So if everything works fine on a newly created user, you messed up your profile and if you don’t know what you did, we certainly don’t either and finding out which exact setting you changed is going to take weeks if not months, therefore, we’re going to do the following:
-
Verify that the new user has access to the same groups as your old one by executing groups and comparing the output of both users.
groups twitty groups twitty2
(Where obviously,
twitty
is your old user andtwitty2
is your new one.)
E.G. iftwitty
is a member ofoperator
andtwitty2
isn’t, execute:usermod --append --groups operator twitty2
-
Copy all data files from your old profile into your new one
cp --verbose --recursive --preserve=timestamps /home/twitty/Documents/* /home/twitty2/Documents/
If that worked and you had no errors, remove the documents from your old user:
rm --recursive /home/twitty/Documents/*
repeat for:
Pictures
Videos
Music
.thunderbird
.mozilla/firefox/
- Templates, and everything else that is important to you.
- Linux games like Battle of Wesnoth have their game data stored under
~/.local/share/
E.G.~/.local/share/wesnoth/
-
After everything has been copied over, disable the old user so you cannot accidentally log on to it any more:
usermod --lock twitty
-
If you would have theming or other customisations going on, don’t do everything in one day but do this at the rate of 1 application / theme / … per day and if the same issue crops up again, roll back your last change and thus you’ve now pinpointed the exact setting that made your old user misbehave.
-
in 1 month delete the entire home directory of your old user, but don’t delete the user itself so that in 6 months time files still owned by that user will still show up under its username.
-
If you ever migrate to a new machine, just don’t migrate the old user: only the new one.
-
From now on, start making backups so you can roll back and never have to do this again:
- also please read this as you seem to be new to Linux: