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keychain access password

I'm grateful for the help recently received from this site.


We had a death in the family recently, and I have the unwanted task for settling the estate. The person (my son) who passed away did nearly everything on his computer...and didn't leave any passwords behind. Thanks to helpful advice from this site, I was able to reset his password so I can get into it. However, I can't access the keychain in order to get into the sites that he used.


Is there a way to reset the keychain password without knowing the original password?

Posted on Jul 19, 2017 4:05 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Jul 19, 2017 4:39 PM

Unless he purposely changed things the Keychain uses the same password as that assigned to the Admin's account. So you can try that. If you can't access the keychain then all you can do is delete the keychain and start from scratch is your son had El Capitan or later installed. Please read the following:


Repair Keychain in El Capitan or Sierra


  1. Launch Keychain Access (located in Applications/Utilities)
  2. Click "Show Keychains" in the lower-left corner of the window.
  3. Select the problematic keychain from the left-hand pane.
  4. Navigate to the "File" menu and select "Delete Keychain '(name of keychain)'"
  5. Check all options for deletion and press "OK"
  6. Create a new keychain by going to the "File" menu, then "New" and selecting "New Keychain"
  7. You can now make this keychain your default if you desire by selecting it, then going to the "File" menu and selecting "Make '(name of keychain)' Default"


Keychain Access in El Capitan


  1. If you are frequently being prompted to re-enter your keychain password, you will find that the fix described for pre-El Capitan systems ha changed. Please follow this procedure instead:
  2. Copy this text to your clipboard: com.apple.scopedbookmarksagent.xpc. Open Keychain Access that is located in your Utilities' folder. In the search field of Keychain Access’ window paste the above text.
  3. A window will appear with a login password item selected. Click on the Delete key. Click on the Delete button on the panel to confirm your deletion.
  4. Quit Keychain Access and see if the prompts stop.


Tutorial: Resolving Keychain Issues


If you can't access your keychain, or forget your password If you can't get into your keychain file because you've forgotten your password or the keychain file appears to be corrupt, there are a couple of options.


First, if you've forgotten your password, you can use the "Keychain First Aid" utility to make the keychain password the same as the login password. This can be accomplished via the following process:


1. Open Keychain Access (located in Applications/Utilities)

2. Go to the "Keychain Access" menu and select "Preferences"

3. Click the "First Aid" tab

4. Make sure the "Synchronize login keychain password" box is checked

5. Close the Preferences window

6. Go to the "Keychain Access" menu and select "Keychain First Aid"

7. Enter your username and password

8. Click the "Repair" button


The second option is to completely delete your keychain then recreate it. This routine is useful if your keychain appears to be corrupt or otherwise inaccessible. This can be accomplished as follows:


1. Launch Keychain Access (located in Applications/Utilities)

2. Click "Show Keychains" in the lower-left corner of the window.

3. Select the problematic keychain from the left-hand pane.

4. Navigate to the "File" menu and select "Delete Keychain '(name of keychain)'"

5. Check all options for deletion and press "OK"

6. Create a new keychain by going to the "File" menu, then "New" and selecting

"New Keychain"

7. You can now make this keychain your default if you desire by selecting it, then

going to the "File" menu and selecting "Make '(name of keychain)' Default"


Login as root and perform repair In some cases, problems with keychains can only be resolved when logged in as the root user.


First, you want to enable the root user:


1. OS X Mountain Lion: Enable and disable the root user

2. OS X Lion: Enable and disable the root user

3. Mac OS X 10.6: Enabling the root user

4. Enabling and using the "root" user in Mac OS X


After enabling the root user, and logging in under this account, again open Keychain Access. First attempt repairs using Keychain First Aid, and failing that, delete then recreate the keychain as described above while logged in as root.


Persistently asked for stored passwords If you are persistently asked for passwords in various applications that you have specified should be remembered in a keychain, your "login" keychain may not be active for one reason or another.


Navigate to ~/Library/Keychains/ (this is the Library folder inside your user's home folder). Find the file named "login.keychain" and double-click it.


Failing that, select the "login" keychain within the Keychain Access application and make sure it is the default keychain by going to the "File" menu and selecting "Make 'Login' Default"


Turn off Keychain synchronization in applications having problems If specific applications are experiencing issues when accessing password-protected material, the Keychain may be to blame.


The above comes from an article published on MacFixit.com.

1 reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jul 19, 2017 4:39 PM in response to gswank2

Unless he purposely changed things the Keychain uses the same password as that assigned to the Admin's account. So you can try that. If you can't access the keychain then all you can do is delete the keychain and start from scratch is your son had El Capitan or later installed. Please read the following:


Repair Keychain in El Capitan or Sierra


  1. Launch Keychain Access (located in Applications/Utilities)
  2. Click "Show Keychains" in the lower-left corner of the window.
  3. Select the problematic keychain from the left-hand pane.
  4. Navigate to the "File" menu and select "Delete Keychain '(name of keychain)'"
  5. Check all options for deletion and press "OK"
  6. Create a new keychain by going to the "File" menu, then "New" and selecting "New Keychain"
  7. You can now make this keychain your default if you desire by selecting it, then going to the "File" menu and selecting "Make '(name of keychain)' Default"


Keychain Access in El Capitan


  1. If you are frequently being prompted to re-enter your keychain password, you will find that the fix described for pre-El Capitan systems ha changed. Please follow this procedure instead:
  2. Copy this text to your clipboard: com.apple.scopedbookmarksagent.xpc. Open Keychain Access that is located in your Utilities' folder. In the search field of Keychain Access’ window paste the above text.
  3. A window will appear with a login password item selected. Click on the Delete key. Click on the Delete button on the panel to confirm your deletion.
  4. Quit Keychain Access and see if the prompts stop.


Tutorial: Resolving Keychain Issues


If you can't access your keychain, or forget your password If you can't get into your keychain file because you've forgotten your password or the keychain file appears to be corrupt, there are a couple of options.


First, if you've forgotten your password, you can use the "Keychain First Aid" utility to make the keychain password the same as the login password. This can be accomplished via the following process:


1. Open Keychain Access (located in Applications/Utilities)

2. Go to the "Keychain Access" menu and select "Preferences"

3. Click the "First Aid" tab

4. Make sure the "Synchronize login keychain password" box is checked

5. Close the Preferences window

6. Go to the "Keychain Access" menu and select "Keychain First Aid"

7. Enter your username and password

8. Click the "Repair" button


The second option is to completely delete your keychain then recreate it. This routine is useful if your keychain appears to be corrupt or otherwise inaccessible. This can be accomplished as follows:


1. Launch Keychain Access (located in Applications/Utilities)

2. Click "Show Keychains" in the lower-left corner of the window.

3. Select the problematic keychain from the left-hand pane.

4. Navigate to the "File" menu and select "Delete Keychain '(name of keychain)'"

5. Check all options for deletion and press "OK"

6. Create a new keychain by going to the "File" menu, then "New" and selecting

"New Keychain"

7. You can now make this keychain your default if you desire by selecting it, then

going to the "File" menu and selecting "Make '(name of keychain)' Default"


Login as root and perform repair In some cases, problems with keychains can only be resolved when logged in as the root user.


First, you want to enable the root user:


1. OS X Mountain Lion: Enable and disable the root user

2. OS X Lion: Enable and disable the root user

3. Mac OS X 10.6: Enabling the root user

4. Enabling and using the "root" user in Mac OS X


After enabling the root user, and logging in under this account, again open Keychain Access. First attempt repairs using Keychain First Aid, and failing that, delete then recreate the keychain as described above while logged in as root.


Persistently asked for stored passwords If you are persistently asked for passwords in various applications that you have specified should be remembered in a keychain, your "login" keychain may not be active for one reason or another.


Navigate to ~/Library/Keychains/ (this is the Library folder inside your user's home folder). Find the file named "login.keychain" and double-click it.


Failing that, select the "login" keychain within the Keychain Access application and make sure it is the default keychain by going to the "File" menu and selecting "Make 'Login' Default"


Turn off Keychain synchronization in applications having problems If specific applications are experiencing issues when accessing password-protected material, the Keychain may be to blame.


The above comes from an article published on MacFixit.com.

keychain access password

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