grep face /home/<username> -r
:)
Oh, yes, the point I realized I should mention as I hit <send>: I thought I mentioned that when I look at the log, that the user is NOT LOGGED ON, and that the home directories were automounted at login.
mark "gnome, gnome and deranged"
-- David Fix Senior Systems Administrator Mr. X Inc.
----- Original Message ----- From: "m roth" m.roth@5-cent.us To: "CentOS mailing list" centos@centos.org Sent: Friday, September 18, 2009 9:01:27 AM Subject: Re: [CentOS] gdm-simple-greeter config?
Greetings,
On Fri, Sep 18, 2009 at 8:34 AM, mark m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
itxakaserrano@gmail.com wrote:
Enviado desde mi iPhone El 18/09/2009, a las 04:39, mark m.roth@5-cent.us escribió:
R P Herrold wrote:
On Thu, 17 Sep 2009, mark wrote:
> I have googled. I have find ...-exec grep. One server > continues to send error messages to /var/log/messages that > gdm-simple-greeter can't find some file in a user's (another > admin, actually) home directory. Any ideas where it's > getting it from?
There are couple of directories starting with '.' (i.e. hidden ones) pertaining to gnome .gconf, .gdm maybe you can find the answers there.
/me putting up the sheild for hiding from "insufficient accuracy" missiles
Yeah, I always alias ll="ls -laF", so they're never hidden from me. <g>
Anyway, the situation is that users logging onto this system, as most of our systems, get their home directory automounted. However, this guy hasn't been on this system most of the time I've tried to find this error.
Based on that, it's got to be somewhere in a *system* file, not in a home directory, yet it complains: gdm-simple-greeter[2361]: GLib-GIO-WARNING: Missing callback called fullpath = /home/<username>/.face#012
Now, I found /var/lib/gdm, and have looked under .config, .gconf, and .gconfd, and not found it. I have also killed the simple greeter, and it respawned, and started griping again.
So, where is it storing this, and, more important, *WHY* is it caching this? Ideally, I'd like to not only clear whatever's causing it now, but also change the relevant system configuration file so that it doesn't happen again.
mark
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