These determine the assumed/default size of instruction operands, and restricts which opcodes are available, and how they are used.
Modern operating systems, booted inside Real
mode,
How to export (backup), reset to defaults and import (restore) the configuration of a gnome extension. | |
// prints the whole config to a file | |
dconf dump /org/gnome/shell/extensions/<extension-name>/ > ~/<backupfile> | |
// Resets the config to defaults (might wanna check first if the dump was a succes by opening the file) | |
dconf reset -f /org/gnome/shell/extensions/<extension-name>/ | |
// Loads configuration from a file into your gnome-shell | |
dconf load /org/gnome/shell/extensions/<extension-name>/ < ~/<backupfile> | |
From what I can tell a good way to determine <extension-name> is from its url at https://extensions.gnome.org | |
However its better to be safe and launch dconf editor , browse to /org/gnome/shell/extensions/ and check the name. |
This is a collection of the tweaks and modification I've made to my Arch Linux installation over the months. These may be applicable to other distros, but please check first before doing anything. I also included Arch Wiki references for all the procedures I mentioned. My recommendation is not to blindly follow this gist but to always check with the Arch Linux wiki first. Things move fast and by the time you're reading this my gist may be out of date. Lastly, the golden rule: never execute a command you don't understand.
My current DE of choice is KDE's Plasma. I find it just about perfect.
There are various ways to install it on Arch. The most popular one is to install plasma
and plasma-applications
, but I don't like doing that because it comes with too many programs I'll never use. I, instead, install the base plasma
group, remove the few extra packages that come with it, then I finish off by installing a few KDE apps that don't come with th