On Sat, 2007-12-01 at 20:16 -0500, Bob S wrote:
On Saturday 01 December 2007 03:00:36 am Aaron Kulkis wrote:
Bob S wrote:
Hello SuSE people,
Running 10.3 64 bit after a new install. Saved the /home directory for myself and two users. Moved all of the pertinent stuff (.kde & .mozilla) from a 10.2 install into the repective new /home directories on 10.3.
Everything works fine for myself and one of the users. For the other user Firefox cannot be started and comes up with a message the Firefox is already running and it must be closed first. Firefox is installed globally.
I ran system guard and there is no sign of Firefox (mozilla) running. I've tried everything I can think of including wiping that user's /home directory and re-importing it. Can't find anything. Asking for ideas/suggestions here. Anybody have any?
There's a lock file.
From the user's account:
find ~/.mozilla -name "lock" -print
will find it for you.
Thanks for replying Aaron,
It would if it were there. Sadly it is not.
Do you (or anybody) know if it is possible to uninstall Firefox for just a single user and reinstall new?
Bob S
Unless you had installed firefox as a whole under a user's own home directory, the answer is most likely no. However, you can delete that user's mozilla files. Or actually, I would save the .mozilla folder elsewhere. A new .mozilla folder should be created when you start up mozilla. You may want to then copy the bookmarks.html folder and some other pertinent files like history, etc. into the new .mozilla folder in the exact same location as the old .mozilla folder contents. As a test before you do all this, open a terminal, su into root then type firefox, just to make sure it is not the application that is corrupted by rather, the user's settings. If it launches, (which it is launching under root's settings) then you know for sure it is the user's settings. Then proceed with the steps I mentioned above. -- ---Bryen--- -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org