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<page xmlns="http://projectmallard.org/1.0/" xmlns:its="http://www.w3.org/2005/11/its" type="topic" style="task" id="dconf-custom-defaults"> <info> <link type="guide" xref="setup" /> <link type="seealso" xref="dconf-profiles" /> <link type="seealso" xref="dconf-lockdown" /> <link type="seealso" xref="dconf" /> <revision pkgversion="3.30" date="2019-02-08" status="draft"/> <credit type="author copyright"> <name>Ryan Lortie</name> <email>desrt@desrt.ca</email> <years>2012</years> </credit> <credit type="author copyright"> <name>Jeremy Bicha</name> <email>jbicha@ubuntu.com</email> <years>2012</years> </credit> <credit type="author copyright"> <name>Jim Campbell</name> <email>jwcampbell@gmail.com</email> <years>2012</years> </credit> <credit type="editor"> <name>Jana Svarova</name> <email>jana.svarova@gmail.com</email> <years>2013</years> </credit> <credit type="copyright editor"> <name>Ekaterina Gerasimova</name> <email>kittykat3756@gmail.com</email> <years>2013</years> </credit> <credit type="editor"> <name>Petr Kovar</name> <email>pknbe@volny.cz</email> <years>2019</years> </credit> <include href="legal.xml" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"/> <desc>Set system-wide default settings using <sys its:translate="no">dconf</sys> profiles.</desc> </info> <title>Custom default values for system settings</title> <p>System-wide default settings can be set by providing a default for a key in a <sys its:translate="no">dconf</sys> profile. These defaults can be overridden by the user.</p> <section id="example"> <title>Set a default value</title> <p>To set a default for a key, the <sys>user</sys> profile must exist and the value for the key must be added to a <sys its:translate="no">dconf</sys> database.</p> <comment> <cite date="2012-08-14">Jeremy Bicha</cite> <p>You don't have to use "local" as the profile name. You can even have different profiles for different users. This isn't mentioned because this functionality needs something like accountsservice integration to enforce this. gnome-control-center integration would be great too.</p> </comment> <steps> <title>An example setting the default background</title> <item> <p>Create the <file its:translate="no">user</file> profile:</p> <listing its:translate="no"> <title><file>/etc/dconf/profile/user</file></title> <code> user-db:user system-db:local </code> </listing> <p><input its:translate="no">local</input> is the name of a <sys its:translate="no">dconf</sys> database.</p> </item> <item> <p>Create a <em>keyfile</em> for the <input its:translate="no">local</input> database which contains the default settings:</p> <listing its:translate="no"> <title><file>/etc/dconf/db/local.d/01-background</file></title> <code> # <span its:translate="yes">dconf path</span> [org/gnome/desktop/background] # <span its:translate="yes">dconf key names and their corresponding values</span> picture-uri='file:///usr/local/share/backgrounds/wallpaper.jpg' picture-options='scaled' primary-color='000000' secondary-color='FFFFFF' </code> </listing> </item> <include href="dconf-snippets.xml" xpointer="xpointer(/*/*[@xml:id='dconf-update'])" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"/> </steps> <note> <p>When the <sys its:translate="no">user</sys> profile is created or changed, the user will need to log out and log in again before the changes will be applied.</p> </note> <p>If you want to avoid creating the <sys its:translate="no">user</sys> profile, you can use the <cmd>dconf</cmd> command-line utility to read and write individual values or entire directories from and to a <sys its:translate="no">dconf</sys> database. For more information, see the <link its:translate="no" href="man:dconf"><cmd>dconf</cmd>(1)</link> man page.</p> </section> </page>