On 06/20/16 15:23, Stephen Davies wrote:
> I do not know how to control start-up applications apart from systemctl and I
> don't
> believe that systemctl has anything to do with tbird. Is there a KDE facility?
> I see a .kde/Autostart directory but it is empty.
>
> What is "saved the session on
On 20/06/16 16:36, Tim wrote:
On Mon, 2016-06-20 at 11:13 +0930, Stephen Davies wrote:
The first thing that happens when I request the reboot is that I get a
message "GDBus.Error:org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.LimitsExceeded Maximum
number of connections for UID 0 has been reached".
When the system
On Mon, 2016-06-20 at 11:13 +0930, Stephen Davies wrote:
> The first thing that happens when I request the reboot is that I get a
> message "GDBus.Error:org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.LimitsExceeded Maximum
> number of connections for UID 0 has been reached".
>
> When the system does restart, I get a
On 20/06/16 14:59, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 06/19/2016 06:43 PM, Stephen Davies wrote:
When the system does restart, I get a pop-up saying that Thunderbird is
already running.
I have to manually kill the tbird process and then reinitialise tbird.
To my knowledge, there is nothing in a startup scrip
On 06/19/2016 06:43 PM, Stephen Davies wrote:
When the system does restart, I get a pop-up saying that Thunderbird is
already running.
I have to manually kill the tbird process and then reinitialise tbird.
To my knowledge, there is nothing in a startup script to initiate tbird.
There is actually
On 06/19/2016 06:43 PM, Stephen Davies wrote:
When the system does restart, I get a pop-up saying that Thunderbird is
already running.
I have to manually kill the tbird process and then reinitialise tbird.
To my knowledge, there is nothing in a startup script to initiate tbird.
Put this in a s
Since updating to F22 I have had issues with system restarts.
Regardless of how I restart (reboot or systemctl) the process stops at the
point where the log says "Reached target Shutdown" and just hangs.
I have to press the physical restart button to get the system up again.
The first thing tha