Hello Willem,
If you're using JavaHL adapter (see Subclipse preferences page) then you
should clear Subversion credentials storage that is usually located at
~/.subversion/auth on Linux and OSX or at USER_HOME/Application
Data/Subversion/auth directory on Windows.
.keyring file only used when JavaSVN adapter is selected.
Also, your repository may allow anonymous read access, so browsing and
update operation doesn't require you to log in. Supclipse only prompts for
credentials when credentials are requested by Subversion server.
Alexander Kitaev.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Willem Voogd [mailto:w.f.voogd@planet.nl]
> Sent: Thursday, August 03, 2006 1:55 PM
> To: users@subclipse.tigris.org
> Subject: [Subclipse-users] Change login credentials for
> subclipse repositories
>
> Hi,
>
> I would like to change my login, since somehow I'm logged in
> using a co-workers account. I have searched the archives and
> something was said about clearing the eclipse .keyring file.
> What i did was deleting the file, but i was still logged in,
> e-/subclipse didnt ask for my credentials. The keyring file
> was there again. So this time, i quit eclipse, removed the
> keyring file and started eclipse. Still i was not asked for
> credentials and could still view the repositories and update.
>
> I am using eclipse 3.2 (Callisto) and the subclipse plugin
> from the 1.2 update site
>
> Does anybody have some additional pointers for me?
>
> TIA
>
> Willem Voogd
>
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Received on Thu Aug 3 13:47:40 2006