On Ubuntu 13.10, I have all of my gsettings in a file, mygset.sh. For example, mygset.sh contains many lines such as
gsettings set com.canonical.Unity.Launcher favorites "['application://nautilus.desktop', 'application://firefox.desktop', 'application://chromium-browser.desktop', 'unity://running-apps', 'unity://expo-icon', 'unity://devices']"
I have a master install script that I have to run with sudo (e.g. it does sudo apt-get install).
From that master install script I want to call mygset.sh
. However, no matter how I call it it is not changing the settings for my user. I think it is changing the settings of root. I've tried it like (from masterinstall.sh
which is being run as sudo ./masterinstall.sh
):
sudo -u "wang" ./mygset.sh
sudo -u "wang" bash -c ./mygset.sh
Neither of those works (they run without error and change the setting [I check within the script with gsetting get] but not for user "wang").
When I run mygset.sh
from the command line (without sudo: bash ./mygset.sh
). It works perfectly. Why is there this difference and what can I do to solve it within masterinstall.sh
?
mygset.sh
from within a script I'm runningsudo
on. I could refactor it but that would take some time and lead to less readable code. In any case, yours is the closest to an answer and indeed is an answer to this use case after some refactoring.