On Sun, 28 May 2017 at 09:28:22 -0400
Renaud (Ron) OLGIATI wrote:
> On Sat, 27 May 2017 23:04:13 +0200
> info at smallinnovations dot nl wrote:
>
> > Nice if you missed it otherwise annoying. Thunar puts deleted files
> > there, at least on my system with XFCE4 it does.
>
> One more reason t
On Mon, May 29, 2017 at 08:16:28PM +0900, Olaf Meeuwissen wrote:
> Florian Zieboll writes:
> > IIRC, a sane developer had replied to that thread and said
> > that also saned just checks for the existence of libsystemd0 but does
> > not need it at all. So the "dependency" is null and could be remove
Hi,
Florian Zieboll writes:
> On Sun, 28 May 2017 09:17:05 -0400
> Hendrik Boom wrote:
>
>> The only one I have an idea what it's for is sane-utils. Presumably
>> access to scanners.
>
> As mentioned on this list some days ago, sane-utils is not necessary to
> run a local scanner. It provides s
On Sun, 28 May 2017 09:17:05 -0400
Hendrik Boom wrote:
> Along with gvfs-daemons, packagekit, packagekit-tools, and sane-utils.
>
> I've been wondering if I need those.
I have kicked out gvfs some time ago - the only effect I noticed was,
that pcmanfm's "trash can" disappeared, as well as its "
On Sat, 27 May 2017 23:04:13 +0200
info at smallinnovations dot nl wrote:
> Nice if you missed it otherwise annoying. Thunar puts deleted files
> there, at least on my system with XFCE4 it does.
One more reason to drop Thunar and use Pcmanfm ;-3)
Cheers,
Ron.
--
On Sun, 28 May 2017 09:17:05 -0400
Hendrik Boom wrote:
> The only one I have an idea what it's for is sane-utils. Presumably
> access to scanners.
I believe that one is for accessing the scanner over a network.
Cheers,
Ron.
--
If I had better tools,
On Sun, May 28, 2017 at 11:42:32AM +0200, Florian Zieboll wrote:
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> On Sat, 27 May 2017 16:49:39 -0400
> Hendrik Boom wrote:
>
> > Anyone know what subsystems put files and directories in
> > ~/.local/share/Trash ?
>
>
> Do you have gvfs in
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On Sat, 27 May 2017 16:49:39 -0400
Hendrik Boom wrote:
> Anyone know what subsystems put files and directories in
> ~/.local/share/Trash ?
Do you have gvfs installed? gvfs-trash is at least one possible
culprit. (Not sure if there are other comp
On Sat, 27 May 2017 19:48:32 -0500
goli...@dyne.org wrote:
> On Xfce here, when I right click on a file/directory, I have two
> options: Move to Trash and Delete.
In Pcmanfm I have the option, in Edit => Preferences which lets me choose
whether Delete sends to Trash, or delete.
Cheers,
R
On Sat, 27 May 2017 19:06:01 -0400
Hendrik Boom wrote:
> But there may well be some applications that depend on parts of ght
> gnome and kde libraries, and they my well have this dysfunction. I'm
> just wondering what they are.
Make a process using dialog or zenity with inotifywait on
~/.loca
On 2017-05-27 18:06, Hendrik Boom wrote:
On Sat, May 27, 2017 at 02:03:49PM -0700, Rick Moen wrote:
Quoting Hendrik Boom (hend...@topoi.pooq.com):
> Anyone know what subsystems put files and directories in
> ~/.local/share/Trash ?
>
> I just found something like 443 gigabytes in there.
I'll be
Hi Hendrik,
El 27/05/17 a las 23:03, Hendrik Boom escribió:
Anyone know what subsystems put files and directories in
~/.local/share/Trash ?
I just found something like 443 gigabytes in there.
-- hendrik
Obviously, this is your trash. There's another trash for root:
/root/.local/share/Trash
Quoting Hendrik Boom (hend...@topoi.pooq.com):
> But there may well be some applications that depend on parts of ght
> gnome and kde libraries, and they my well have this dysfunction. I'm
> just wondering what they are.
The filenames and file contents inside ~/.local/share/Trash are
probably
On Sat, May 27, 2017 at 11:04:13PM +0200, info at smallinnovations dot nl wrote:
> On 27-05-17 22:49, Hendrik Boom wrote:
> >Anyone know what subsystems put files and directories in
> >~/.local/share/Trash ?
> >
> >I just found something like 443 gigabytes in there.
> >
> >-- hendrik
> >
> >___
On Sat, May 27, 2017 at 02:26:14PM -0700, Rick Moen wrote:
> Quoting info at smallinnovations dot nl (i...@smallinnovations.nl):
>
> > Personally, I like mc for convenience when working from the
> > commandline because of its splitscreen mode.
>
> mc (Midnight Commander) is very, very handy -- an
On Sat, May 27, 2017 at 02:03:49PM -0700, Rick Moen wrote:
> Quoting Hendrik Boom (hend...@topoi.pooq.com):
>
> > Anyone know what subsystems put files and directories in
> > ~/.local/share/Trash ?
> >
> > I just found something like 443 gigabytes in there.
>
> I'll bet you use something like
I wrote:
> (There may be some clever and elaborate way to make a directory become a
> file sink for mv or cp operations _without_ accidentally overwriting it,
> as someone upthread thought could be done by symlinking to
> /dev/null, but I'm not thinking of it offhand.)
There's this, which made me
Quoting Adam Borowski (kilob...@angband.pl):
> Some of that DE crap (forgot which) will instead throw an error and refuse
> to delete the file. Which is bad if an otherwise good, say, image viewer,
> uses that Trash nonsense.
Recompile it to not do that? ;->
(There may be some clever and elabo
Quoting Renaud OLGIATI (ren...@olgiati-in-paraguay.org):
> Or ln to /dev/null
I thought about that. cp or mv to /dev/null (as opposed to the ordinary
cat or redirection to /dev/null) is IMO at best a bad habit, because one
day you'll thoughtlessly do it with superuser authority, thereby
overwrit
Quoting info at smallinnovations dot nl (i...@smallinnovations.nl):
> Personally, I like mc for convenience when working from the
> commandline because of its splitscreen mode.
mc (Midnight Commander) is very, very handy -- and might be the best
choice for operations where visually tagging files
On Sat, May 27, 2017 at 02:11:17PM -0700, Rick Moen wrote:
> Oh, and, just in case some other program with DE disease (like k3b)
> decides to move a file there when you say to delete it):
>
> $ chmod 000 ~/.local/share/Trash
>
> (If that doesn't work, get a bigger hammer and set it immutable.
On Sat, 27 May 2017 14:11:17 -0700
Rick Moen wrote:
> > Personally, I find that bash makes a fabulous file manager, along with
> > its friends find, awk, sed, cut, etc.
>
> Oh, and, just in case some other program with DE disease (like k3b)
> decides to move a file there when you say to delete
On 27-05-17 23:03, Rick Moen wrote:
Quoting Hendrik Boom (hend...@topoi.pooq.com):
Anyone know what subsystems put files and directories in
~/.local/share/Trash ?
I just found something like 443 gigabytes in there.
I'll bet you use something like Nautilus or other graphical 'file
manager', ri
I wrote:
> Personally, I find that bash makes a fabulous file manager, along with
> its friends find, awk, sed, cut, etc.
Oh, and, just in case some other program with DE disease (like k3b)
decides to move a file there when you say to delete it):
$ chmod 000 ~/.local/share/Trash
(If that does
On 27-05-17 22:49, Hendrik Boom wrote:
Anyone know what subsystems put files and directories in
~/.local/share/Trash ?
I just found something like 443 gigabytes in there.
-- hendrik
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Quoting Hendrik Boom (hend...@topoi.pooq.com):
> Anyone know what subsystems put files and directories in
> ~/.local/share/Trash ?
>
> I just found something like 443 gigabytes in there.
I'll bet you use something like Nautilus or other graphical 'file
manager', right? On those, deletion isn
Anyone know what subsystems put files and directories in
~/.local/share/Trash ?
I just found something like 443 gigabytes in there.
-- hendrik
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