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gnome-control-center

Configure GNOME settings


see also : gsettings

Synopsis

gnome-control-center [OPTION...] [PANEL] [ARG...]


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examples

0
source
            
depends gnome-control-center &&
depends libglade2 &&
depends gnome-panel &&
depends pilot-link

description

gnome-control-center is a graphical user interface to configure various aspects of GNOME.

When run without arguments, the shell displays the overview, which shows all available configuration panels. The overview allows to open individual panels by clicking on them. It also has a search entry to find panels by searching keywords.

It is also possible to specify a panel name as commandline argument to go directly to that panel. Individual panels may accept further arguments to specify which tab to open (for multi-tabbed panels) or which item to display (for panels with lists).

Note that gnome-control-center is not meant to expose each and every setting that is available. The settings that can be found here represent what is considered useful and commonly needed options. For more exotic or uncommon options, you can look at gnome-tweak-tool or the gsettings commandline utility.

options

-?, --help

Prints a short help text and exits.

--version

Prints the program version and exits.

-v, --verbose

Enables verbose mode.

-o, --overview

Opens the overview.

exit status

On success 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise.

panels

The following panel names can be specified:

background

The background panel lets you set your desktop background.

bluetooth

The bluetooth panel lets you configure your computer's Bluetooth adapter, and pair the computer with Bluetooth keyboards, phones, etc.

color

The color panel can calibrate monitors, web cams and printers for accurate color reproduction.

datetime

The datetime panel lets you set the timezone and time format.

Some operations in this panel affect all user accounts on the computer and require privieges.

display

The display panel configures the resolution and arrangement of monitors and laptop panels. Note that monitors can be rearranged by drag-and-drop, and you can change which monitor is your main display by dragging the black bar.

info

The info panel shows a general overview of the system configuration. It also lets you change the default applications for various tasks and the handling of removable media.

keyboard

The keyboard panel can change how the keyboard reacts to key presses and lets you change keyboard shortcuts or create custom shortcuts.

You can open this panel on a specific tab by passing typing or shortcuts as extra argument.

mouse

The mouse panel can change how mice and touchpads react to user input.

network

The network panel provides a view of available network devices (wired, wireless or mobile) and their current configuration. It also provides a way to create new VPN connections and configure proxy settings.

online-accounts

The online-accounts panel shows your configured online accounts and lets you add or remove accounts.

power

The power panel shows the fill level of batteries and can configure what happens when the computer is idle or runs out of battery.

printers

The printers panel shows all known printers and their status. It is possible to inspect queued print jobs and add new printers.

Some operations in this panel require privileges.

region

The region panel contains regional settings such as the display language, formatting for times, dates, numbers, and input sources.

You can open this panel on a specific tab by passing language, formats, layouts or system as extra argument.

screen

The screen panel contains settings that control the screen brightness and screen lock behavior.

sound

The sound panel shows all known sound devices and their configuration, including volume and balance settings.

You can open this panel on a specific tab by passing output, input, hardware, effects or applications as extra argument.

universal-access

The universal-access panel contains settings for accessible technologies such as the screen reader, magnifier, screen keyboard and AccessX options.

user-accounts

The user-accounts panel shows all user accounts that exist on the computer and allows to change them in some ways, such as changing the user name, password or permissions. It also allows to create or remove accounts.

Some operations in this panel require privileges.

wacom

the wacom panel shows connected Wacom graphics tablets and lets you calibrate and configure such devices.

gnome control center

[OPTION...] [PANEL] [ARG...]
see also

gsettings

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