GNOME Shell
The GNOME Shell redefines user interactions with the GNOME desktop. In
particular, it offers new paradigms for launching applications, accessing
documents, and organizing open windows in GNOME.
- Developed at GNOME:Factory
- Sources inherited from project openSUSE:Factory
-
5
derived packages
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osc -A https://api.opensuse.org checkout openSUSE:Leap:15.1:Staging:FactoryCandidates/gnome-shell && cd $_
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Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed |
---|---|---|
gnome-shell-2.29.0.tar.bz2 | 0000660830 645 KB | |
gnome-shell-libmozjs.patch | 0000001097 1.07 KB | |
gnome-shell-session | 0000000292 292 Bytes | |
gnome-shell-translations.patch | 0000000735 735 Bytes | |
gnome-shell.changes | 0000011104 10.8 KB | |
gnome-shell.spec | 0000003904 3.81 KB | |
gnome3.desktop | 0000000264 264 Bytes | |
ready | 0000000000 0 Bytes |
Revision 11 (latest revision is 263)
autobuild
accepted
request 33778
from
Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar)
(revision 11)
Copy from GNOME:Factory/gnome-shell based on submit request 33778 from user dimstar
Comments 1
Hi! I've been helping the GNOME Project test patches that fix multiple very common GNOME Shell 40 and 41 crashes, as seen in this pull request:
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/merge_requests/2029
The patches fix 1 crash that happens with vanilla GNOME, and multiple crashes that happens with extensions that incorrectly add "OR windows" to GNOME's overview (this is done by extensions such as Pop Shell).
These are severe and very disruptive crashes of the entire GNOME desktop, and the patch fixes all of them. So I suggest that openSUSE applies those patches too, so that users won't have to wait for upcoming GNOME releases.