

I backed up with deja-dup for the first time, and to restore it doesn't seem to need the password provided. This worries me, because I unselected the option to remember the password. I also want to see if I remember the password correctly, but I can't do that unless it challenges me for it.

How do I make deja-dup forget the password so I can verify that I remember it correctly? This is the first backup, so it will not be a problem if I have to redo it.

Organic Marble avatar
us flag
On my 20.04 system the password is stored in the keyring under "backup encryption password". You could check to see if it's there and delete it if it is.
James Wetterau avatar
ma flag
How do I see this keyring?
Organic Marble avatar
us flag
You don't say what version and/or flavor of Ubuntu you are using, but on my system the keyring app is called `seahorse`, you can type that in a terminal. In the menus it can be called "Passwords and Keys".
James Wetterau avatar
ma flag
Thanks. Yes, I have that application. Unfortunately, no I don't see the key in there. The only keys are three related to chome, oe for firefox, two for ssh keys, and one for my GNOME Online Account.
Organic Marble avatar
us flag
Then there is a good chance that the password was forgotten. You could try having deja-dup remember it and see if it show up in the keyring.
James Wetterau avatar
ma flag
The thing is, when I select "restore", after some time "Scanning backup files..." it shows the correct files from the backup. When I look at the contents of the disk, they are all .gpg files, described as "GPG symmetrically encrypted data (AES256 cipher)". I don't like the idea that my password for this backup is stored somewhere on the machine, and I'd also like to verify that I remember it correctly, so I'd like to find out where it's kept and delete it.
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