GNOME Bugzilla – Bug 698409
Google account doesn't work
Last modified: 2013-08-12 17:13:19 UTC
I'm able to setup Facebook and Windows Live account, but Google account doesn't work. When I try to access I can log and reach the "grant permissions" page, but when I accept the window close and on console I receive: process 17910: arguments to dbus_message_iter_append_basic() were incorrect, assertion "_dbus_check_is_valid_utf8 (*string_p)" failed in file ../../dbus/dbus-message.c line 2598. This is normally a bug in some application using the D-Bus library. Gkr-Message: secret service operation failed: Connection was disconnected before a reply was received (gnome-control-center:17910): Gkr-WARNING **: dbus connection disconnected for unknown reason Google account remains disabled.
Is this really against gnome-online-accounts-3.4.x? Also, what is your gnome-keyring version?
Yes, it's gnome-online-accounts 3.4.2 (debian package 3.4.2-2). gnome-keyring is 3.4.1-5.
I see. Unfortunately I don't have a 3.4.x system myself (3.6.x is the oldest I have) so it is hard for me to try to reproduce it. Let me see if I can find a Debian system.
(In reply to comment #0) > I'm able to setup Facebook and Windows Live account, but Google account doesn't > work. It's probably a good idea to report this to Debian with the 'reportbug' tool if you haven't already - that will report exact versions of everything likely to be relevant. > process 17910: arguments to dbus_message_iter_append_basic() were incorrect, > assertion "_dbus_check_is_valid_utf8 (*string_p)" failed in file > ../../dbus/dbus-message.c line 2598. > This is normally a bug in some application using the D-Bus library. This means something in process 17910 tried to send invalid (non-UTF-8) strings. Do you perhaps have a non-UTF-8 locale, username, password, or something like that?
(In reply to comment #0) > When I try to access I can log and reach the "grant permissions" page, > but when I accept the window close This works for me in an up-to-date Debian testing (GNOME 3.4) virtual machine, for what it's worth.
(In reply to comment #4) > This means something in process 17910 tried to send invalid (non-UTF-8) > strings. Do you perhaps have a non-UTF-8 locale, username, password, or > something like that? Closing as WONTFIX since we don't know if there was a non-UTF-8 locale, username, password, etc. being used. Please feel free to reopen if you have reason to believe otherwise.