Robert Wohlhueter wrote:
> With OS 10.4/intel and Apple X11 package, I've installed bundle-gnome, 
> gconf2, gconf2-dev,
> gconf2-shlibs, etc, and am able to start a gnome desktop in rooted mode, 
> and run various gnome apps
> under it.  All told, I seem to have a fairly functional gnome desktop on 
> my MacBookPro.
>
> But something is dreadfully wrong or missing in the gconf2 preferences 
> database system.
> Gross symptoms:  1) the main-menu drop-down from top menu bar has no 
> entries at all under the
> "applications" submenu; 2) the actions-menu | run application window 
> offers to "show list of known
> applications" - it's empty.  3) The frequent instructions in the Gnome 
> Users Guide referring to use of the
> "Menus & Toolbars preference tool" are confounded by the absence of any 
> such tool that I can mouse
> up or start from a command line.
>
> Prime suspects:  Gnome (2.14) Desktop Administration Guide, chap. 2 goes 
> through procedures for
> manually editing menu definition files, all of which assume a context 
> that there is an XDG_CONFIG_DIRS tree containing definitions files like 
> 'menus/applications.menu'.  My installation does not have any "xdg" 
> directory (neither under /sw nor /etc), nor any files with names like 
> 'applications.menu.  There does exist under /sw/gconf subdirs 
> 'gconf.xml.defaults', gconf.xml.mandatory', and 'schemas', and under 
> /sw/gconf/2 a 'path' subdir.  (I've tried setting the XDG_CONFIGS_DIRS 
> variable to point to these, with no success.  And my HOME/.gconf dir is 
> empty.)  The gconfd-2 daemon is running in the process table (with 
> parameter '13', whatever that means.
>
> Remedies: The notion of generating a set of *.menu files from scratch 
> seems daunting.  Surely, there is a default set that comes along with 
> some of the gnome or gconf packages.  Moreover, it seems implied also 
> that, as one installs new applications via fink, that sane entries for 
> them ought to be registered in the "xdg" database, and show up in the 
> "list of known applications."
>
> Sorry to be so long winded; this is not a single glitch, but a 
> fundamental flaw in the way I've installed gnome.
>
> Hints anyone?
>
> Bob Wohlhueter
>
>
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I haven't been using my Gnome desktop in OS X much but the last time I
tried I had the same symptoms and quickly went back to KDE. Too bad as I
prefer Gnome. I thought that I had screwed up something along the way
but the only thing I did last in Fink was a self-update.
Just my 2 cents as this is the second post that I've seen on this issue.
Not much help.

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