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Date:      Sat, 11 Nov 2006 16:27:37 +0000
From:      eoghan <eoghanj@gmail.com>
To:        Boris Samorodov <bsam@ipt.ru>
Cc:        Joe Marcus Clarke <marcus@FreeBSD.org>, freebsd-gnome@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: gnome login more...
Message-ID:  <3F8E1C2A-8813-4820-B9DC-3AF34FCB6503@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <24267848@srv.sem.ipt.ru>
References:  <A8B94EF1-9112-4C40-ACD1-A29C051E75E4@gmail.com> <4554D637.4080508@FreeBSD.org> <7F979F22-48DE-450C-A9D5-A6E147C238FF@gmail.com> <90344115@srv.sem.ipt.ru> <877EEABE-5F56-4E21-9963-CFE816E000D6@gmail.com> <24267848@srv.sem.ipt.ru>

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On 11 Nov 2006, at 16:17, Boris Samorodov wrote:

>>>
>>> Yesterday I've got into the same situation when trying to change  
>>> some
>>> gnome system->parameters. Deletting ~/.gconf* and ~/.gnome* helped.
>
>> Thanks for the tip, im not sure where i can find these to delete...
>
> Those are hidden directories at your home directory. Just do
> $ cd ~
> $ ls -lda .gconf* .gnome*
>
> ... and you'll see those hidden directories. To remove them use
>
> $ rm -rf .gconf* .gnome*
>
> Or you may rename them first if you want to unvestigate the
> case. Note: you'll loose all your gnome configuration while deletting
> those directories.

Boris
I have removed both of these and am able to log back in a normal user.
Thanks for your help
Eoghan



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