Gtk-Message: GtkDialog mapped without a transient parent. (gnomesu:25465): Gtk-WARNING **: gtk_window_set_titlebar() called on a realized window (gnomesu:25465): GLib-GObject-WARNING **: The property GtkSettings:gtk-button-images is deprecated and shouldn’t be used anymore. (gnomesu:25465): GLib-GObject-WARNING **: The property GtkButton:use-stock is deprecated and shouldn’t be used anymore. It works pretty good too although it does complain a gnomesu gedit /etc/nf I’ve never used gnomesu before I must have thought it was an editor. ** (gedit:17943): WARNING **: Set document metadata failed: Setting attribute metadata::gedit-position not supportedĪpparently (from other posts) you are using Gnome.Īs suggested by hcvv in post #2 you would have done your job with just a few irrelevant warnings. (gedit:17943): dconf-WARNING **: failed to commit changes to dconf: The connection is closedĮrror creating proxy: The connection is closed (g-io-error-quark, 18) 'Set document metadata failed' when I run sudo gedit 16.04 command-line sudo gedit metadata 121,429 Solution 1 You can stop seeing this behavior simply by launching gedit from the launcher rather than the command line as was intended. You’re right Ubuntu doesn’t like su.īTW, su complained a lot, but it let me do it: su What I ultimately did was to cat nf, copy it into gedit, edit the file, then sudo cp the file back into root… I am greatful for everyone’s help and I will investigate all the suggestions when my workload diminishes. Good answer! This is a new build with many issues. This would work in any openSUSE running any Desktop, or even IceWM which does not formally run a Desktop. You should also be able to launch any graphical app like gedit from a root console (created with “su”) which would then be able to edit files like nf. In general and not just because I use openSUSE, I feel the more traditional ways openSUSE applies security is clearer so less prone to mis-understanding and mistake. I haven’t checked, but Ubuntu might looser security for nf. Ubuntu doesn’t really support using “su” like we do here in openSUSE, and has a different “sudo” security policy in part to compensate. Ubuntu applies a different security system. Is there any gui based text editor that will edit system files? I don’t want to make any mistakes with these. I don’t know why I can’t do it in openSUSE. ![]() BTW, I have always been able to edit system files in Ubuntu with gedit, 7 years. = Clean up =ĭpkg -l 'linux-*' | sed '/^ii/!d /'"$(uname -r | sed "s/\(.*\)-\(\ \)/\1/")"'/d s/^* * \(*\).I will try your suggestions however I would ultimately prefer a gui text editor. = Separate output audio devices for each app = Sudo chmod a rx /usr/local/bin/youtube-dl Sudo apt-get install rabbitvcs-cli rabbitvcs-core rabbitvcs-gedit rabbitvcs-nautilus rabbitvcs-nautilus3 Sudo add-apt-repository ppa:rabbitvcs/ppa ![]() ![]() Sudo add-apt-repository ppa:gezakovacs/ppa , when open nf, the information is total different from kangalow’s video, it only asked for backing up the image, kernel, label etc. Sudo dd bs=4M if=/media/d1/Dist/Util/Hdd-tools/WinPE10_8_Sergei_Strelec_x86_圆4_2018.01.05_English/Lite/WinPE10_Sergei_Strelec_圆4_2018.01.05_English.iso of=/dev/sdd status=progress oflag=sync (gedit:11673): WARNING : 15:58:45.573: Set document metadata failed: Setting atribute::gedit-position not supported I followed the tutorial from kangalow’s video, to format ,mounted. ![]() Mkisofs -r -iso-level 4 -o $iso_path/$project_name"_"$(date %Y-%m-%d).iso $basepath
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