Hello John,
About the below. When you open the backup file from two weeks ago and you
see the two duplicated transactions, enable the option to see splits on
both transactions to see if something else was added to the transaction
that might have created that extra 11,000 appearing when you delete
My first port of call when looking for errors is the trial balance to make
sure the Debit and Credit amounts match.
If they don't I first check that all the accounts have been selected in the
'Options' - I found that if you add a new account it is not automatically
added in Gnucash
to the TB, and I
Hi,
As a starting point, do a search on the account for a value of 11,000. It
might give you an idea of what has happened.
If the missing value is not showing up in the reconciliation window it implies
that a previously reconciled item has been accidentally deleted. Look for large
values (i
Hello, John:
On 2024-09-30 10:45, John Dzielski wrote:
Hi,
I have been using GnuCash for many years. I am not a sophisticated user,
and primarily use it to keep track of my checking account. I reconcile
monthly, and once every few years I’m off by a few cents or dollars. Today I
reco
Hi,
I have been using GnuCash for many years. I am not a sophisticated user,
and primarily use it to keep track of my checking account. I reconcile
monthly, and once every few years I’m off by a few cents or dollars. Today I
reconciled the account and I was off by 70.10. I unchecked eve
@gnucash.org
Subject: Re: [GNC] Backup Solution - Linux Desktop to Synology NAS
Message-ID: <458802e6-3a48-4626-959f-248d3b264...@gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Hi Dennis
This is after the fact, but I use a program call SyncThing - it syncs
my PC's (2 lapt
Just to note that it's not mythical. It's a per-directory setting (which
you can only change on an empty - normally new - directory).
To do for an existing directory X, rename to Y, (re)create directory X,
apply this option to X (make names case sensitive), copy all members of
Y to X, and dele
Hi Fred,
>> I believe that this can be changed if you perform the magical and possibly
>> mythical NTFS configuration setting that preserves case sensitivity on
>> Windows systems ...
>
> Just to note that it's not mythical. It's a per-directory setting (which
> you can only change on an empty -
On 27 September 2024 at 10:33, Chris Miller said:
[...]
> I also note that you may run into problems using rsnapshot on an NTFS
> filesystem mounted CIFS, meaning you are an SMB client. If you are
> "snapping" two files with names differentiated only by case, then these
> will collide on case inse
On Fri, Sep 27, 2024 at 12:16:59PM -0400, Fred wrote:
> I've been using rsnapshot for years, now, to do nightly, weekly, and
> monthly backups.
>
Ah, yes, I was trying to remember the name of the rsync based
incremental backup tool!
--
Chris Green
___
Hi Folks,
> I've been using rsnapshot for years, now, to do nightly, weekly, and
> monthly backups.
I concur. I will add that rsnapshot can also backup databases, but it needs a
short script to do it. I'm willing to offer copies of my scripts, with
explanations, if anybody is interested.
I als
I've been using rsnapshot for years, now, to do nightly, weekly, and
monthly backups.
There is no GUI (that I'm aware of) for it and you have to read
documentation to figure out how to build its config file, but after that
it's set up cron job(s) and forget it.
as an example of how it works, the
On Fri, Sep 27, 2024 at 01:23:06PM +1000, Alan Hopkins wrote:
>Hi Dennis
>This is after the fact, but I use a program call SyncThing - it syncs
>my PC's (2 laptops, 1 desktop) which all run Linux and as well, there
>is third party SyncThing app for my Synology NAS. Syncing is not
>
Hi Dennis
This is after the fact, but I use a program call SyncThing - it syncs
my PC's (2 laptops, 1 desktop) which all run Linux and as well, there
is third party SyncThing app for my Synology NAS. Syncing is not
really the same as backing-up but, as I have effectively have the sa
Hopefully this info will help someone that has been struggling with this
issue...
I recently abandoned Windows (after 40 years) and moved to Linux as my
"Daily Driver". I had used Synology's Active Backup for Business to
backup my desktop PC's to my Synology NAS and was happy as a lark.
Try
Please include the group when you reply.
I am unable to help you further.
On Wed, Jun 28, 2023 at 6:35 PM James Baxter wrote:
> David Carlson
> Sir. Sorry if I said the wrong thing. I was in Gnucash as I was looking to
> get it straight. "I do know". I was looking at the backup. I was looking
Gosh! Heck! Yes! Information wants to be free. There is so much stuff
out there it is hard to determine what is good information and what is
not. It is easy to determine commercial stuff because sooner or later
one will encounter a paywall, right? That is why Askleo is a great
resource. Here's
James
I think that you need a third party primer on how to back up the data on
your computer. Without promoting any particular commercial products the
following U-Tube video may help:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YFw6kiH52TM
On Wed, Jun 28, 2023 at 4:09 PM Stephen
wrote:
> James, you're
James, you're getting some good advice in the responses you've received
so far. May I add that it might be useful to review the Gnucash Tutorial
and Concepts Guide regarding types of files Gnucash makes/uses. This is
in Chapter 2 (Ver 4 Tutorial) called Backing Up and Recovering Data.
There is
On 2023-06-28 13:21, David Carlson wrote:
> James,
>
> When your computer fails, your data will be gone unless you, by your own
> volition, have made a special plan to back up your data to a safe and
> proper external location. Nobody here can tell you if you made a proper
> choice. That also go
James,
When your computer fails, your data will be gone unless you, by your own
volition, have made a special plan to back up your data to a safe and
proper external location. Nobody here can tell you if you made a proper
choice. That also goes for all the other data on your computer.
A feature
Sir. I am using LibreOffice. There is a backup in the program. So I use that.
I am going to reread your email to see what you are talking about.
ThanksJames Baxter kangaro...@yahoo.com
Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
On Wed, Jun 28, 2023 at 6:49 AM, James Baxter wrote:
David You are not t
GNUCash does backups by default if you use XML. Every time you save there
is a backup made. It sits in the same directory as your main data file (I
wish you could specify a specific folder.)
However, what the folks on this chain are talking about is a backup of
those files in case the hard drive
On 6/28/2023 7:18 AM, Maf. King wrote:
Hi James,
I'm Maf, not David, and I can't tell you that from here.
I would suggest that on a philosophical level, if you don't *know* that your
back-up strategy is working (and you can recover files from it at will), then
it might be time to rethink your s
Hi James,
I'm Maf, not David, and I can't tell you that from here.
I would suggest that on a philosophical level, if you don't *know* that your
back-up strategy is working (and you can recover files from it at will), then
it might be time to rethink your strategy.
good luck,
Maf.
On Wednesday
David You are not tell me if the backup is working or not.
ThanksJames Baxter kangaro...@yahoo.com
Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
On Wed, Jun 28, 2023 at 3:35 AM, Maf. King wrote: On
Wednesday, 28 June 2023 00:46:45 BST James Baxter via gnucash-user wrote:
> I have a backup drive. I have
On Wednesday, 28 June 2023 00:46:45 BST James Baxter via gnucash-user wrote:
> I have a backup drive. I have looked over it and I don't see it. Does
> Gnucash have a backup. Or what. ThanksJames Baxter kangaro...@yahoo.com
>
Hi James.
If you are using the default XML file to store your GC data,
James,
Did you design your backup strategy to include your GnuCash data?
And did you test the strategy to see if you could recover the data?
If so, you should be good. If not, you have some work to do.
On Tue, Jun 27, 2023, 6:47 PM James Baxter via gnucash-user <
gnucash-user@gnucash.org> w
I have a backup drive. I have looked over it and I don't see it. Does Gnucash
have a backup. Or what.
ThanksJames Baxter kangaro...@yahoo.com
Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
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Thanks for replies. 1) My approach was to leave the GNC backup process as is
and handle the files only (moving them out of the base dir). 2) I have many
other files also in a folder where my budget database file resists, so I wanted
to move backups instantly. 3) I also wanted not to
Message: 2
> Date: Fri, 05 Aug 2022 00:47:05 +0200
> From: GNC mailinglist
> To: gnucash-user@gnucash.org
> Subject: [GNC] Backup files in another folder ? solution for Windows
> Message-ID: <875471b7354140d490ddd6c5dd291...@grupawp.pl>
> Content-Type: text/plain; chars
Not at all! Just adding info for this great community and for the next
person that searches
On Fri, Aug 5, 2022 at 10:22 AM Adrien Monteleone <
adrien.montele...@lusfiber.net> wrote:
> Of course. Sorry if it seemed I implied otherwise.
>
> Regards,
> Adrien
>
> On 8/5/22 9:02 AM, Glenn Fowler wro
not simply use "*.gnucash" for the
backup file as that would move the main data file as well, so it must be
"*.gnucash.*.gnucash".
Jack
-Original Message-
From: gnucash-user On
Behalf Of Glenn Fowler
Sent: Thursday, August 4, 2022 7:12 PM
To: GNC mailinglist
Cc: gnuc
Of course. Sorry if it seemed I implied otherwise.
Regards,
Adrien
On 8/5/22 9:02 AM, Glenn Fowler wrote:
Even with the SQLite database you still need backups.
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Even with the SQLite database you still need backups.
One could use the built-in backup scheme to guard against user error or
database corruption and then also a copy to other media (cloud, external
drive, etc.) to guard against hardware failure.
On Fri, Aug 5, 2022 at 9:37 AM Adrien Monteleone <
An alternative is to use the SQLite backend. There is no file
cluttering, and the added bonus of instant saves rather than periodic.
I'm not sure how easy that is to set up on Windows, however.
Regards,
Adrien
On 8/4/22 5:47 PM, GNC mailinglist wrote:
Hi,I'm new to GnuCash but, yep, I was
Thank you for sharing.
I do my backups with PS as well but just do a once daily run and check the
file hash for changes. If it's changed then copy.
On Thu, Aug 4, 2022 at 6:47 PM GNC mailinglist wrote:
> Hi,I'm new to GnuCash but, yep, I was disappointed by the multiple
> backup and log file
Hi,I'm new to GnuCash but, yep, I was disappointed by the multiple
backup and log files cluttering the directory where the main budget file is
stored. I've searched and found out nobody even made a workaround. So I
wrote a Powershell (Windows) script watching folder for new files and moving
FYI, I have successfully used EncFS and Cryptomator to store encrypted
Gnucash data on a Dropbox-like sync service.
--
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Op donderdag 14 mei 2020 01:01:13 CEST schreef flywire:
> - GnuPG may well offer better security but it's not as turnkey
I agree with the essence of Stephen's reply: gnucash does accounting. If you
need a layer of encryption to protect that, you'll have to find a solution
that supplements it. Th
Simply put:
- I'm not the one using it
- it's to prevent casually or accidentally displaying the data
- considering the external value of personal cashbook data this very
accessible process kindly provided by a community member seems
fit-for-purpose
- GnuPG may well offer better security but it's n
Encryption is very personal and also very hard to get right.
1. Personal. You might prefer a commercial product (PGP) while I
prefer open source (GnuPG).
2. Hard. Simply XOR and many short-bit keys are now easily breakable.
Even those who create methods (two-fish, RSA, etc) make mistakes that
Er ... no encryption.
https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/FAQ#Q:_Can_you_please_add_a_password_feature.3F
...[No]
The actual problem is access to personal data on a work supplied computer.
An optional program based backup is more appropriate. GnuCash won't install
but thankfully there is a portable ver
GnuCash already has an option in the user preferences for the XML data file
to be stored in compressed form (zipped) on the hard disk. It is
automatically zipped and unzipped by gnucash in that case. It may be the
default but I'm less sure about that.
Just copy it to a backup location as required
https://lists.gnucash.org/pipermail/gnucash-user/2014-September/056076.html
>
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If you
Hmm, old idea apparently. GnuCash is launched in Windows from a batch file
to it seems to integrate well.
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Wait! EMACS already supports double-entry bookkeeping. :-)
https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/CategoryFinancial
On Tue, Mar 24, 2020 at 2:28 PM Jean-David Beyer via gnucash-user <
gnucash-user@gnucash.org> wrote:
> On 3/24/20 9:32 AM, Michael or Penny Novack wrote:
> > On 3/24/2020 7:58 AM, lbo...
On 3/24/20 9:32 AM, Michael or Penny Novack wrote:
> On 3/24/2020 7:58 AM, lbo...@rogers.com wrote:
>> Would it be possible to incorporate a backup module function into the
>> menu bar, as a pull-down feature under the heading "File", as is
>> commonly found in some programs? Backing up to the ha
As Michael notes, there is more than just a data file. Preferences are stored
separately as are saved report configurations, and any interface
customizations. (such as if one uses a custom CSS file) And they aren’t just
stored in separate files, they are also in different directories.
Better to
On Tue, Mar 24, 2020 at 9:36 AM Michael or Penny Novack <
stepbystepf...@comcast.net> wrote:
> a special process to back up gnucash data is redundant.
While I agree that adding this feature to the application would be a poor
idea, I do see the point.
I back up my hard drive to an external drive,
On 3/24/2020 7:58 AM, lbo...@rogers.com wrote:
Would it be possible to incorporate a backup module function into the menu bar, as a
pull-down feature under the heading "File", as is commonly found in some
programs? Backing up to the hardrive is currently automatic but saving to a disc or
mem
Would it be possible to incorporate a backup module function into the menu bar,
as a pull-down feature under the heading "File", as is commonly found in some
programs? Backing up to the hardrive is currently automatic but saving to a
disc or memory stick, for off site storage could be made sim
On Tuesday, 12 February 2019 12:09:22 GMT Finbar Mahon wrote:
> Well, I hope I understood all that.
>
> I did a save as in a new folder called GNU FEB 12 2019, >Saved all the
> open accounts, >closed them, >quit and then reopened GNUcash.
>
> Voila, afaics, a file opened called GNU FEB12 2019.gnu
Well, I hope I understood all that.
I did a save as in a new folder called GNU FEB 12 2019, >Saved all the
open accounts, >closed them, >quit and then reopened GNUcash.
Voila, afaics, a file opened called GNU FEB12 2019.gnucash and it
contains the last transactions, so far so good.
Just hav
Yes, if you just launch GnuCash from its launcher it will open the last file
you had open when you did a ’Save’ and ‘Quit’.
But apparently, you intentionally at one point opened a backup file instead of
the current working file, twice. (each time a different backup file)
You normally do *not* w
Hi Finbar.
Comments in-line below...
On Monday, 11 February 2019 13:24:32 GMT Finbar Mahon wrote:
> Wow, this is getting (more) complicated -
>
> You said -
>
> [When Gnucash starts, it *normally* opens the file that was open when
> you shutdown last time around,
>
> so it is fairly easy to ge
I can't see the images you presumable posted for some reason, but I
suspect what happened was that some time ago you, for some reason,
opened one of the backup files (so
whatever.gnucash.longdatestring.gnucash) and didn't then re-open or
save as the original file name. Ever since then you have bee
Wow, this is getting (more) complicated -
You said -
[When Gnucash starts, it *normally* opens the file that was open when
you shutdown last time around,
so it is fairly easy to get the wrong one by mistake if you've been
digging in the folder.]
I just booted up GNUcash without any 'diggin
On Monday, 11 February 2019 10:35:30 GMT you wrote:
> OK, thanks. So, it is 'normal' to be using it?
>
No, you risk data loss at the point of opening the backup.
let me clarify.
Your data file is called (for example) "mybooks.gnucash" All timestamps are
made up (but plausible)
you enter a tra
OK, thanks. So, it is 'normal' to be using it?
Finbar
On 11/02/2019 10:28, Maf. King wrote:
On Monday, 11 February 2019 09:10:30 GMT Finbar Mahon wrote:
that I was working on another backup. I don't recall making one
specifically but it was probably part of a 'general' HD backup. However,
I
On Monday, 11 February 2019 09:10:30 GMT Finbar Mahon wrote:
> that I was working on another backup. I don't recall making one
> specifically but it was probably part of a 'general' HD backup. However,
> I have no idea how or when I restored it, if I ever did,
Finbar,
re-read the GC info abo
Yes, I appreciate the comment.
In my original post I mentioned that I was testing out an app called
backblaze, an automatic backup to the the cloud. I asked where and how I
would find the GNU backups, since the folder where GNU stuff is saved is
full of files, and would have been backed up by
I don’t know. What is backblaze?
Based on the info in the FAQ to which I referred, it appears that on Feb 8,
2019, you opened a backup copy of “GNU 5 Feb 2018”, which itself was made on
March 5, 2018, made some changes, and saved from that backup. I don’t know your
workflow or immediate purpose
Thanks for that, I probably did, but not (yet) in backblaze, does that
matter?
Finbar
On 09/02/2019 12:59, D wrote:
That file name indicates that you opened, and saved, a backup of your main data
file. You might not have intended to do this.
See
https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/FAQ#Q:_Why_is_m
That file name indicates that you opened, and saved, a backup of your main data
file. You might not have intended to do this.
See
https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/FAQ#Q:_Why_is_my_file_name_getting_longer_and_longer.3F
David
On February 9, 2019, at 5:15 PM, Finbar Mahon wrote:
Thanks, I read th
Thanks, I read the guide and was a bit confused when backblaze showed
the most recent save was yesterday at 3.55pm but with two dates/times of -
GNU 5 Feb 2018 .gnucash.20180305171639.gnucash.20190208155508.gnucash<<
Is the second date from the left [20180305171639] the date the file was
cre
Finbar,
The directory with your data file will also contain log files and backup
files.
See https://www.gnucash.org/docs/v3/C/gnucash-guide/basics-backup1.html for
details
David Cousens
-
David Cousens
--
Sent from: http://gnucash.1415818.n4.nabble.com/GnuCash-User-f1415819.html
Hi,
I know this has been asked before and I have read some of the the
threads, however...
I am trying out Backblaze, the continuous backup to the cloud service.
I wanted to check if my files were recoverable and I found -
and more, all dated the day before yesterday, when I did the backu
I fixed your slashes in several places.
Anything else?
Why don’t you get your own wiki account?
Regards,
Adrien
> On Nov 2, 2018, at 9:01 AM, Wm via gnucash-user
> wrote:
>
> On 01/11/2018 09:27, Geert Janssens wrote:
>> Op woensdag 31 oktober 2018 17:09:27 CET schreef Wm via gnucash-user:
>
So because Liinux does not use a backslash, that is erroneous?
On Fri, Nov 2, 2018 at 11:15 PM Wm via gnucash-user <
gnucash-user@gnucash.org> wrote:
> On 01/11/2018 09:27, Geert Janssens wrote:
> > Op woensdag 31 oktober 2018 17:09:27 CET schreef Wm via gnucash-user:
> >> On 31/10/2018 01:24, D
that is not a constructive comment.
David C
On Fri, Nov 2, 2018 at 11:00 PM Wm wrote:
> On 01/11/2018 09:19, Colin Law wrote:
> > On Thu, 1 Nov 2018 at 08:23, Wm via gnucash-user
> > wrote:
> >>
> >> On 31/10/2018 01:24, D via gnucash-user wrote:
> >>> Check out https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/B
On 01/11/2018 16:40, Ronal B Morse wrote:
I don't see any reason to change the Wiki. People who
already have a backup plan in place know what they need to
do.
So long as no-one is ever allowed to say "I followed your instructions
and lost my data" I agree.
I am waving and saying, "I have po
On 01/11/2018 09:27, Geert Janssens wrote:
Op woensdag 31 oktober 2018 17:09:27 CET schreef Wm via gnucash-user:
On 31/10/2018 01:24, D via gnucash-user wrote:
Check out https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Backup
You should not point people to incorrect and misleading links
What's misleading abou
On 01/11/2018 09:19, Colin Law wrote:
On Thu, 1 Nov 2018 at 08:23, Wm via gnucash-user
wrote:
On 31/10/2018 01:24, D via gnucash-user wrote:
Check out https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Backup
You should not point people to incorrect and misleading links
Please point out the errors so it can b
I don't see any reason to change the Wiki. People who
already have a backup plan in place know what they need to
do.
RBM
On Thu, 2018-11-01 at 08:48 -0500, David Cousens wrote:
> Wm,
>
> What is incorrect or misleading about the Wiki backup
> page? It points out
> the necessity to have an adeq
Wm,
What is incorrect or misleading about the Wiki backup page? It points out
the necessity to have an adequate backup strategy in place outside the
inbuilt backups which only protect against file write problems. It is really
outside the scope of GnuCash to specify what that strategy should be. It
Wm,
I know I am putting myself out here to get royally flamed by you, but...
I call BS. You’re trolling here.
First off, IT’S A WIKI.
YOU of all people should know what that means: volunteers write/edit that
content, and OTHER volunteers (read: YOU) can edit those pages to make them
accurat
Op woensdag 31 oktober 2018 17:09:27 CET schreef Wm via gnucash-user:
> On 31/10/2018 01:24, D via gnucash-user wrote:
> > Check out https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Backup
>
> You should not point people to incorrect and misleading links
What's misleading about that link ? I have just read it and a
On Thu, 1 Nov 2018 at 08:23, Wm via gnucash-user
wrote:
>
> On 31/10/2018 01:24, D via gnucash-user wrote:
> > Check out https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Backup
>
> You should not point people to incorrect and misleading links
Please point out the errors so it can be corrected.
Colin
> --
> Wm
>
>
Wm,
If you think that link contains incorrect and misleading information, why
don't you contact the developers and help them correct it.
David C
On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 3:22 AM Wm via gnucash-user
wrote:
> On 31/10/2018 01:24, D via gnucash-user wrote:
> > Check out https://wiki.gnucash.org/w
On 31/10/2018 01:24, D via gnucash-user wrote:
Check out https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Backup
You should not point people to incorrect and misleading links
--
Wm
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On 31/10/2018 00:52, Bob Hammons wrote:
I have been using Gnucash since the first of the year. The data files are in a
directory named gnucash and it save a lot of backups. I am using Windows 10. I
open filer and control c the days files, sometimes as high as 20, and paste
them to a thumb dr
Bob,
There will be the main data file, x.gnucash, log files and backup files in
your gnucash directory. The logfiles and
backup files will have the same basename as your mainfile, but will have a
timestamp as part of the filename, i.e
x..log and x..gnucash. If you have a datafile
p
Check out https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Backup
HTH,
David
On October 31, 2018, at 6:23 AM, Bob Hammons wrote:
I have been using Gnucash since the first of the year. The data files are in a
directory named gnucash and it save a lot of backups. I am using Windows 10. I
open filer and control c
I have been using Gnucash since the first of the year. The data files are in a
directory named gnucash and it save a lot of backups. I am using Windows 10. I
open filer and control c the days files, sometimes as high as 20, and paste
them to a thumb drive for backup. Is this all I need to bac
On Wed, May 16, 2018 at 11:03 AM Nikos Charonitakis
wrote:
> I have recently made a back of my home directory on a fedora 27 pc
> and then i restored it to a new installation on fedora 28. I was
> expecting to open Gnucash and continue working on my latest Gnucash
> file and also have all my sett
Was this the order of operations?
#1 Upgrade/Install new OS version
#2 Restore backup
#3 Install new version of GnuCash
If #2 happened before #3, perhaps the GnuCash install is overwriting the
restored .gnucash folder with a fresh copy.
Does restoring just that folder again from the backup rest
-All home folders (hidden or not) were saved and then then restored...
-Same behavior even if the new installation is the same gnucash
version e.g. Fedora 27 to Fedora 27
2018-05-16 18:00 GMT+03:00 Nikos Charonitakis :
> Hi All
> I have recently made a back of my home directory on a fedora 27 pc
>
Since Firefox stores user prefs in $HOME/.mozilla, I’d be surprised if .gnucash
didn’t get backed up also, unless the OP used a custom command and .mozilla was
specifically included and .gnucash wasn’t.
But if this were some sort of backup app and it was set to backup hidden files,
then .gnucas
Op woensdag 16 mei 2018 17:00:19 CEST schreef Nikos Charonitakis:
> Hi All
> I have recently made a back of my home directory on a fedora 27 pc
> and then i restored it to a new installation on fedora 28. I was
> expecting to open Gnucash and continue working on my latest Gnucash
> file and also ha
Fedora version 28 installs Gnucash 3.0.1.something if you use the
version in the Fedora 28 repository. Not sure which version is in the
Fedora 27 repo, but I'll wager it's one of the 2.XX releases.
RBM
On 05/16/2018 09:00 AM, Nikos Charonitakis wrote:
Hi All
I have recently made a back of m
As a long time Linux user and having used GnuCash for several years I
can tell you that your GnuCash settings are in a hidden file in your
home directory: ~/.gnucash
You didn't say how you made your backup so, as David asked, did you back
up your hidden files. If, for example, you used `tar` b
I am not an expert on Linux, so do not quote me here. I think that GnuCash
puts the settings in a hidden folder under your user directory. Does your
backup program also back up the hidden folders?
David C
On Wed, May 16, 2018 at 10:00 AM, Nikos Charonitakis
wrote:
> Hi All
> I have recently m
Hi All
I have recently made a back of my home directory on a fedora 27 pc
and then i restored it to a new installation on fedora 28. I was
expecting to open Gnucash and continue working on my latest Gnucash
file and also have all my settings in place but this was not the case.
Running Gnucash on th
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