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authorrbuj <[email protected]>2018-10-13 23:22:52 +0200
committerlukefromdc <[email protected]>2018-10-20 13:34:11 -0400
commitfed78efebdd3c9d390e00c9b864ae6d178236676 (patch)
tree87363c39c1c3b5b86fa03de25e8c955974fed612
parent3fcf0e2efa8bfcfb4ff81c7f2098e91b261e7fc4 (diff)
downloadmate-user-guide-fed78efebdd3c9d390e00c9b864ae6d178236676.tar.bz2
mate-user-guide-fed78efebdd3c9d390e00c9b864ae6d178236676.tar.xz
Systems without dconf profiles
-rw-r--r--mate-user-guide/C/gosdconf.xml5
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/mate-user-guide/C/gosdconf.xml b/mate-user-guide/C/gosdconf.xml
index d038428..1e03fc3 100644
--- a/mate-user-guide/C/gosdconf.xml
+++ b/mate-user-guide/C/gosdconf.xml
@@ -24,6 +24,11 @@
<application>dconf</application> uses several database files in GVDB binary format, one database per file.
A dconf profile consists of a single file, in plain text format, which contains a list of database files in GVDB format.
All dconf profiles are stored in the <filename class='directory'>/etc/dconf/profile</filename> folder.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ In most systems, there is no dconf profile file since they only use the default database, user.db which is stored in ~/.config/dconf/user. In such case, there is no system-wide setting, i.e. users just have their own settings.
+ </para>
+ <para>
Example of content for the user profile (/etc/dconf/profile/user file):
</para>