On 08/13/18 08:09, Danny Milosavljevic wrote:
> Okay. To compare, try this:
> $ ps $(pgrep -U `id -u` '^dbus-daemon$') |grep session |grep -v /run/user/
> Notice the PID (first column) and then do:
> $ cat /proc//environ |tr '\0' '\n' |grep XDG
>
> Is the result the same?
b@ui ~$ ps $(pgrep -U
Hi,
On Sun, 5 Aug 2018 21:57:15 +1000
Brendan Tildesley wrote:
> On 08/05/18 10:23, Danny Milosavljevic wrote:
> > Hi Brendan,
> >
> > On Thu, 2 Aug 2018 16:21:02 +1000
> > Brendan Tildesley wrote:
> >
> >> I've always had gvfs installed and it hasn't made any difference as far
> >> as I can
On 08/05/18 10:23, Danny Milosavljevic wrote:
> Hi Brendan,
>
> On Thu, 2 Aug 2018 16:21:02 +1000
> Brendan Tildesley wrote:
>
>> I've always had gvfs installed and it hasn't made any difference as far
>> as I can tell
> Hmm, what does your ~/.guix-profile/share/dbus-1/services directory contain?
FWIW I just installed pcmanfm (didn't know it before) as a regular user - and
it works fine with no warnings or crashes (in fluxbox with the mentioned session
command line).
pgpcDqCPT_0YV.pgp
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
Hi Brendan,
On Thu, 2 Aug 2018 16:21:02 +1000
Brendan Tildesley wrote:
> I've always had gvfs installed and it hasn't made any difference as far
> as I can tell
Hmm, what does your ~/.guix-profile/share/dbus-1/services directory contain?
What is the environment variable XDG_DATA_DIRS set to?
On 08/01/18 07:54, Danny Milosavljevic wrote:
> Hi,
>
> dbus is an object-oriented inter-process-communication mechanism.
>
> On a typical single-user system there's one user bus, at least one session
> bus and one system bus.
>
> On a typical multi-user system there's multiple user buses, at
Danny Milosavljevic writes:
> dbus is an object-oriented inter-process-communication mechanism.
Wow, awesome overview! Thank you for taking the time to explain it.
I've always wondered how it was supposed to fit together.
> I wonder why it works with the GNOME desktop. Does it really?
What
Hi,
dbus is an object-oriented inter-process-communication mechanism.
On a typical single-user system there's one user bus, at least one session
bus and one system bus.
On a typical multi-user system there's multiple user buses, at least as many
session buses and one system bus.
From your
Hi Brendan,
I can definitely confirm this, as I have been dealing with this on and
off for a couple of years now due to the window managers I use.
Would you like to file a bug on this or check if there are / have been
bugreports about this before? I'm not sure what the best way to
proceed could
Continuing on from my previous thread here:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/help-guix/2017-11/msg00084.html
I discovered that I was able to work around the problem by running
pcmanfm with dbus-launch. Running `dbus-launch evince` also fixed an
issue I had with Evince not remembering the last
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