LinuxQuestions.org
Help answer threads with 0 replies.
Go Back   LinuxQuestions.org > Forums > Linux Forums > Linux - Desktop
User Name
Password
Linux - Desktop This forum is for the discussion of all Linux Software used in a desktop context.

Notices


Reply
  Search this Thread
Old 09-01-2010, 02:06 AM   #1
MrCode
Member
 
Registered: Aug 2009
Location: Oregon, USA
Distribution: Arch
Posts: 864
Blog Entries: 31

Rep: Reputation: 148Reputation: 148
Xfce panel's "quit" button not working correctly; logout is also delayed...


...among other things.

Basically I've got four big problems here:
  • 1: The Xfce panel's "Quit" action button doesn't work correctly anymore. It used to provide all the logout options (i.e. logout, shutdown, restart, etc.), but now it just pops up a dialog that asks "Exit Xfce Panel?" with a "Cancel" and "Quit" button. If I hit "Quit", the panel is gone, but the desktop stays, and all my keyboard shortcuts still work. (It kills xfce4-panel, but doesn't do anything else)
  • 2: When logging out via Xfce_menu->Log Out, it delays for about a couple seconds before it actually logs me out/shuts down/whatever. It didn't used to do this; it used to be immediate.
  • 3: If I run anything with gksu, a) it takes forever to get a password prompt, and b) one CPU core goes to 100%, taken up by dbus-daemon. Killing it of course kills X altogether (X<->DBus).
  • 4: This one is somewhat unrelated, but still of rather large importance IMO: I totally screwed my partitioning up when I installed this Arch system (wasn't paying attention) and ended up allocating the better part of my 500 GiB hard disk to my /home partition, leaving / with just under 8 GiB. Now I'm paying the price: I can't install anything, and even pacman has complained that it can't retrieve the package list (for an update) because there's "no more space left on [the] device".

I've searched Google for solutions to all of these problems, and haven't really found anything useful. The only one that might be solvable (at least without directly asking questions) is the partitioning screw-up. I really hope I can fix that without having to re-install and re-configure everything. I've got everything just the way I want it on this machine, and I'm not sure if I'd be able to set it all up correctly again.

I honestly don't know what the deal is with any of these problems. My initial hypothesis was that it's because the / partition is now so full that some configs got lost and/or changed somehow. Now, I'm not so sure what the big problem is. I suppose in the meantime I can try finding a decent way of resizing my / and /home partitions without re-installing everything so that I can do updates and install additional SW if I need/want to.

Last edited by MrCode; 09-01-2010 at 02:11 AM.
 
Old 09-01-2010, 04:31 AM   #2
RockDoctor
Senior Member
 
Registered: Nov 2003
Location: Minnesota, US
Distribution: Fedora, Ubuntu, Manjaro
Posts: 1,791

Rep: Reputation: 427Reputation: 427Reputation: 427Reputation: 427Reputation: 427
Regarding your partition problem: boot from any live CD or USB flash drive that has Gparted on it, and use Gparted to resize your partitions
 
1 members found this post helpful.
Old 09-01-2010, 04:49 AM   #3
MrCode
Member
 
Registered: Aug 2009
Location: Oregon, USA
Distribution: Arch
Posts: 864

Original Poster
Blog Entries: 31

Rep: Reputation: 148Reputation: 148
Quote:
boot from any live CD or USB flash drive (...) and use Gparted to resize your partitions
I had thought about that, and I'm just wondering if it's safe? (I know, stupid question, right? )

But seriously, what's the risk of losing data? I mean, I'll back up first, but even so, I'd rather not have to go to the trouble of restoring from it. I suppose as long as I leave a little extra room for more stuff in /home, then I should be fine.

EDIT: Okay, maybe I'm not backing up...the only USB external hard drive I has is advertised at 160 GB, which I'm pretty sure is more like 15x GiB, and my /home partition (according to du -h /home) is 153 GiB in size. There's already plenty of stuff on that drive, which can be moved to my desktop machine's internal 320 GB drive, but even then I'm not sure if an image of my /home partition would fit on it (I was just gonna dd it).

Last edited by MrCode; 09-01-2010 at 04:59 AM.
 
Old 09-01-2010, 07:07 AM   #4
dixiedancer
Member
 
Registered: Feb 2010
Location: Florida, Occupied CSA
Distribution: Xubuntu
Posts: 98
Blog Entries: 3

Rep: Reputation: 37
If you right-click on that troublesome Logout button and select Properties, you might find that it directs you to some Xfce setting thingy rather than to the Logout. You can edit those properties (and it's pretty self-explanatory) to fix that.

-Robin
 
Old 09-01-2010, 07:25 AM   #5
MrCode
Member
 
Registered: Aug 2009
Location: Oregon, USA
Distribution: Arch
Posts: 864

Original Poster
Blog Entries: 31

Rep: Reputation: 148Reputation: 148
Quote:
If you right-click on that troublesome Logout button and select Properties, you might find that it directs you to some Xfce setting thingy rather than to the Logout.
Already tried, and it doesn't fix anything by changing the options there. If I right-click it and hit "Properties" I get a small config dialog where I can change the button's function between "Quit", "Lock screen", and "Quit + Lock screen". Changing it to "Lock screen" or "Quit + Lock screen" does no good.

I've tried clearing out my sessions (rm -r ~/.cache/sessions), but that didn't do anything either.

Maybe I just suck at hand-configuring Xfce...I had a hell of a time getting Compiz to start automatically with it (had to dig around in the main config XMLs). I really don't understand what went wrong; it was working fine until I discovered that my / partition is full (the hard way), which leads me to believe that was the main cause, and something got screwed up in the configs.

Last edited by MrCode; 09-01-2010 at 07:26 AM.
 
Old 09-02-2010, 04:59 AM   #6
MrCode
Member
 
Registered: Aug 2009
Location: Oregon, USA
Distribution: Arch
Posts: 864

Original Poster
Blog Entries: 31

Rep: Reputation: 148Reputation: 148
Apparently resizing the partitions was all I needed to do; I stuck a Linux Mint LiveCD in (it has GParted), resized the partitions to something a little more sane (), and on rebooting, everything works the way it used to!

Thanks for the help...apparently it was safe.
 
  


Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off



Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
How do I disable "shutdown" and "restart" options in KDE logout screen for all users? maxgsp Linux - Distributions 1 12-12-2008 03:18 PM
tar "Error exit delayed from previous errors" using "-C /" ToK Linux - Software 2 03-19-2008 06:49 AM
KDE "Logout" and "Lock Session" menu restoration powah Linux - Software 3 03-29-2005 08:02 PM
KDE "Lock Session" and "Logout" menu restoration tcma Linux - Software 0 01-29-2005 11:12 AM
Mom clicked a button and "it stopped working" antiocles Linux - Software 3 01-02-2005 01:35 PM

LinuxQuestions.org > Forums > Linux Forums > Linux - Desktop

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:37 AM.

Main Menu
Advertisement
My LQ
Write for LQ
LinuxQuestions.org is looking for people interested in writing Editorials, Articles, Reviews, and more. If you'd like to contribute content, let us know.
Main Menu
Syndicate
RSS1  Latest Threads
RSS1  LQ News
Twitter: @linuxquestions
Open Source Consulting | Domain Registration