Check the option "send files to trash when erasing images" in the configuration (https://darktable.gitlab.io/doc/en/preferences_chapter.html#gui_options_security) to see if darktable is sending the files to trash or directly deleting them.
On many linux systems the Trash folder is defined per mount point (.Trash folder at the root of the mount). If the user has no write permission on that folder, it can either send it to a general Trash folder somewhere, throw an error, or completely bypass the trash and delete it for good. Of course, darktable has no control over that, it just tells the OS to "send the file to trash", the OS takes over from there. So, darktable's trashed pictures end in the sample place where they would end if you trash them from Dolphin, for example. Regards, Guillermo On Wed, Mar 4, 2020 at 9:57 AM Germano Massullo <[email protected]> wrote: > > Il giorno mer 4 mar 2020 alle ore 13:54 Patrick Shanahan > <[email protected]> ha scritto: > > you fail to provide any information about your "system" so anything > > following is guessed. Normally a "protocol" does not provide "trash" but > > that is provided by your desktop environment. I have plasma5/kde5 and the > > "trash" directory is below /home/<user>/.local/share/Trash > > plasma-desktop-5.17.5 and /home/<user>/.local/share/Trash does not > contain any photo trashed in darktable > ____________________________________________________________________________ > darktable user mailing list > to unsubscribe send a mail to [email protected] > ____________________________________________________________________________ darktable user mailing list to unsubscribe send a mail to [email protected]
