Flushing the Evolution Exchange Password.

I know that day light savings is new to the US, but in the UK it has always been, anyway something weird happened this year, the clocks changing clashed with a password change; now this may not have been the fault but since then I’ve not been able to get my gnome evolution email client to connect to our corp’ Microsoft exchange server (via exchange-connector).

After a bit of fruitless googling for authentication issues, I decided to try and flush my evolution settings by deleting (well moving actually) my ~/.evolution directory, but this didn’t help, neither did deleting the account within the client (you know via mail setup)… fortunatley I found the following FAQ :

Where does Evolution store my data?
Evolution stores your data in $HOME/.evolution/, your account settings in $HOME/.gconf/apps/evolution and your passwords in $HOME/.gnome2_private/Evolution. The passwords are not stored encrypted, just base64 encoded. SSL Certificates are stored in $HOME/.camel_certs, and if Evolution crashed while you were writing an email, there could even be a file $HOME/.evolution/.evolution-composer.autosave-123456 (where 123456 is some string). Note: If you run Evolution 2.8 or older, the file will be at $HOME/.evolution-composer.autosave-123456.

So I restored my ~/.evolution folder and renamed ~/.gnome2_private/Evolution to /.gnome2_private/Evolution.bak, ran an evolution --force-shutdown, and re-opened evolution.. and joy authentication works again! :)

By the way, I’m posting this from flock… hope it works!

rgds,

Nick


3 thoughts on “Flushing the Evolution Exchange Password.

  1. Day light saving new to US?? I know European history is much longer but I do not believe that something implemented in 1917 in the US can be considered as “new” any more. By the way it is “daylight saving” not “daylight savings”.

  2. Actually the observations I made are miniscule minor so please dont take it to heart. I also have the password forget problem and therefore found your post very interesting but I dont have the know how to convert my password to base64 since it involves about 4-6 steps. So I doubt I could use it, although it is nice to see that some people have figured out a work-around. Does anyone have a nice cure for the Evolution password amnesia written up in a simple program that we could download?

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