I use korganizer 6.3.1. I made an google calendar account and it worked. But after each restart i have to fill in the password again.
First, welcome to the KDE Discuss Forum.
Are you using KWallet to store the password needed to access the remote Calendar account?
It should be, I can restart account and then it will fetch the password. Only after restart I haven to log in again
Is the “kwallet-pam” package installed on your system?
- BTW, which OS are you running on your hardware?
Which encryption did you choose when you created the Wallet named “kdewallet”?
Are you certain that, the KDE Wallet was open when you attempt to access the remote Calendar account?
- The default (factory) setting is to close the KDE Wallet after a period of no access to the wallet(s).
Kwallet-pam is installed. Running latest manjaro kde. Plasma 6.2.5. Kde wallet was open.
Dont know encryption, wallet was created by installation.
If, ‘~/.local/share/kwalletd/’ contains the files named “kdewallet.kwl” and “kdewallet.salt” then, the Blowfish encryption is probably being used.
If, KWallet shall be opened on login to the KDE Plasma session then, the password used to open the KWallet “kdewallet” has to be the same as the user’s login password.
Documentation is in the ArchWiki: <KDE Wallet>
The KDE Plasma documentation is here: <The KWallet Handbook>
It uses Blowfish enccryption en kdewallet is enabled by default. It uses the same password to login the plasma session. Found that in kwallet is does not store the akonadi google password. How to fix that if possible
Please raise a KDE Bug Report: <https://bugs.kde.org/>
This issue has also been reported in the following discussions –
- <https://discuss.kde.org/t/new-problem-with-korganizer-and-google-calendar-local-changes-do-not-get-saved/13062>
- <https://discuss.kde.org/t/no-longer-able-to-access-google-calendar-in-korganizer/5240/4>
- <https://invent.kde.org/pim/kdepim-runtime/-/merge_requests/129>
- Documentation here: <https://docs.kde.org/stable5/en/korganizer/korganizer/managing-data.html>
A “me too” can sometimes work wonders …