Le lundi 30 juin 2008 à 12:53 +0100, Neil Williams a écrit :
> It works (so far) but lintian gives a warning:
> W: estron-gnome: gconftool-used-in-maintainer-script postinst:45
> N:
> N: This script apparently runs gconftool or gconftool-2. It should
> N: probably be calling gconf-schemas or up
On Mon, 2008-06-30 at 21:39 +0200, Loïc Minier wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 30, 2008, Neil Williams wrote:
> Ok, then one problem with it is that as soon as the user will have
> gconf settings in place different from the default, any updates to the
> default wont be visible anymore. It all depends how
On Mon, Jun 30, 2008, Neil Williams wrote:
> Only for certain settings related to installed package selection. Much
> like the system user for MySQL and PostgreSQL installations - in effect,
> it is used to tell the IDE which backends are installed and the
> configuration for each. Rather than ask
hi neil,
On Monday 30 June 2008 05:49:25 pm Neil Williams wrote:
i have serious trouble grokking what exactly you are doing, but should just
say that if you are interested in adding "missing features" etc to
dbconfig-common then the door is open at
[EMAIL PROTECTED] :)
sean
signa
On Mon, 2008-06-30 at 15:39 +0200, Loïc Minier wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 30, 2008, Neil Williams wrote:
> > Is this a sane use of dbconfig and gconf?
>
> I might misunderstand what you're doing, but I think you're setting up
> GConf default systme-wide.
Only for certain settings related to installe
On Mon, Jun 30, 2008, Neil Williams wrote:
> Is this a sane use of dbconfig and gconf?
I might misunderstand what you're doing, but I think you're setting up
GConf default systme-wide. Usage of GConf for system wide
configuration (of default databases) is a bit weird, but it's valid, as
long
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