Settings are not stored in the kde-directory, but in a .kde-directory in the users home-directory. If you upgrade to a new kde-installation, the updates are converted to a new version. The means particulary that someone who have runned kde 3.3 once could have difficulties in starting kde 3.1 again.Quoted
Original von belliott4488
It seems to start up okay, but now I'd like to test it out a bit before migrating completely. Rather than going to the trouble of recreating all the settings from my v3.1 installation, I'm hoping just to copy files from the v3.1 directory tree into the v3.3.1 tree, so that I can do a real comparison and test out the things I do most often.
KDE 3.3 should be binary compatible with KDE 3.1 AFAIK. Thus programs that worked under KDE 3.1 should work in KDE 3.3.Quoted
Original von belliott4488
Is it safe just to copy files in the kde/share directories, or is there a risk that I'll overwrite a v3.3.1 file with one from v3.1 that is not upwards compatible with v3.3.1?
I suggest to make a test user. You can copy the settings of a existing user to this user. That way, you can cerefully check if everything does what it have to do.Quoted
Original von belliott4488
Are there any files in particular I should be sure to get or to stay away from?
thanks,
Bruce E.
[/i]Quoted
Original von mart_k
Settings are not stored in the kde-directory, but in a .kde-directory in the users home-directory. If you upgrade to a new kde-installation, the updates are converted to a new version. The means particulary that someone who have runned kde 3.3 once could have difficulties in starting kde 3.1 again.Quoted
Original von belliott4488
It seems to start up okay, but now I'd like to test it out a bit before migrating completely. Rather than going to the trouble of recreating all the settings from my v3.1 installation, I'm hoping just to copy files from the v3.1 directory tree into the v3.3.1 tree, so that I can do a real comparison and test out the things I do most often.
KDE 3.3 should be binary compatible with KDE 3.1 AFAIK. Thus programs that worked under KDE 3.1 should work in KDE 3.3.Quoted
Original von belliott4488
Is it safe just to copy files in the kde/share directories, or is there a risk that I'll overwrite a v3.3.1 file with one from v3.1 that is not upwards compatible with v3.3.1?
I suggest to make a test user. You can copy the settings of a existing user to this user. That way, you can cerefully check if everything does what it have to do.Quoted
Original von belliott4488
Are there any files in particular I should be sure to get or to stay away from?
thanks,
Bruce E.
Yes, you can safely copy them. If you are afraid of losing settings, backup your old .kde-directory.Quoted
Original von belliott4488
My question had to do with whether I can safely copy configuration files from my default ~/.kde directory to the new ~./kde3.3.1 directory. It sounds as if this will be okay, from your response. I'm less concerned with the applications settings than I am with the KDE Desktop settings, in particular the panel and menu settings, since I've customized both with items that point to new applications.
Normally, is it not needed. In theory, there is not many that can be go wrong, espesially if there are seperated .kde-dirs. But extra safety is not a bad thing.Quoted
Original von belliott4488
On a separate note, I now wish I had thought of running Konstruct as new test user. This is the suggested procedure in the step-by-step procedure at http://quality.kde.org/develop/cvsguide/buildstep.php, which I did not see until after I'd run Konstruct. I recommend this for anyone else who is considering using Konstruct to build KDE.
The panel items are stored in ~/.kde/share/apps/kicker/. I don't know exactly how removed items are stored.Quoted
Original von belliott4488
What do I need to do to get my panel items?
Quoted
Original von mart_k
The panel items are stored in ~/.kde/share/apps/kicker/. I don't know exactly how removed items are stored.Quoted
Original von belliott4488
What do I need to do to get my panel items?
[edit]I think that applets that are not removed are stored in ~/.kde/share/config/kickerrc, because there is a list there with kicker-buttons.[/edit]
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