Hi; I just freshly re-installed Fedora 9. Problem: Many of my gnome applets and desktop are still not working as they should. gconf & gconf-editor is not giving me the same keys in 'root' as in 'user' for common applications because (I think) gconf in 'user' is being over ridden by the '/home/user/.gconf' in the /home partition that I preserved on the new install. I used the 'root account ' as a comparison because its .gconf was removed and re-written by gconf on installation. gconf-cleaner in 'user' finds more and more keys to change or remove each time I run it in whichever 'user account ' ( I have three on my machine.) The problems that I have and that have persisted with the re-install are: * Information for system => networking => is missing from my .gconf and gconf-editor. I have been told by several people on this list that that data should be present although I don't remember having seen it before. * The latest linux kernel update was installed but was not being updated in grub.conf. * 'clock' applet not getting task and calendar info from Evolution properly. The clock applet has different keys in root from user. The biggest difference being the inclusion of /apps/panel/default_setup/applets/clock/bonobo_iid and the absence of the choices for task list and appointments. Every time I click on it disappears from the panel and warns me to reload. (I include that as a symptom of bigger things) * My trashcan has disappeared from my desktop and nautilus through gconf-editor won't/can't put it back. I have had several people post me about how it is supposed to work. I assure everyone I have marked it as visible in nautilus => desktop. That works when I am logged in as root but not as a user. * Plus other screwy things are going on with other applications that may or may not be related. I haven't chased them down yet, and it may not be necessary if I can get my gconf working. I have checked the logs and roots messages nothing _seems_ untoward on the surface of it (some unalarming gnome-keyring messages and gconfd resolving some addresses). Unless someone has a better solution, I was thinking of 'yum remove gconf gconf-editor' and deleting all my user's .gconf dir/files. Then re-installing gconf and gconf-editor. However, that means I lose all my configurations for all my apps; and, gconf-editor has a lot of dependencies. If yum had a way to remove an app while leaving the dependencies intact or a way to do a 'dry run' I wouldn't be asking for advice. I have read through man yum-utils etc and see nothing useful there. I am not sure rpm -evv --nodeps -- test would be any better. ***************************************************************** If anyone has a better idea of where the problems might lie or how to fix them please let me know. ***************************************************************** The thing that bothers me about my solution is that gconf should have installed in the first place accommodating my preexisting ~/.gconf. As far as I can tell, I have not touched or been messing about with anything that should damage gconf. -- Regards Bill; Fedora 9, Gnome 2.22.3 Evo.2.22.3.1, Emacs 22.2.1 -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list