Le mercredi 11 janvier 2006 à 22:39 +0100, Josselin Mouette a écrit : > Le mercredi 11 janvier 2006 à 22:10 +0100, Rubén Porras a écrit : > > Could you please 'ls -l' the contents of your ~/.gconf > > directory ? > > > $ ls -l .gconf > > insgesamt 72 > > drwx------ 25 bennett bennett 4096 2005-11-30 17:54 apps > > drwx------ 4 bennett bennett 99 2006-01-04 17:03 desktop > > -rw------- 1 bennett bennett 67216 2006-01-11 22:03 %gconf- tree.xml > > drwx------ 3 bennett bennett 68 2005-09-13 23:47 GNOME > > drwx------ 3 bennett bennett 68 2005-09-14 00:35 system > > > > OK, I see what's wrong. I have based the checks on the existence of a > file named %gconf.xml in the root directory, but it isn't enough in your > case.
On second thought, this should have worked nevertheless. > To find your previous settings, you have to create an empty file named > %gconf.xml and remove the %gconf-tree.xml file. Still, I'd like to know what happens if: 1. you remove the %gconf-tree.xml file and log in again; 2. you remove the %gconf-tree.xml file, create an empty %gconf.xml and log in again. In both cases, are you asked for migration? Do you get your settings correctly then? Regards, -- .''`. Josselin Mouette /\./\ : :' : [EMAIL PROTECTED] `. `' [EMAIL PROTECTED] `- Debian GNU/Linux -- The power of freedom

