| Summary: | In gpk-update-icon, start packagekit 30s after startup | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Product: | PackageKit | Reporter: | Behdad Esfahbod <freedesktop> |
| Component: | General | Assignee: | Richard Hughes <richard> |
| Status: | RESOLVED FIXED | QA Contact: | |
| Severity: | normal | ||
| Priority: | medium | CC: | freedesktop |
| Version: | unspecified | ||
| Hardware: | Other | ||
| OS: | All | ||
| Whiteboard: | |||
| i915 platform: | i915 features: | ||
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Description
Behdad Esfahbod
2008-12-10 17:38:50 UTC
It already does -- what version are you running? Humm, weird. In my warm-login chart it doesn't happen. In the cold-login one it does. See: http://www.gnome.org/~behdad/login/3/7.gnome-session.preload.png It's updated F10. [behdad@home ~]$ rpm -q gnome-packagekit gnome-packagekit-0.3.11-3.fc10.x86_64 What's the very first thing PackageKit does when you do a cold boot? Does it search for firmware, or check for updates? Thanks. (In reply to comment #3) > What's the very first thing PackageKit does when you do a cold boot? Does it > search for firmware, or check for updates? Thanks. How can I tell? Do you get the icon doing anything? Can you rm /var/log/PackageKit, reboot, and then post the log please? Thanks. That "fixed" it. Should I close? I do have a computer with a lot of resources and I don't want to wait 30 seconds to use packagekit. Is "30s" hard-coded or does packagekit start after the other applications are effective started? (In reply to comment #7) > I do have a computer with a lot of resources and I don't want to wait 30 > seconds to use packagekit. Is "30s" hard-coded or does packagekit start after > the other applications are effective started? It's now a value in GConf. Yay for more gconf traffic during login ;) |
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