On 9/22/19 9:09 PM, Neal Gompa wrote:
On Sun, Sep 22, 2019 at 7:25 PM Ty Young <youngty1...@gmail.com> wrote:

On 9/22/19 5:51 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 9/22/19 3:10 PM, Ty Young wrote:
I couldn't actually install the drivers because the update GUI in the
cinnamon spin is broken and/or the repo/update servers are down. Again.
I don't know why you're having so much trouble with updates.  But just
in case you're referring to rpmfusion as you have in other emails, I
hope you're aware that Redhat has nothing to do with them.  They are
an independent third-party repo not managed by Fedora.  They host
packages that can't, for various reasons, be distributed by Fedora.

No, I meant the package manager GUI front-end won't work:


https://imgur.com/a/Dajf28T


I'm sorry that dnfdragora isn't quite working properly on your system.
As one of the developers of dnfdragora and dnfdaemon, I'm aware of
some of those quirks, and myself and the other developer have been
trying to work on fixing these problems. It's difficult though, as
both of us are working on it in our spare time. We're committed to
improving it, but I have to find time for it, among everything else.

If you'd like to help, we'd appreciate it. The project is here:
https://github.com/manatools/dnfdragora


It's fine, I completely understand. I just happened to pick the Cinnamon spin since I knew it and MATE used LightDM and I don't use Fedora so I don't know if I can be of any help.



Also, Spanish(?) confirm prompt when rest of GUI is English:


https://imgur.com/a/7ashccO


...and proof X.Org on Cinnamon is running as root:


https://imgur.com/a/UcLjjKT


Yet on Gnome Fedora it isn't:


https://imgur.com/a/DlXwcdK


So is Fedora going to admit it's a bug in Gnome Fedora or are we going
to keep being salty that Nvidia doesn't support or have an Open Source
driver by pointing the finger at them? Actually fixing the bug would be
the more productive option here.

Well, the rootless X thing is from gnome-session down, so that's a
GNOME thing. I'm aware that not all DEs do this, the work was
primarily done in GNOME.

How would you propose we fix this bug, as you call it?


Well, what exactly was the old behavior before? I know for a fact X. Org was running as root during the beta. Is X. Org as root during beta periods only the norm?


Neither of the two other major distro families, Arch Linux and Ubuntu with Gnome, have X. Org as root disabled, at least not when running the Nvidia binary. Are there any malicious software that even exists that exploit X. Org being ran as root? If no one else sees that as an issue then why does Fedora? And is disabling root X. Org worth breaking people's software that would otherwise work?


Clearly few DM(s) other than Gnome supports it despite earlier claims, so it isn't even standard behavior. Fedora supports multiple spins including DM(s) that don't support it, so you're just fragmenting your own ecosystem if it is enabled on Gnome Fedora only. That's not a great idea.


So, IMO, the correct behavior here would be to disable until at least other DM(s) support it and other distros enabled it by default so that Fedora is at least following standards. Once it *actually* gets adopted *maybe* Nvidia will allow overclocking on non root X. Org but that could just be wishful thinking. At minimum there should always be an option to disable security features, especially if it results in performance loss(e.g. Specter) or, in this case, application compatibility problems easily... and editing a config file isn't that easy, obvious, or in some cases even safe.


Maybe provide an optional rootless login session option in Gnome's login screen?


FWIW, even if the application uses Flatpak, rootless X. Org still breaks the application. Would it be possible to grant individual applications privileged root access on a case by case basis?




Also while I'm at it, why does Gnome Screenshot in Fedora have a menu to
the left of the cancel button but Arch doesn't? Bit odd.

Maybe different versions of the software positioned it differently?


Ah, no. The menu I'm talking looks like the application icon itself. I've only seen it manifest itself in Arch Linux when you install another DE. No other Gnome applications in Fedora that I could see has it, and it does stick out... maybe it's a CSD compatibility thing for Cinnomon and/or Mate?



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