This page is almost 3 years old: 
https://wiki.gnome.org/Initiatives/GnomeGoals/GSettingsMigration

But it does offer a list of potential apps to check that might still be using 
gconf. I’m pretty sure Chromium has completed their migration as of early this 
year.

Ubuntu stopped installing it as of 17.04. So if your system doesn’t have 
anything on it that isn’t on 17.04, it is probably safe to delete. And if you 
do have extra software as most people do, then the list to check is smaller.

Regards,
Adrien

> On Aug 23, 2018, at 9:13 AM, Geert Janssens <geert.gnuc...@kobaltwit.be> 
> wrote:
> 
> Op donderdag 23 augustus 2018 16:00:24 CEST schreef Ken Heard:
>> On 2018-08-18 13:38, Geert Janssens wrote:
>>> Op zaterdag 18 augustus 2018 16:34:14 CEST schreef Ken Heard:
>>>> Last evening I was thinking of filing a bug report for my problem.  In
>>>> the process I found a previous bug report 555187 dealing with the same
>>>> one (1).  This bug was originally filed on 2008-10-16, but the last
>>>> comment on it by André Klapper was filed on 2018-08-17 13:58:19 UTC --
>>>> yesterday!
>>> 
>>> That bug is about GConf, which was used for preferences before we switched
>>> to dconf. GConf and dconf are completely different tools and your problem
>>> is with dconf so this bug is irrelevant here.
>>> 
>>> The only thing André added yesterday was a message indicating that the
>>> (old) GConf tool should be considered dead and burried. Which is fine
>>> because gnucash has not been using it since version 2.6.0.
>> 
>> Does the foregoing mean that directory ~/.gconf can be safely deleted?
>> The most recent dates of the files in its subdirecties date from 2014 or
>> earlier.
>> 
>> Regards, Ken
> 
> I don't know. I know gnucash is no longer using gconf, but perhaps other 
> applications on your system still are (though unlikely).
> 
> The fact the most recent date in that directory is from 2014 means no 
> application you have run since that time has made changes in gconf, but some 
> may still read the current state.
> 
> Having said all that, it's unlikely there are still currently maintained 
> applications using GConf though. And if you remove the directory, worst case 
> is for those applications the default preferences are reset. You  won't loose 
> your data because of this.
> 
> If in doubt, archive a copy of the directory somewhere before removing. If 
> you 
> find one of your applications starts behaving oddly (in the sense it's no 
> longer configured as you expected) you may check if it's still using gconf.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Geert
> 
> 
> 


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