I, also, am running Max's workaround. The odd thing is that even if you do what he suggests in gnome-session-properties, you'll still see the Gnome keyring wrapper daemon running on the machine. However, it will stop messing with ssh keys, and the standard ssh-agent commands will then work to let you manipulate keys in the usual way because ssh-agent is running.
The GUI lead me to believe I was turning off the Gnome keyring wrapper daemon, but apparently that isn't what it really does.
So much for truth in advertising. Or something. :)
I, also, am running Max's workaround. The odd thing is that even if you do what he suggests in gnome-session- properties, you'll still see the Gnome keyring wrapper daemon running on the machine. However, it will stop messing with ssh keys, and the standard ssh-agent commands will then work to let you manipulate keys in the usual way because ssh-agent is running.
The GUI lead me to believe I was turning off the Gnome keyring wrapper daemon, but apparently that isn't what it really does.
So much for truth in advertising. Or something. :)