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GNOME Shell extensions have a UUID property; this key lists extensions which should be disabled, even if loaded as part of the current mode. You can also manipulate this list with the EnableExtension and DisableExtension D-Bus methods on org.gnome.Shell. This key takes precedence over the “enabled-extensions” setting.
Allow users to install extensions in their home folder. If disabled, the InstallRemoteExtension D-Bus method will fail, and extensions are only loaded from system directories on startup. It does not affect extensions that are already loaded, so a change only takes full effect on the next login.
GNOME Shell will only load extensions that claim to support the current running version. Enabling this option will disable this check and try to load all extensions regardless of the versions they claim to support.
This key overrides the automatic hiding of the “Log out” action in the system menu for logged-in situations where there is a single, local, non-system user and only a single available session type (e.g. GNOME on Wayland).
The shell will request a password when an encrypted device or a remote filesystem is mounted. If the password can be saved for future use a “Remember Password” checkbox will be present. This key sets the default state of the checkbox.
Some systems support more than two power profiles. In order to still support toggling between two profiles, this key records the last selected non-default profile.
This key determines for which version the “Welcome to GNOME” dialog was last shown. An empty string represents the oldest possible version, and a huge number will represent versions that do not exist yet. This huge number can be used to effectively disable the dialog.