> Kamil Paral <kparal <at> redhat.com> writes: > > > > Several tests in the install test matrix require the above > > > option, > > > but when > > > anaconda attempts to start after downloading the file, I get the > > > text-based > > > traceback (not the expected GUI error) at > > > > > > http://robatino.fedorapeople.org/traceback.xwd.gz > > > > Did you already reported the bug against anaconda? > > No, the error "ImportError: cannot import name expandLangs" made me > suspect that > the problem is with the traceback.img file itself (I could be wrong > though). You seem to be right. I explored the files in traceback.img and they contain this line. So there are two solutions: 1. Ask James Laska (or someone else) to fix this problem. 2. Ask Anaconda team to provide us with their "official" and supported solution. After inspecting updates.img, there is a lot of code copied from (some old version of) anaconda. That doesn't seem to me as a good solution, because we might get completely unrelated problems in the process. I imagine anaconda guys could provide us with a much better solution. For example they could add "traceback" kernel option that causes anaconda crash on startup. This is just a few lines of code, it would be maintained, and doesn't involve any updates.img downloading etc. What do you think? I'll discuss with anaconda team if noone has better ideas. > > > > (use "display traceback.xwd.gz" to view, where display is part of > > > the > > > ImageMagick package). The traceback is exactly the same with the > > > i386 > > > and x86_64 > > > DVDs. > > > > virt-manager can save the screen as a PNG. xwd.gz is somewhat > > cumbersome. > > Thanks. I filed https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=735611 > against eog a > while ago for not recognizing xwd files, but no activity yet. Is > there a way to > save a specific window as a PNG that works in general? (With XWD I > can just do > "xwd > file.xwd", click in the window, then compress the file.) eog doesn't help much when I still need to download it. PNG can be viewed in the browser. I think hitting "Virtual Machine -> Print screen" (available when running VMs from virt-manager) or generic Alt+Printscreen (that would include VM window borders, but who cares) is just really simple as well. Thanks. -- test mailing list test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/test