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From earlier in the thread...(answers why it's not in [testing])
Matt
"It is very difficult to educate the educated."
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Since all of gnome 2.28 packages are available, why it isnt moved to [testing]?
It would cause a lot of load on the mirrors, and use up tons of bandwidth due to the sheer size of the packages. When ready it'll be moved straight to [extra]. That's what was said on the ML anyway. Hopefully the new symlink-based repos will be implemented soon, moving packages would be so much easier then.
Allan-Volunteer on the (topic being discussed) mailn lists. You never get the people who matters attention on the forums.
jasonwryan-Installing Arch is a measure of your literacy. Maintaining Arch is a measure of your diligence. Contributing to Arch is a measure of your competence.
Griemak-Bleeding edge, not bleeding flat. Edge denotes falls will occur from time to time. Bring your own parachute.
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Oh hai !
After the theft of my hard drive, i re install my favorite distro !
Im going to enable gnome-unstable right from the start
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Since all of gnome 2.28 packages are available, why it isnt moved to [testing]?
Please, don't hurry :-) Better it be definitely stable before transition.
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syms wrote:Since all of gnome 2.28 packages are available, why it isnt moved to [testing]?
Please, don't hurry :-) Better it be definitely stable before transition.
I would be proud to see Metacity patched to solve this problem with Compiz
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Hi,
I've been using GNOME 2.28 for a couple of days now, and I'm really enchanted so far. The only bug that I saw is the grey area in the notification panel. As for me, it seems that only Banshee is affected. Never mind, I really appreciate the hard work that is done to deliver the packages.
As a GNOME lover, I'm curious about the GNOME build process in Arch. The GNOME website itself states that one should use the packages that come along with the distribution, and they recommend jhbuild if otherwise. Now whenever a new GNOME version is released, what exactly is done so that in the end the packages are available in [extra]? I wonder if there's something like a PKGBUILD for something as big as GNOME, and if so, what does it look like? What methods are used to build the GNOME packages?
In addition, will reporting bugs be a good support for the GNOME packagers?
I'm a bug squasher newbie, but if there's anything I can help with, I'd love to.
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Hi,
I've been using GNOME 2.28 for a couple of days now, and I'm really enchanted so far. The only bug that I saw is the grey area in the notification panel. As for me, it seems that only Banshee is affected. Never mind, I really appreciate the hard work that is done to deliver the packages.
As a GNOME lover, I'm curious about the GNOME build process in Arch. The GNOME website itself states that one should use the packages that come along with the distribution, and they recommend jhbuild if otherwise. Now whenever a new GNOME version is released, what exactly is done so that in the end the packages are available in [extra]? I wonder if there's something like a PKGBUILD for something as big as GNOME, and if so, what does it look like? What methods are used to build the GNOME packages?
In addition, will reporting bugs be a good support for the GNOME packagers?
I'm a bug squasher newbie, but if there's anything I can help with, I'd love to.
Package GNOME in Arch? Write the PKGBUILD and makepkg it
Nothing special (I think, if JGC want to answer...)
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I know the packages won't be moving to [extra] until they're guaranteed to be stable, but could you give me an estimate of when we should expect that move to happen?
Kudos for the all the hard work and dedication.
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I know the packages won't be moving to [extra] until they're guaranteed to be stable, but could you give me an estimate of when we should expect that move to happen?
Kudos for the all the hard work and dedication.
I'm using GNOME 2.28 productively, i'm working using it and i believe it's stable.
There's only that nasty and noisy problem with Metacity and Compiz -.-'
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I'm having troubles with gdm. I select the user from the list but the password entry never shows up. So the only thing I can do is to kill gdm and start my session with startx.
Any solutions for this problem?
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- how can I configure gdm?
- I wait for gnome-shell and empathy
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- how can I configure gdm?
- I wait for gnome-shell and empathy
gksudo -u gdm dbus-launch gnome-appearance-properties
In that window you can decide GTK controls, wallpaper, fonts... as the same as your GNOME desktop
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Cosmin wrote:- how can I configure gdm?
- I wait for gnome-shell and empathygksudo -u gdm dbus-launch gnome-appearance-properties
In that window you can decide GTK controls, wallpaper, fonts... as the same as your GNOME desktop
So ... no more themes and I do not find sesions ... it is not possible o use other sesion beside gnome?
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Bl@ster wrote:Cosmin wrote:- how can I configure gdm?
- I wait for gnome-shell and empathygksudo -u gdm dbus-launch gnome-appearance-properties
In that window you can decide GTK controls, wallpaper, fonts... as the same as your GNOME desktop
So ... no more themes and I do not find sesions ... it is not possible o use other sesion beside gnome?
There's a bar below, look there
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The only bug that I saw is the grey area in the notification panel. As for me, it seems that only Banshee is affected.
I'm seeing this with Banshee, Pidgin and CheckGmail. Banshee bug is filed as bgo#588255.
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Cosmin wrote:Bl@ster wrote:gksudo -u gdm dbus-launch gnome-appearance-properties
In that window you can decide GTK controls, wallpaper, fonts... as the same as your GNOME desktop
So ... no more themes and I do not find sesions ... it is not possible o use other sesion beside gnome?
There's a bar below, look there
In the bar below I have only languages and keyboard ... no session ... and I do not find also how to autologin
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Bl@ster wrote:Cosmin wrote:So ... no more themes and I do not find sesions ... it is not possible o use other sesion beside gnome?
There's a bar below, look there
In the bar below I have only languages and keyboard ... no session ... and I do not find also how to autologin
If you select your user, the "Session" menù will appear. It happens for me
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Just to say that yesterday I installed 2.28 over xfce-4.6 and eveything works nicely (with xmonad wm).
Packager(s) did great job. thumbs up
Sincerely,
Gour
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Bl@ster wrote:Cosmin wrote:So ... no more themes and I do not find sesions ... it is not possible o use other sesion beside gnome?
There's a bar below, look there
In the bar below I have only languages and keyboard ... no session ... and I do not find also how to autologin
Strange you cant select session, but you can set it manually in ~/.dmrc, e.g :
[Desktop]
Session=gnome
Language=en_US.UTF-8
Layout=se
You can enable autologin by editing /etc/gdm/custom.conf, e.g :
[daemon]
AutomaticLogin=<username>
AutomaticLoginEnable=true
See http://library.gnome.org/admin/gdm/2.28 … figuration
It seems configuring gdm is a bit hard at the moment.
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I use [gnome-unstable] on [extra] (no [testing]).
The problems i have seen so far is :
- logging out from gnome takes a few seconds, perhaps this is a new feature, do anyone else see this ?
- gnome-terminal seems to be moved by metacity spontaneously sometimes on terminal output (it often happen when i do a yaourt -Syu)
- xfce4 is partly broken (some apps in xfce4-settings) because of the new libxklavier, hopefully a rebuild of xfce4-settings will be enough
- configuring gdm is difficult
I was hoping to see drag-n-drop work with Alt-Tab with gnome 2.28 and gtk+ 2.18 but no luck, perhaps all gnome devs are busy implementing eye-candy .
It seems it is possible to have this working with a patch they use in Fedora:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=135056
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Leye wrote:Hi,
I've been using GNOME 2.28 for a couple of days now, and I'm really enchanted so far. The only bug that I saw is the grey area in the notification panel. As for me, it seems that only Banshee is affected. Never mind, I really appreciate the hard work that is done to deliver the packages.
As a GNOME lover, I'm curious about the GNOME build process in Arch. The GNOME website itself states that one should use the packages that come along with the distribution, and they recommend jhbuild if otherwise. Now whenever a new GNOME version is released, what exactly is done so that in the end the packages are available in [extra]? I wonder if there's something like a PKGBUILD for something as big as GNOME, and if so, what does it look like? What methods are used to build the GNOME packages?
In addition, will reporting bugs be a good support for the GNOME packagers?
I'm a bug squasher newbie, but if there's anything I can help with, I'd love to.
Package GNOME in Arch? Write the PKGBUILD and makepkg it
Nothing special (I think, if JGC want to answer...)
Ah, this is really an Arch way!
If PKGBUILD is the answer, I bet it will be full of pachtes and so on, won't it? You see I'm just curious about compiling something as big as GNOME. As I've mentioned I'd try jhbuild, but I wonder how it is done in Arch.
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I use [gnome-unstable] on [extra] (no [testing])....
How is it possible? Earlier JGC told me here in the forums that you cannot install gnome-2.28 unless you have testing enabled?
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cleanrock wrote:I use [gnome-unstable] on [extra] (no [testing])....
How is it possible? Earlier JGC told me here in the forums that you cannot install gnome-2.28 unless you have testing enabled?
He also wrote he got it working with only [extra], it has been ok for me so far. I had to recompile xfce4-settings to have xfce working fully though.
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cleanrock wrote:I use [gnome-unstable] on [extra] (no [testing])....
How is it possible? Earlier JGC told me here in the forums that you cannot install gnome-2.28 unless you have testing enabled?
He rebuilt the gnome packages against extra.
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