By default, it’s Right.Īll the Titlebar buttons should show up on the left side of the Titlebar from now on. Then on the bottom right, on “Titlebar Buttons” section, flip the Placement Switch to Left. If you prefer the Titlebar buttons to be on the left of the Titlebar as in Ubuntu 16.04, open GNOME Tweak Tool and go to Windows. In Ubuntu 17.10, the buttons are in the right side of the Titlebar. On earlier versions of Ubuntu, the buttons were on the left side of the Titlebar. On Ubuntu 17.10, the default placement of the Titlebar buttons has changed. Now search for “tweak” and click on the Tweaks icon as shown below.Ĭhange the Position of the Titlebar Buttons: Just click on Show Applications icon on the bottom left. Once it’s installed, you can start GNOME Tweak Tool from GNOME 3 Application Menu.
If you don’t have it installed already, you can install GNOME Tweak Tool using the following command: $ sudo apt-get update In this article, I will use GNOME Tweak Tool to customize the GNOME 3 Desktop Environment on Ubuntu 17.10 Artful Aardvark.
In this article, I will show you how to customize the GNOME 3 Desktop Environment on Ubuntu 17.10 Artful Aardvark. The icons, theme, cursor theme and many other things can be changed. You can tweak it to fit your everyday need. GNOME 3 is a customizable desktop environment. Ubuntu 17.10 Artful Aardvark comes with GNOME 3 Desktop pre-installed.
Maybe they were referring to the include/config.php file where cacti stores a password in plain text.maybe a special character could throw off the way that config file is read.How to Customize GNOME 3 Desktop Environment on Ubuntu 17.10 I read from another website not to use special characters in the MySQL user passwords for some reason, so I just used Alpha/Numeric in case that mattered as well. I noticed it was not starting up during the installation process nor starting on boot. The command should now show MySQL as running after a reboot). (After a restart sometime, after you finish the install, run the command “mysqladmin -u root -p status” to check the status of mysql (run as root if needed). Now install the following packages for Cacti setup on your Ubuntu server with the help of given below command.ġ) Before installing cacti in Step 3, restart/start the mysql service with the command “service mysql restart” (this will probably start it for the first time but should still work, otherwise just use ‘start’ instead of ‘restart’ in the command).Ģ) Run the command “update-rc.d mysql defaults” which starts mysql on boot.
# add-apt-repository 'deb trusty universe' # apt-get update
So, we will be using the 'MySQL-Server-5.6' by adding it repository and then update the system with below commands. # apt-get update # apt-get upgradeīefore installing the LAMP packages, please do note that Cacti do not support MySQL-Server-5.7 as yet. Login to your Ubuntu server and run below command to update your Ubuntu server. The basic requirement for Cacti is that you must have LAMP stack setup on your server, before getting started with the installation of Cacti.
You can also add plugins to the Cacti for enabling the possibility to integrate other free tools like ntop or php weathermap. Cacti's installation is very simple and you don't need to be expert to complete its setup. Using Cacti you can easily monitor the performance of your computers, networks, servers, router, switch, services (apache, mysql, dns, harddisk, mail server), SANs, applications, weather measurements, etc.