I'm running F33 Mate, but I think I was also seeing the problem I'm asking about under at least F32, and maybe also earlier.
Dragora has two icons that I can put on a panel. One of them is supposed to be an updater. It works, afaict.
The other seems intended to do what it used to: permit me to slice and dice lists of apps, and to install or remove them. On any new install I used to use it heavily, eliminating apps I knew I'd never use, and adding ones not present by default that I do use.
Both icons do only the check for updates. Have I damaged something? Or is the exhaustive form deprecated?? If so, is there a replacement?
On 29/11/2020 05:10, Beartooth wrote:
I'm running F33 Mate, but I think I was also seeing the problem I'm
asking about under at least F32, and maybe also earlier.
Dragora has two icons that I can put on a panel. One of them is
supposed to be an updater. It works, afaict.
The other seems intended to do what it used to: permit me to slice and dice lists of apps, and to install or remove them. On any new install I used to use it heavily, eliminating apps I knew I'd never use, and adding ones not present by default that I do use.
Both icons do only the check for updates. Have I damaged something? Or is the exhaustive form deprecated?? If so, is there a replacement?
The desktop files
/usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora.desktop
both define the same Icon
Icon=dnfdragora
Sounds like you have 2 copies of /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop
on your panel.
--- The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
On 29/11/2020 07:37, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 29/11/2020 05:10, Beartooth wrote:
I'm running F33 Mate, but I think I was also seeing the problem I'm asking about under at least F32, and maybe also earlier.
Dragora has two icons that I can put on a panel. One of them is supposed to be an updater. It works, afaict.
The other seems intended to do what it used to: permit me to slice and dice lists of apps, and to install or remove them. On any new install I used to use it heavily, eliminating apps I knew I'd never use, and adding ones not present by default that I do use.
Both icons do only the check for updates. Have I damaged something? Or is the exhaustive form deprecated?? If so, is there a replacement?
The desktop files
/usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora.desktop
both define the same Icon
Icon=dnfdragora
Sounds like you have 2 copies of /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop
on your panel.
Oh, on further thought, I think I may have confused dnfdragora with the KDE's plasma-discover.
When it comes to dnfdragora, doesn't the drop-down with the selection of "To Update", "All", "installed", "Not Installed" provide helpful information?
--- The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
On 29/11/20 12:26 pm, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 29/11/2020 07:37, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 29/11/2020 05:10, Beartooth wrote:
I'm running F33 Mate, but I think I was also seeing the problem I'm asking about under at least F32, and maybe also earlier.
Dragora has two icons that I can put on a panel. One of them is supposed to be an updater. It works, afaict.
The other seems intended to do what it used to: permit me to slice and dice lists of apps, and to install or remove them. On any new install I used to use it heavily, eliminating apps I knew I'd never use, and adding ones not present by default that I do use.
Both icons do only the check for updates. Have I damaged something? Or is the exhaustive form deprecated?? If so, is there a replacement?
The desktop files
/usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora.desktop
both define the same Icon
Icon=dnfdragora
Sounds like you have 2 copies of /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop
on your panel.
Oh, on further thought, I think I may have confused dnfdragora with the KDE's plasma-discover.
When it comes to dnfdragora, doesn't the drop-down with the selection of "To Update", "All", "installed", "Not Installed" provide helpful information?
I have dnfdragora installed and I only have one icon for it which in KDE is under Administration, and that icon runs the application that allows slicing and dicing packages, and allows putting on all or a selection of updates from the display as a result of selecting "To Updates" from the drop down menu. This is no different to what I had in previous versions of Fedora. I don't have a kicker entry for dnfdragora-updates, and I don't believe I had that in previous versions of Fedora either.
regards, Steve
The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
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On 29/11/2020 14:58, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 29/11/20 12:26 pm, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 29/11/2020 07:37, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 29/11/2020 05:10, Beartooth wrote:
I'm running F33 Mate, but I think I was also seeing the problem I'm asking about under at least F32, and maybe also earlier.
Dragora has two icons that I can put on a panel. One of them is supposed to be an updater. It works, afaict.
The other seems intended to do what it used to: permit me to slice and dice lists of apps, and to install or remove them. On any new install I used to use it heavily, eliminating apps I knew I'd never use, and adding ones not present by default that I do use.
Both icons do only the check for updates. Have I damaged something? Or is the exhaustive form deprecated?? If so, is there a replacement?
The desktop files
/usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora.desktop
both define the same Icon
Icon=dnfdragora
Sounds like you have 2 copies of /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop
on your panel.
Oh, on further thought, I think I may have confused dnfdragora with the KDE's plasma-discover.
When it comes to dnfdragora, doesn't the drop-down with the selection of "To Update", "All", "installed", "Not Installed" provide helpful information?
I have dnfdragora installed and I only have one icon for it which in KDE is under Administration, and that icon runs the application that allows slicing and dicing packages, and allows putting on all or a selection of updates from the display as a result of selecting "To Updates" from the drop down menu. This is no different to what I had in previous versions of Fedora. I don't have a kicker entry for dnfdragora-updates, and I don't believe I had that in previous versions of Fedora either.
I don't believe dnfdragora-updater is installed by default.
It installs a /etc/xdg/autostart/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop which will put an item in your panel and inform you when updates are available.
--- The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
On Sun, 29 Nov 2020 07:37:13 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 29/11/2020 05:10, I Beartooth wrote:
I'm running F33 Mate, but I think I was also seeing the problem I'm
asking about under at least F32, and maybe also earlier.
Dragora has two icons that I can put on a panel. One of them is
supposed to be an updater. It works, afaict.
[...]
The desktop files
/usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora.desktop
both define the same Icon
Icon=dnfdragora
Sounds like you have 2 copies of /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop
on your panel.
The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
Well, I try hard ...
I did cd /usr/share/applications, and got
# ls|grep dnf org.mageia.dnfdragora.desktop org.mageia.dnfdragora-localinstall.desktop org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop
Is there some repo somewhere from which I can grep the standard icons for those three?
Meanwhile, I got a surprise. I tried to construct the command, not surprisingly getting several failures -- my CLI-foo is miniscule. But then came this:
[root@localhost btth]# /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora- localinstall.desktop -bash: /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-localinstall.desktop: Permission denied [root@localhost btth]#
I suppose I should be glad it failed; but WHO has power to give or refuse permission to root??
I also went back (as user, not root) to the GUI of /usr/share/ applications, opened the file for the installer, and found a box saying its command is dnfdragora-localinstall.desktop; I copied that, added a &, and got a screenful of messages I don't understand.
On 30/11/2020 01:40, Beartooth wrote:
On Sun, 29 Nov 2020 07:37:13 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 29/11/2020 05:10, I Beartooth wrote:
I'm running F33 Mate, but I think I was also seeing the problem I'm
asking about under at least F32, and maybe also earlier.
Dragora has two icons that I can put on a panel. One of them is
supposed to be an updater. It works, afaict.
[...]
The desktop files
/usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora.desktop
both define the same Icon
Icon=dnfdragora
Sounds like you have 2 copies of /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop
on your panel.
The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
Well, I try hard ...
I did cd /usr/share/applications, and got
# ls|grep dnf org.mageia.dnfdragora.desktop org.mageia.dnfdragora-localinstall.desktop org.mageia.dnfdragora-updater.desktop
Is there some repo somewhere from which I can grep the standard icons for those three?
A few things. First, I may have inadvertently added some confusion. I'm not a frequent MATE user.
You had said: "Dragora has two icons that I can put on a panel" I took that to mean that you went to "System-->Administration" and then right-clicked on either dnfdragora and/or dnfdragora-updater and selected either "Add this launcher to panel" or "Add this launcher to desktop".
Doing both will result in the same icon appearing twice on the panel or desktop.
This is because the "launcher" or "desktop file" for both is define as the same.
It is important to note that the *destop files are *not* shell scripts. And they have no execute permissions.
[egreshko@meimei ~]$ ll /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-localinstall.desktop -rw-r--r--. 1 root root 5376 Sep 6 23:04 /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-localinstall.desktop
Meanwhile, I got a surprise. I tried to construct the command, not surprisingly getting several failures -- my CLI-foo is miniscule. But then came this:
[root@localhost btth]# /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora- localinstall.desktop -bash: /usr/share/applications/org.mageia.dnfdragora-localinstall.desktop: Permission denied [root@localhost btth]#
I suppose I should be glad it failed; but WHO has power to give or refuse permission to root??
That is explained above.
I also went back (as user, not root) to the GUI of /usr/share/ applications, opened the file for the installer, and found a box saying its command is dnfdragora-localinstall.desktop; I copied that, added a &, and got a screenful of messages I don't understand.
Again, dnfdragora-localinstall.desktop is not a command. It is a file with information as to what to execute when the Icon on the panel or desktop is clicked (or double-clicked").
The more important question as this point is the one I asked in a later post.
When it comes to dnfdragora, doesn't the drop-down with the selection of "To Update", "All", "installed", "Not Installed" provide the needed functionality? That is, you can list what packages aren't installed and you can select from there which one to install.
--- The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
On Mon, 30 Nov 2020 06:50:32 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
The more important question as this point is the one I asked in a later post.
When it comes to dnfdragora, doesn't the drop- down with the selection of "To Update", "All", "installed", "Not Installed" provide the needed functionality? That is, you can list what packages aren't installed and you can select from there which one to install.
My bad. There is no drop-down. The whole display is greyed out, except for the colored line at the bottom showing its progress; and when that finishes, the only thing not greyed out is "quit".
On 01/12/2020 02:44, Beartooth wrote:
On Mon, 30 Nov 2020 06:50:32 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
The more important question as this point is the one I asked in a later post. When it comes to dnfdragora, doesn't the drop- down with the selection of "To Update", "All", "installed", "Not Installed" provide the needed functionality? That is, you can list what packages aren't installed and you can select from there which one to install.
My bad. There is no drop-down. The whole display is greyed out, except for the colored line at the bottom showing its progress; and when that finishes, the only thing not greyed out is "quit".
You will see that greyed out condition if dnfdragora is started with the --update-only parameter.
--- The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
On Tue, 01 Dec 2020 04:15:09 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
My bad. There is no drop-down. The whole display is greyed out, except for the colored line at the bottom showing its progress; and when that finishes, the only thing not greyed out is "quit".
You will see that greyed out condition if dnfdragora is started with the --update-only parameter.
So how do I get it to launch without that? Can it be done with the GUI??
F33 Mate with dnfdragora-updater removed (rpm -e dnfdragora-updater) because I found it annoying. I have a launcher for dnfdragora in my panel; right-click on the panel then Add to Panel->Application Launcher->Administration->dnfdragora. I click on the panel icon, and, using the default Gtk interface, dnfdragora graciously takes up the whole screen and refuses to let me reduce its window beyond a still-too-large size. But it does work.
Steven, Check out this bug report for the full screen and a possible work around.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1895120
Feel free to add your self to it as you like.
~~R
On 12/3/20 12:09 PM, Steven Usdansky via users wrote:
F33 Mate with dnfdragora-updater removed (rpm -e dnfdragora-updater) because I found it annoying. I have a launcher for dnfdragora in my panel; right-click on the panel then Add to Panel->Application Launcher->Administration->dnfdragora. I click on the panel icon, and, using the default Gtk interface, dnfdragora graciously takes up the whole screen and refuses to let me reduce its window beyond a still-too-large size. But it does work. _______________________________________________
Richard,
I've been using that work-around for two months 🤠