Echoing the last entry, this is (also) an Ubuntu bug. The
/etc/xdg/autostart/gnome-keyring-gpg.desktop should not be installed
until gnome-keyring is a reasonable feature-complete replacement for the
GnuPG agent, which it is not at the moment. Please consider removing
that file until the upstream g
This bug is not fixed in lucid, even with the latest gdm
(2.30.2.is.2.30.0-0ubuntu5.2). Gdm still touches all user directories,
which means they all get mounted when /home is managed by automount.
This is very annoying because as soon as one home directory is not
available (because the NFS server i
Public bug reported:
We have a small Ubuntu 10.04 LTS deployment (about 10 seats), with some
home directories mounted on NFS. Even with the face chooser disabled,
gdm still scans every home directory before allowing someone to log in.
If any of the home directories is stalls (because its NFS serve
Is there a possibility of raising the priority of this bug and
backporting this fix to the hardy LTS release? Basically, this bug makes
search in PDF pretty much unusable. And I'm not the only one thinking
that (http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=531956#c1, saying "This
has a huge usability
Yes, it's still an issue in hardy. Whoever makes the Ubuntu login theme
for gdm just needs to stretch the region where the menu is activated in
the screen to the lower left edge of the screen.
--
Options button in default Ubuntu gdm login screen does not obey Fitt's law
https://bugs.launchpad.net
Public bug reported:
The default Ubuntu login screen in Dapper puts an option button in the
lower left corner of the screen. However, the region for that button
extends almost (but not quite) to the lower left pixel of the screen,
making access to that button with the mouse slower than necessary.
Public bug reported:
I have a Xinerama setup with two monitors. When gdm starts, it puts the
login screen on the left monitor, and the right monitor is inactive (a
shade of dark brown). Gdm (or the X server, I don't know) also puts the
mouse pointer in the middle of the two screens, which happens