On Tuesday, April 03, 2012 05:26:41 AM Duncan did opine: > gene heskett posted on Mon, 02 Apr 2012 19:17:26 -0400 as excerpted: > > Greetings; > > > > I needed to burn a copy of the bios for a new intel board this > > afternoon, > > and when I fired off k3b, it had a small litter of kittens: > > > > [gene@coyote ~]$ k3b KGlobal::locale::Warning your global KLocale is > > being recreated with a valid main component instead of a fake > > component, this usually means you tried to call i18n related > > functions before your main component was created. You should not do > > that since it most likely will not work [gene@coyote ~]$ > > K3bQProcess::QProcess(0x0) > > K3bQProcess::QProcess(0x0) > > k3b(26825)/kdeui (kdelibs): Attempt to use QAction "view_projects" > > with KXMLGUIFactory! > > k3b(26825)/kdeui (kdelibs): Attempt to use QAction "view_dir_tree" > > with KXMLGUIFactory! > > k3b(26825)/kdeui (kdelibs): Attempt to use QAction "view_contents" > > with KXMLGUIFactory! > > k3b(26825)/kdeui (kdelibs): Attempt to use QAction "location_bar" with > > KXMLGUIFactory! > > QCoreApplication::postEvent: Unexpected null receiver > > > > But it did burn the cd ok. > > > > Is this something one of us should do something about? If so, what? > > Short answer: Nothing to worry about. > > Rather longer, with a caveat: > > In general, it seems that kde devs don't normally expect their apps to > be run from a terminal window by "ordinary users". Instead, I guess > they expect them to use the menu system or run them from krunner (the > run dialog), such that STDOUT and STDERR get sent to /dev/null. Given > that expectation, kde apps run from a terminal window (or otherwise > with user visible STDOUT/STDERR) tend to be very noisy, spitting out > all sorts of developer targeted warnings due to use of deprecated > functions that the app hasn't been updated away from yet but that still > work perfectly well, etc. > > Thus, in general, such "noise" from a kde app is to an end user just > that, "noise", and can be entirely disregarded. The /problem/ of course > is that when there actually /is/ a problem and you're running from a > terminal window in ordered to troubleshoot, all that perfectly normal > for a kde app noise hides the information that might actually be > telling you what's wrong and how to fix it. There's all these alarming > looking messages... but most of them are perfectly normal! The only > hope for anything useful in that case is to diff the output generated > from a working install to that of the one with the problem, in ordered > to see what's actually different between them. But of course that > requires at least two systems, one of which must still be working, > either that or per incredibly lucky chance, a captured "normal" output > from before the problem, to compare against. > > That's always been a bit of a frustration of mine, particularly since > unlike some, I don't normally keep multiple systems around. (I do now > have a netbook as well as my main machine, both running kde on gentoo, > but the netbook's install isn't updated anything near as frequently, and > is actually kde 4.6.4 or some such at this point, I think, while my main > machine is 4.8.1, to be 4.8.2 after its scheduled release later this > week. With that much of a version gap, and different hardware as well, > the comparison is of limited use.) > > > The caveat: The ISO-9660 spec does have some technical particulars > related to locale, and at one point anyway, there was a rather common > misconfiguration that k3b would complain about as it could screw up the > ability of the generated images to be read on other systems, MS Windows > being the most common I'd expect. At least that was my understanding of > the situation. > > I don't recall the specifics, but it's possible that local warning is > related to that. FWIW, I get it (along with the other complaints you > posted, plus something about a missing smb.conf, not surprising as I > don't have samba installed and have most of the related kde > functionality build-time disabled where possible) too. > > So it's /possible/ that locale-related complaint might have some > relevance if you intend to load the generated ISOs on MS platforms or > the like, or maybe not as it could be locale related but entirely > separate from that old issue, but other than that, no, I don't believe > that output is anything to worry about, at all. It did work, it burnt the bios update as requested. And its 10,000% easier to type k3b in a user terminal than it is to wade through the menu's and find it, under archivers of all places. Call me an anachronism at 77, but if I can spell it, I can type it a heck of a lot easier than I can hunt around in the cracks and crannies of a poorly laid out menu system. So I suspect you are 200% correct. System housekeeping has never been kde's strong point. :) They get lots more points for making bz hard to use IMO. Its forgot who I am, again. But funny thing, if I try to open a new account, it will toss it in the bit bucket because I already have one. Thanks Duncan. Cheers, Gene -- "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) My web page: <http://coyoteden.dyndns-free.com:85/gene> Don't worry if you're a kleptomaniac; you can always take something for it. ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.