I partly solved my "emergency". I restarted kbear and deleted the synch list. That stopped the kbearsitemanagerdaemon from deleting files on my website. I still can't get rid of the kbearsitemanagerdaemon from my system tray. If I kill it, it restarts within a couple seconds. I assume KDE is configured somehow to restart it, but I have no idea where. I've gone through what little documentation kbear has, and googled for similar problems to no avail. Any ideas on how to get this stupid thing from coming up in my system tray? Rebooting does NOT get rid of it. -- Jim Sabatke Hire Me!! - See my resume at http://my.execpc.com/~jsabatke Do not meddle in the affairs of Dragons, for you are crunchy and good with ketchup. NOTE: Please do not email me any attachments with Microsoft extensions. They are deleted on my ISP's server before I ever see them, and no bounce message is sent.
Jim Sabatke wrote:
I still can't get rid of the kbearsitemanagerdaemon from my system tray. If I kill it, it restarts within a couple seconds. I assume KDE is configured somehow to restart it, but I have no idea where. I've gone through what little documentation kbear has, and googled for similar problems to no avail.
Any ideas on how to get this stupid thing from coming up in my system tray? Rebooting does NOT get rid of it.
Just a thought, do you have KDE setup to start with an empty session, or to restore the last session? Check KDE Components>Session Manager. -- Joe Morris New Tribes Mission Email Address: Joe_Morris@ntm.org Registered Linux user 231871
Joe Morris (NTM) wrote:
Jim Sabatke wrote:
I still can't get rid of the kbearsitemanagerdaemon from my system tray. If I kill it, it restarts within a couple seconds. I assume KDE is configured somehow to restart it, but I have no idea where. I've gone through what little documentation kbear has, and googled for similar problems to no avail.
Any ideas on how to get this stupid thing from coming up in my system tray? Rebooting does NOT get rid of it.
Just a thought, do you have KDE setup to start with an empty session, or to restore the last session? Check KDE Components>Session Manager.
Yes, I do have it setup to restore the session. I do this because I normally have a dozen shells open to various directories. Changing that default fixed the problem. Thanks. In any case, is there a utility for adjusting what programs start at login? -- Jim Sabatke Hire Me!! - See my resume at http://my.execpc.com/~jsabatke Do not meddle in the affairs of Dragons, for you are crunchy and good with ketchup. NOTE: Please do not email me any attachments with Microsoft extensions. They are deleted on my ISP's server before I ever see them, and no bounce message is sent.
* Jim Sabatke
In any case, is there a utility for adjusting what programs start at login?
/home/<user-name>/.kde/Autostart -- Patrick Shanahan Registered Linux User #207535 http://wahoo.no-ip.org @ http://counter.li.org HOG # US1244711 Photo Album: http://wahoo.no-ip.org/photos
Patrick Shanahan wrote:
* Jim Sabatke
[08-04-04 11:43]: In any case, is there a utility for adjusting what programs start at login?
/home/<user-name>/.kde/Autostart
I had actually looked through the whole ~/.kde directory structure. I did find the startup listing, but decided against hand editing it as I wasn't sure if that would corrupt something. I'm not sure if this was a kbear or kde problem. I have no idea how kbear kept restarting itself; no parent process was evident. That led me to suspect that kde had some sort of function that I'm unaware of that would relaunch a specified app. Thanks for the suggestion! -- Jim Sabatke Hire Me!! - See my resume at http://my.execpc.com/~jsabatke Do not meddle in the affairs of Dragons, for you are crunchy and good with ketchup. NOTE: Please do not email me any attachments with Microsoft extensions. They are deleted on my ISP's server before I ever see them, and no bounce message is sent.
participants (3)
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Jim Sabatke
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Joe Morris (NTM)
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Patrick Shanahan