Am Sonntag, 16. Januar 2011 schrieb Martin (KDE):
Am Sonntag, 16. Januar 2011 schrieb Martin (KDE):
> Am Sonntag, 16. Januar 2011 schrieb Rex Dieter:
> > On Sun, 16 Jan 2011, Martin (KDE) wrote:
> > > Hallo
> > >
> > > the last years I used to use yum-updatesd to automatically
> > > update my system. But as some users switched of the computer
> > > during update I thought of switching to packagekit (the KDE
> > > variant). On my newly setup laptop this works as expected. I
> > > got a Icon in the systemtray if there are updates detected.
> > >
> > > On my other computer (the one previously updated with
> > > yum-updatesd) this does not work. I have set up the
> > > kpackagekit to check every hour but I got no icon in the
> > > systray. There are updates pending (yum in the command line
> > > told so). How do I get kpackagekit working?
Hm, a newly created user got this update icon in systray. This
seems to be a user base setting.
The difference is that the newly created user is a local one (local
passwd). The other users which don't get kpackagekit icons
automatically are users stored in a global ldap directory. This is not
bound to one single computer. All my four computers have the same
problem (so all are on an up to date f14 system).
Martin
Martin
> > The kapackagekit systray icon thingy is an autostart item on
> > login, ie, did you relogin after installing it?
>
> Jep, I relogin and I restarted the computer.
>
> > If you run kpk by hand, does it display any updates available?
>
> Yes, If I run kpackagekit from command line the systray Icons are
> there and the updates are visible.
>
> Martin
>
> > -- Rex