Hi, I tried to kill the app, and restart it. It actually works. That is it saves the config, and the next time it starts, it uses the saved config. The problem is that when I reboot the computer it will restart again with the default config. So, apparently I would have to kill the app every time... This doesn't make sense (at least to me,) right? Paulo On 09/21/2009 07:58 AM, Duncan wrote: Kishore posted on Mon, 21 Sep 2009 11:57:50 +0530 as excerpted:On Monday 21 Sep 2009 6:37:41 pm paulo wrote:On kde 4.2, when you add a system monitor application to the desktop, and you change it's default settings, how can you save those settings in order to keep them between sessions? I ask this because every time I login, the system monitor application starts with the default settings. That is, 2 sec update rate, CPU % system total and not each core %, etc...That should be automatic. Contact the author of the applet to let him/her know of this issue.The problem can also be the result of plasma not shutting down properly (maybe it's crashing on shutdown?), thus not getting a chance to save any changed settings properly. If I notice an issue such as that, I try to set it up as I want, and immediately quit and restart the app in question, thus saving the settings. The nature of plasma being what it is, the main desktop and panels, not a standard app, shutting down and restarting it works a bit differently, but the idea is the same. I normally open a terminal (konsole) window (I have a hotkey setup for just that), and do it from there using standard CLI commands, killall pl<tab> (with bash-completion setup properly, the <tab>, two tabs if there's more than one candidate, should auto-complete the app name to kill, or give you a choice if more than one). In kde 4.3, it's plasma- desktop. In 4.2 I think it was simply plasma. Then, restart it. However, last time I mentioned that, someone mentioned that there's a kde specific way to kill an app as well, kquitapp, which uses the dbus interface to do it if it's a dbus interfaced app (like plasma and pretty much all of kde is), instead of the traditional Unix signals (SIGTERM by default) that killall uses. You can also type it into krunner, if you prefer. That's not part of plasma, so you can invoke it again to restart plasma, after plasma is stopped. Of course, it can also be a permissions problem, if the appropriate config file is set read-only, or something. And of course it can be some other app bug, as Kishore already mentioned. |
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