On Wed, Aug 17, 2005 at 11:28:01AM +0900, Dave Gutteridge enlightened us: > My desktop environment has become a little chaotic, and, long story > short, I would like to uninstall KDE and Gnome, and then reinstall > Gnome. (I want to remove KDE for the time being because I just don't > think I want it taking up space on my hard drive). > > The thing is, I don't want to throw the baby out with the bathwater. For > instance, I want to make sure I don't lose settings in X, like my > xorg.conf file. I just want to reset my Gnome interface back to how it > was when I first installed it. > > I'm thinking the steps I need to take are roughtly these, but it would > be great if someone could verify that these will be a non-destructive > way of getting Gnome back to it's original state: > > 1. Stop X (By running telinit 3 at a command prompt?) > Probably not necessary, but can't hurt. > 2. Use YUM to remove Gnome and KDE (#yum remove gnome kde?) > yum groupremove "KDE (K Desktop Environment" "Gnome Desktop Environment" > 3. Use YUM to install Gnome (#yum install gnome?) > yum groupinstall "Gnome Desktop Environment" > 4. restart X (#telinit 5?) > Correct. > Could someone clarify if I have the commands right, and if this process > is safe to undertake? > Yes, it should be fine, but as mentioned in the other reply, you'll need to (re)move the config files in your home directory as well. Matt -- Matt Hyclak Department of Mathematics Department of Social Work Ohio University (740) 593-1263