Comments at the bottom. On Sat, 2007-01-20 at 10:13 -0800, Les wrote: > On Sat, 2007-01-20 at 10:49 -0700, Kim Lux wrote: > > Any ideas ? > > > I'm getting a "The process for the file protocol died unexpectedly" when > > > I log into my Linux box. > > > > > > When I log in, my desktop has no icons. As soon as I do anything with a > > > desktop file, it refeshes and the icons appear. (For example, right > > > click->new->folder.) > > > > > > Also, my .xsession-errors file has literally hundreds of "+QFile::open: > > > No file name specified" errors in it. Furthermore, whenever I do > > > anything on the desktop, like move an icon, about 20 more such error > > > messages occur. > > > > > > I think the problem originated when I accidentally filled my hard drive. > > > Since then I have freed up a bunch of space. I've also run fsck and its > > > fine error wise. > > > > > > I suspect that KDE is trying to open a file that was used in a previous > > > session, maybe when my computer shut down from a full hard drive. How > > > does one wipe all the previous session info so that KDE doesnt do a > > > "restore session" operation ? > > > > Hi, Kim, > I only use Gnome, so I cannot comment on KDE. However, have you > rebooted the system? Yes. > When a disk fills up, things can be hosed in > temporary files, and in the tmp directory affected by the overwrite or a > file not properly terminated (due to the fill up issue). A reboot will > sometimes clear these files and let things re-initialize. It hasn't. I agree the issue is in a messed up file somewhere, but how would I find it ? One thing I notice is that I have a folder on my desktop for my home directory. Its named "~" if that makes any difference. The thing I notice about it is that its misplaced every time I start a new session. I always move it to its proper location on the desktop and yet every time I start a new session, its in the wrong place. > Another issue is whether or not you have a VM running (VMWare or some > other VM such as JAVA can occasionally be badly messed up by a full file > system.) You may have to terminate the VM by hand and restart it to get > it to fully initialize. hmmm, yeah, I was running Java. But there doesn't seem to be anything running now. $ ps aux | grep vm xxx 6542 0.0 0.0 3880 676 pts/1 S+ 11:04 0:00 grep vm $ ps aux | grep VM xxx 6544 0.0 0.0 3880 676 pts/1 S+ 11:04 0:00 grep VM $ ps aux | grep java xxx 6546 0.0 0.0 3884 680 pts/1 S+ 11:05 0:00 grep java Any other ideas ? -- Kim Lux, Diesel Research Inc.