Bug 146973

Summary: Cann't open applications:/// , system-settings:/// and preferences:/// with nautilus
Product: [Fedora] Fedora Reporter: sangu <sangu.fedora>
Component: gnome-menusAssignee: Mark McLoughlin <markmc>
Status: CLOSED WONTFIX QA Contact:
Severity: medium Docs Contact:
Priority: medium    
Version: rawhide   
Target Milestone: ---   
Target Release: ---   
Hardware: i386   
OS: Linux   
Whiteboard:
Fixed In Version: Doc Type: Bug Fix
Doc Text:
Story Points: ---
Clone Of: Environment:
Last Closed: 2005-02-03 08:12:07 UTC Type: ---
Regression: --- Mount Type: ---
Documentation: --- CRM:
Verified Versions: Category: ---
oVirt Team: --- RHEL 7.3 requirements from Atomic Host:
Cloudforms Team: --- Target Upstream Version:
Embargoed:

Description sangu 2005-02-03 05:57:30 UTC
Description of problem:
Cann't open applications:/// , system-settings:/// and preferences:/// with
nautilus.

Version-Release number of selected component (if applicable):
gnome-menus-2.9.90-2

How reproducible:
always

Steps to Reproduce:
1. open nautilus
2. ctrl + l
3. type applications:///
4. Click enter key
  
Actual results:


Expected results:


Additional info:

gnome-vfs2-2.9.90-1 nautilus-2.9.90-1

Comment 1 Mark McLoughlin 2005-02-03 08:12:07 UTC
In GNOME 2.9, the menu system is no longer implemented as a GNOME VFS method, so
these URIs don't exist anymore.

Comment 2 sangu 2005-02-03 09:36:38 UTC
Mark McLoughlin : thank your comment. But "start-here:///" is opened.

Comment 3 Mark McLoughlin 2005-02-03 11:37:06 UTC
Right, start-here:/// is something else entirely.

Look at /etc/gnome-vfs-2.0/modules/default-modules.conf on FC3 and compare with
rawhide:

on FC3:

applications:           menu
applications-all-users: menu
all-applications:       menu
preferences:            menu
preferences-all-users:  menu
all-preferences:        menu
favorites:              desktop
start-here:             desktop
system-settings:        menu
server-settings:        menu

on rawhide:
favorites:              desktop
start-here:             desktop