Am Sonntag, 16. Januar 2011 schrieb Martin (KDE): > Am Sonntag, 16. Januar 2011 schrieb Martin (KDE): > > Am Sonntag, 16. Januar 2011 schrieb Rex Dieter: > > > On Sun, 16 Jan 2011, Martin (KDE) wrote: > > > > Hallo > > > > > > > > the last years I used to use yum-updatesd to automatically > > > > update my system. But as some users switched of the computer > > > > during update I thought of switching to packagekit (the KDE > > > > variant). On my newly setup laptop this works as expected. I > > > > got a Icon in the systemtray if there are updates detected. > > > > > > > > On my other computer (the one previously updated with > > > > yum-updatesd) this does not work. I have set up the > > > > kpackagekit to check every hour but I got no icon in the > > > > systray. There are updates pending (yum in the command line > > > > told so). How do I get kpackagekit working? > > Hm, a newly created user got this update icon in systray. This > seems to be a user base setting. The difference is that the newly created user is a local one (local passwd). The other users which don't get kpackagekit icons automatically are users stored in a global ldap directory. This is not bound to one single computer. All my four computers have the same problem (so all are on an up to date f14 system). Martin > > Martin > > > > The kapackagekit systray icon thingy is an autostart item on > > > login, ie, did you relogin after installing it? > > > > Jep, I relogin and I restarted the computer. > > > > > If you run kpk by hand, does it display any updates available? > > > > Yes, If I run kpackagekit from command line the systray Icons are > > there and the updates are visible. > > > > Martin > > > > > -- Rex _______________________________________________ kde mailing list kde@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/kde New to KDE4? - get help from http://userbase.kde.org