Fore me those directories were not sufficient - I had to delete ~/.config/dconf/user as well.
This helped for me in those two cases:
gnome-panel config broken
(tried to specify location "left" for one gnome panel, it immediately crashed and could not be started afterwards)
GTK Theme and GTK Icons broken
(nevertheless the selection via e. g. gnome-tweak-tool, it remained in ugly Windows-style grey look and icons were standard gnome - I have no clue how this was provoked, it appeared suddenly after login)
This corresponds to the Gnome 3 Fallback Mode I use on Linux Mint 12 Lisa (Oneiric based). But the GTK problem persisted in all other login modes as well (MATE, Gnome 3 Standard)!
I am unsure now to which mechanism the ~/.config/dconf/user file corresponds, as I found out that in Linux Mint only _mateconf-editor_ is installed by default but outfitted with the title and icon of gconf-editor from Natty!
After installing gconf-editor additionally, this one is titled identically but has a different (new) icon. But don't rely on this icon stories, because this will rely on the icon theme which is Mint-X-Dark for me.
Theory says that dconf is the successor for gconf, but I found no information regarding the GUIs.
Reinstalling gnome-tweak-tool resolved this issue and after reboot the GNOME 3 come up again. Actually gnome-tweak-tool was installed but the system detects it as a uninstalled one.
For Unity-related configuration resetting, take a look here.
For Ubuntu 17.10 and higher, you can reset all the settings using dconf.
This command will delete your configuration files. Once it's run there is no going back!
Still with me?
GNOME 2
Run the following on a terminal or with Alt+F2:
That will remove all the GNOME 2 configuration settings. Log out, and log back in. You'll be back to a stock desktop.
You can backup before playing around with your settings in the future:
GNOME 3
If your config isn't worth saving run the following:
To back up and reset GNOME3:
For 17.10+
There isn't a great solution but this may do the job or most of it.
Then log out/in
That command's path could be shortened if needing a more extensive reset, i.e. to just /org/ or even / but I'd go with above first.
Worst case one could also just go this in a terminal, I think it's a bit overkill as it will set all dconf (gsettings) back to defaults
Fore me those directories were not sufficient - I had to delete
~/.config/dconf/user
as well.This helped for me in those two cases:
gnome-tweak-tool
, it remained in ugly Windows-style grey look and icons were standard gnome - I have no clue how this was provoked, it appeared suddenly after login)This corresponds to the Gnome 3 Fallback Mode I use on Linux Mint 12 Lisa (Oneiric based). But the GTK problem persisted in all other login modes as well (MATE, Gnome 3 Standard)!
I am unsure now to which mechanism the
~/.config/dconf/user
file corresponds, as I found out that in Linux Mint only_mateconf-editor_
is installed by default but outfitted with the title and icon ofgconf-editor
from Natty! After installinggconf-editor
additionally, this one is titled identically but has a different (new) icon. But don't rely on this icon stories, because this will rely on the icon theme which is Mint-X-Dark for me.Theory says that
dconf
is the successor forgconf
, but I found no information regarding the GUIs.If you want to reset your GNOME specific settings to default as if you had never logged in try
Logout, switch to command line (Alt + Ctrl + F4), login, do:
Switch to X (Alt + Ctrl + F2, F7 on older versions).
Just like they described it here.
Resetting Gnome Extensions
If you need to remove your Gnome Extensions (I ran into this problem when trying out Ubuntu 17.10 on an upgraded system) run:
Keep in mind that this will wipe all of your extensions.
To remove an individual extension, you can navigate to
~/.local/share/gnome-shell/extensions
and look for the extension's folder, then delete it.If you'd like to backup
To backup, run:
You can use the
mv
command.The syntax is:
In your case:
The last one is a directory and it's the destination.
Reinstalling
gnome-tweak-tool
resolved this issue and after reboot the GNOME 3 come up again. Actuallygnome-tweak-tool
was installed but the system detects it as a uninstalled one.I did :
And I've found my desktop like the first day I create my user account, but all my software params are the same (firefox, thunderbird, filezilla...)