Recover Gnome Terminal profiles from gconf directories and export to a dconf load script. Useful when recovering profiles from Ubuntu 14.04 or less.
Depends on python2.7. The script does the best effort to recover all options, some of them don't have sense anymore in newest versions of gterminal. For more information you can check https://github.com/GNOME/gnome-terminal/blob/master/src/migration.c.
usage: gterminal_tool.py [-h] [--load-current-profiles]
[--load-gconf-profiles-from GCONF_PATH]
[--skip-duplicate-names]
[--set-backup-profile-default] [--set [SET]]
[--execute-action] [--execute-delete]
Gnome Terminal config restore
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--load-current-profiles
Load current dconf profiles
--load-gconf-profiles-from GCONF_PATH
Load gconf profiles from path
--skip-duplicate-names
Skip restoring already existent profile names
--set-backup-profile-default
Set new default profile to GConf default
--set [SET] Set all profile option to value. For ex:
--set="font='Consolas 13'" --set="default-size-
columns=136" --set="default-size-rows=44"
--execute-action Run command that updates dconf with command result, by
default we just print new dconf to console, and you
can manually load with "dconf load"
--execute-delete Delete previous existing profiles
Add old profiles to current list, ignore if same name exist, print to stdout:
python gterminal_tool.py --load-current-profiles --skip-duplicate-names \
--load-gconf-profiles-from homefolder_backup/.gconf/apps/gnome-terminal \
> new_dconf_profiles
You can now review new_dconf_profiles
and then load it with:
/usr/bin/dconf load /org/gnome/terminal/legacy/profiles:/ < new_dconf_profiles
Update current profiles properties at once:
python gterminal_tool.py --load-current-profiles --set="font='Consolas 13'" \
--set="default-size-columns=170" --set="default-size-rows=50" \
--execute-delete --execute-action
apps/
├── gnome-terminal
│ ├── %gconf.xml
│ ├── global
│ │ └── %gconf.xml
│ └── profiles
│ ├── Default
│ │ └── %gconf.xml
│ ├── %gconf.xml
│ ├── Profile1
│ │ └── %gconf.xml
│ ├── Profile10
│ │ └── %gconf.xml
│ ├── Profile11
│ │ └── %gconf.xml
Run it and navigate to /org/gnome/terminal/legacy/profiles:/
to see current profiles.
$ sudo apt-get install dconf-editor
$ dconf-editor