There is an easy workaround to this, as mentioned in #17
(https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/mutter/+bug/1892440/comments/17)
Just downgrade libmutter for the time being.
For anyone complaining about how long this takes to resolve: it hasn't even
beem three weeks. Ubuntu is an ooen source
When you open multiple files with Totem, they are put in a queue and
will play after each other. The previous and Next buttons still work,
but there is no way to see the playlist or to edit it.
Get rid of the playlist functionality entirely or make the playlist view
/ sidebar accessible via the
Although this bug has "expired" in 2011, I'm still experiencing this
issue with Ubuntu 14.04, Brasero 3.10.0. ISRC codes are not saved at
all. As soon as you close the track information dialog and re-open it,
the ISRC code is gone.
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This is a basic feature and on a 'wishlist' for more than 4 years.
What's the point of groups if you can't edit, rename and order them? It should
make accessing your contacts more easily, not more cumbersome.
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Desktop Bugs,
When I pin the terminal application to the launcher, and launch it, it
doesn't get an arrow indicating the application is active. When I click
the launcher again, it opens a new terminal window instead of showing
the current active one, or triggering expose.
The only way to get back to the other
I have the same problem here. Whatever keyboard layout / localization I choose,
after reboot it's reverted to the defaults.
Checking the 'Separate layout for each window' option seems like a reasonable
workaround. Thanks Gavin.
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Keyboard layout settings not saved after reboot
Since I removed the symlink /etc/rc2.d/S98mountnfs, pointing to
/etc/init.d/mountnfs.sh. This issue is resolved for me.
As I mentioned earlier, I have created that symlink myself. Perhaps
you're dealing with a different issue. Please describe what you're
experiencing, perhaps in a new bugreport.
Or perhaps I shouldn't wait... ;-)
I think I'm getting closer to the answer here:
I was playing a bit with the startup order of the scripts and I found
out: if I remove '/etc/rc2.d/S98mountnfs' everthing works fine.
My nfs filesystem is mounted anyway (I gave it the auto option).
Also, I think
Isn't the /etc/init.d/mountnfs script a bit superfluous anyway?
Because my nfs filesystem is mounted automatically (by specifying 'auto' in
/etc/fstab)
Also portmap is also started by the portmap script way before the
mountnfs script is started.
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First attempt to login on gdm fails
I have to admit that you could be right Scott.
Earlier in this bugreport I mentioned that my nfs filesystem wasn't mounted in
the boot process, because my network wasn't fully configured yet at that time
in de boot process.
Because of that it seems to be a logical decision to make a symlink
** Changed in: gxine (Ubuntu)
Sourcepackagename: gxine = libxine-main1
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xmms' volume slider should not mess with PCM but with master
https://launchpad.net/bugs/41871
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As I mentioned in the upstream bugreport:
I removed gdm from my default startup procedure, and started it by hand. Now
everything was fine.
This tells me that this issue is not an issue of gdm, but more an issue of how
my machine boots up and the state my machine is in at the time gdm is
** Also affects: mplayer (Ubuntu)
Severity: Normal
Priority: (none set)
Status: Unconfirmed
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I created a new user account and foud out that the defaults for some
programs are different indeed:
XMMS== Alsa/PCM mixer
Mplayer == Alsa/PCM mixer
GXine== Alsa/PCM mixer
Totem == Software mixer
Can some package maintainers have a look at this and try to package
these
Hmmm... perhaps I should just wait until my Ubuntu 6.06 LTS cd's arrive
from shipit, and do a clean install, like Brendan said.
Thanks for all your input anyway!
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I removed gdm from my default startup procedure, and started it by hand. Now
everything was fine.
This tells me that this issue is not an issue of gdm, but more an issue of how
my machine boots up and the state my machine is in at the time gdm is started.
What do you think Sebastien?
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First
I found out that in MPlayer the mixer can also be configured to use OSS
or ALSA, assign a mixer channer or enable a sofware mixer wich doens't
affect any channel.
Unfortunately I am not in the position to make any choices about what's
important in Ubuntu ;-)
But you have a point about the
Does above information resolve your issue, or am I interpreting your
information badly?
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Thank you for your efforts.
I made a report for this on bugzilla.gnome.org:
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=343091
If anything usefull comes out, I will update this report.
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The strangest thing about this is still that if I restart gdm manually
everything works fine.
Anyone knows where this 'socket' is located?
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It's not thta long ago that I reinstalled my entire system. I installed
from the Kubuntu Flight 4 CD, and dist-upgraded from there.
I tried to reinstall gdm (apt-get --purge remove gdm; apt-get install gdm), but
that doensn't help.
Seems like this is not in gdm at all, but perhaps gdm is started
Yes I have a /etc/gdm/gdm.conf configuration file with the following
permissions: -rw-r--r-- 1 root root
This is the default, because of my reinstall of gdm (see above) all
configuration files were deleted and the default files from the package were
installed again.
I use NIS and NSF as a
Sorry for the double post: I refreshed my browser window...
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Yes I have a /etc/gdm/gdm.conf configuration file with the following
permissions: -rw-r--r-- 1 root root
This is the default, because of my reinstall of gdm (see above) all
configuration files were deleted and the default files from the package were
installed again.
I use NIS and NSF as a
The original translation is: Could not access GDM configuration file.
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Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: gdm
I'm currently using Ubuntu 6.06 LTS, but this issue also occurred before
the last 2 major updates. My gdm version is currently:
gdm-2.14.6-0ubuntu1
Every time, after (re)booting my machine, the first attempt to login on
gdm fails. I can see the
H... I guess you can ignore my lines from Xorg.0.log. This logfile
is from 18:45, while my syslog lines are from 19:47. The last time I was
using Xgl which writes it's logs to /var/log/Xorg.93.log
BWT:
The lines in syslog appear during my login attempt.
This issue occures while using Xgl and
This is not a bug, it's just a setting:
If you open the option dialog in xmms you can configure your Audio I/O
plugin:
1) ALSA: you can choose to use a software mixer, or a hardware mixer. If
you go for the hardware mixer you can select any mixer device (Master,
PCM, Line, Synth, etc.) from your
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