Applications like EndeavorOS Welcome, Tor browser won’t show their actual icons on the taskbar after Gnome 46 update. I have observed that applications launched by invoking the binary through terminal using ./ behaves this way. (Not sure about the EOS Welcome) Is there any fix to this?
OS: EndeavourOS Linux x86_64. DE: GNOME 46.1. Icons: Papirus [GTK2/3].
[Edit: This is not a freshly installed system. Icons were working fine till Gnome 45.]
Gnome reads the icon name from the desktop file. You have to find the desktop file of this app, check its icon name there, and make sure there is a similarly named icon available in the icon pack.
To find the desktop file: open Looking Glass (Alt+F2 -> type
lg
Enter-> click Windows on the top right) you should see your open windows there, it should show the name of the desktop file, even if you started from terminal. You can find the desktop file in~/.local/share/applications
or in/usr/share/applications
. Open the file, and you should see a line starting withIcon
, this is what Gnome reads.To check if a similarly named icon exists search for that name in
/usr/share/icons/
. If you can’t find a named icon, than the problem is in your icon pack, you should open an issue there. If you want to change the icon to something else, change the line in the desktop file.More info in the glorious Arch Wiki: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Desktop_entries
But it was working fine until gnome 45. I tried multiple icons packs quogir, adwaita (default), papirus. Everything behaves the same. The same cog icon.
Check what is in the desktop file first. If the icon name is misspelled there, it won’t work with any icon pack ever.
I know how this works because the same happened to me with Thunderbird, at some release they changed the icon name in the desktop file, but it wasn’t updated in my icon packs, I expect something similar here as well. Without checking this you can’t be sure who’s fault is this, but I guess the app’s developers or maintainers messed up their desktop file some way.
Try creating a new user profile and see if the error is reproduced there.
created a new user, and tested under it, but its the same.
Ah ok. Then it’s definitely a bug with Gnome. Sometimes the user configs can get messed up and make Gnome act weird, but I guess it’s not the case here.
Maybe you can roll back up a previous version? What’s your distro?
Endeavour OS. Unfortunately I cannot rollback, not using btrfs (using LUKS). Anyeay I dont have a previous snapshot.
you should make backups from time to time. even a half assed backup is better than none. like you could just get a cheap USB drive and tar your whole system onto it. nowadays it’s faster than one might think. USB drives are availible up to terabytes and the newer USB ports are really fast.
of course, there are better solutions, but this is quick and easy and helps with everything but broken boot loader or broken partition layout.
You’ve definitely got a custom config doing something that conflicted with the base configs needed to install for 46.
- Get logs, read logs.
- Try new user and login.
- disable custom plugins and see if it’s all normal
I have to check in the journalctl right?
You may need to enable debug logging for KDE. Just search around and you’ll find what you need to do.
It looks like a third party issue rather than Gnome issue…
Maybe you just need to wait for an update that fiz it