After a system start today, I was suddenly prompted with KDE Wallet requiring a password. I have not needed this before, and I could not seem to enter a password it would accept (“Error code -9: Read error - possibly incorrect password.”). I can’t remember setting this up, but it might have been something I did when I first set up my system. However, I would either have remembered it or stored the password in my main password manager, and there is no trace of it there.
To fix this, I created a new wallet and set that to be the default. Now, it works, and it is generally fine as it was not used for much, but I have one big issue: Signal used kwallet as its credentials manager, and now I can’t open the Signal database.
Before I accept my losses and recreate the database from scratch, I wanted to know if anyone have experienced anything similar, and if there are some tips to restoring the original keychain? As I said, I don’t know the password, so my guess is that I’m outta luck…
I have yet to understand why Kwallet does the things it does sometimes. It varies by distro, and sometimes you fix it by putting in your login password, sometimes by putting in no password, sometimes make a new wallet, sometimes wipe the database. It’s pretty frustrating.
If you can’t change the password on the original keychain, I don’t think there’s a way to recover anything stored in it.
That is what I feared. I tried both my login password and a blank password, and it refuses to open. I’ll wait to see if anyone has previously found a way to magically open it again, but I will probably need to scrap my Signal database and relink my computer without the chat history. It’s a bummer, but not a major issue for me.