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gnome-commander(1) [debian man page]

GNOME-COMMANDER(1)					      General Commands Manual						GNOME-COMMANDER(1)

NAME
gnome-commander - a GNOME file manager SYNOPSIS
gnome-commander [-d STRING] [options] [gtk,gnome,bonobo options] DESCRIPTION
GNOME Commander is a fast and powerful graphical filemanager for the GNOME desktop environment, it has a "two-pane" interface in the tradi- tion of Norton and Midnight Commander. OPTIONS
--help Show summary of options. --version Show version of program. -l, --start-left-dir=STRING Specify the start directory for the left pane -r, --start-right-dir=STRING Specify the start directory for the right pane -d, --debug=STRING Specify debug flags to use. Debug output will be written to STDOUT. Possible flags: a: user actions debugging c: file and directory counting d: directory ref-counting f: file ref-counting g: run_command debugging i: imageloader k: directory pool l: directory listings m: connection debugging n: directory monitoring p: python plugins s: SMB network browser t: metadata tags v: internal viewer w: widget_lookup x: xfer y: brief MIME based imageload z: detailed MIME based imageload [gtk,gnome,bonobo options] Standard gtk, gnome, bonobo options are supported. Use --help to see possible options. EXAMPLES
gnome-commander -d nvl Starts GNOME Commander with debugging of directory listings, internal viewer and directory monitoring facilities. FILES
~/.gnome-commander/gnome-commander.xml ~/.gnome2/gnome-commander User settings. ~/.gnome-commander/devices List of user defined devices (see "Devices" tab in the "Options" dialog). ~/.gnome-commander/fav-apps List of user defined applications (see "Programs" tab in the "Options" dialog). ~/.gnome-commander/connections List of remote connections (see "Connections" menu). ~/.gnome-commander/plugins User specific plugins. /usr/lib/gnome-commander/plugins System-wide plugins. BUGS
If you find any bugs, please report them (or better yet, fix them and send a patch). See the GNOME Commander home page for more informa- tion: http://www.nongnu.org/gcmd/ AUTHOR
GNOME Commander was originally developed by Marcus Bjurman. Piotr Eljasiak <epiotr@use.pl> is the current project manager. Assaf Gordon <agordon88@gmail.com> added the internal viewer code and other features. Translations and other contributions by numerous people. See the AUTHORS file in the source tarball for the detailed list. The original manual page was written by Michael Vogt <mvo@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system. Current manual page is maintained as the part of the GNOME Commander project. December 6 2011 GNOME-COMMANDER(1)

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GNOME-SESSION(1)					      General Commands Manual						  GNOME-SESSION(1)

NAME
gnome-session - Start the GNOME desktop environment SYNOPSIS
gnome-session [-a|--autostart=DIR] [--session=SESSION] [--failsafe|-f] [--debug] [--whale] DESCRIPTION
The gnome-session program starts up the GNOME desktop environment. This command is typically executed by your login manager (either gdm, xdm, or from your X startup scripts). It will load either your saved session, or it will provide a default session for the user as defined by the system administrator (or the default GNOME installation on your system). The default session is defined in gnome.session, a .desktop-like file that is looked for in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/gnome-session/sessions, $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/gnome-session/sessions and $XDG_DATA_DIRS/gnome-session/sessions. When saving a session, gnome-session saves the currently running applications in the $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/gnome-session/saved-session direc- tory. gnome-session is an X11R6 session manager. It can manage GNOME applications as well as any X11R6 SM compliant application. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: --autostart=DIR Start all applications defined in DIR, instead of starting the applications defined in gnome.session, or via the --session option. Multiple --autostart options can be passed. --session=SESSION Use the applications defined in SESSION.session. If not specified, gnome.session will be used. --failsafe Run in fail-safe mode. User-specified applications will not be started. --debug Enable debugging code. --whale Show the fail whale in a dialog for debugging it. SESSION DEFINITION
Sessions are defined in .session files, that are using a .desktop-like format, with the following keys in the GNOME Session group: Name Name of the session. This can be localized. RequiredComponents List of component identifiers (desktop files) that are required by the session. The required components will always run in the ses- sion. Here is an example of a session definition: [GNOME Session] Name=GNOME RequiredComponents=gnome-shell;gnome-settings-daemon; The .session files are looked for in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/gnome-session/sessions, $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/gnome-session/sessions and $XDG_DATA_DIRS/gnome-session/sessions. ENVIRONMENT
gnome-session sets several environment variables for the use of its child processes: SESSION_MANAGER This variable is used by session-manager aware clients to contact gnome-session. DISPLAY This variable is set to the X display being used by gnome-session. Note that if the --display option is used this might be different from the setting of the environment variable when gnome-session is invoked. FILES
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/config/autostart $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/config/autostart /usr/share/gnome/autostart The applications defined in those directories will be started on login. gnome-session-properties(1) can be used to easily configure them. $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/gnome-session/sessions $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/gnome-session/sessions $XDG_DATA_DIRS/gnome-session/sessions These directories contain the .session files that can be used with the --session option. $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/gnome-session/saved-session This directory contains the list of applications of the saved session. BUGS
If you find bugs in the gnome-session program, please report these on https://bugzilla.gnome.org. SEE ALSO
gnome-session-properties(1) gnome-session-quit(1) GNOME GNOME-SESSION(1)
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