On Tue, 2003-11-11 at 22:39, Joel Konkle-Parker wrote:
> Ron Johnson wrote:
> > On Tue, 2003-11-11 at 20:02, Joel Konkle-Parker wrote:
> > 
> >>Ron Johnson wrote:
> >>
> >>>On Tue, 2003-11-11 at 18:03, Joel Konkle-Parker wrote:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>I'm experiencing periodic sluggishness when I play 3d games like Unreal 
> >>>>Tournament (natively) and Max Payne (WineX). It's not a framerate 
> >>>>problem, because there's no choppiness, it's periodic (a minute of 
> >>>>slowness, a couple minutes of normal, a couple of slow, et c.), and 
> >>>>there's no apparent relation to the complexity of the action when it 
> >>>>happens. The effect is as if the game itself is going into a slow-mo 
> >>>>mode (yes, I know, Max Payne has a slow-mo mode, but that's not what's 
> >>>>going on here).
> >>>>
> >>>>I have a new Dell 5150 with an nVidia GeForce FX 5200 using the latest 
> >>>>nVidia-supplied drivers. I don't have any apps running while I'm playing 
> >>>>the games, save for Gnome and its applets and such.
> >>>>
> >>>>Does anyone have any clue what could be the problem here?
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>Can you ssh in from another system, and run top(1) in P mode?
> >>>Maybe some intermittent process is jumping in.
> >>
> >>Assuming that any such process would be running even when I'm not in a 
> >>game, would simply watching top for a while work?
> > 
> > 
> > Oh, ok, I assumed (yeah, yeah, I know) that these were full-screen
> > games that would make that impossible.
> > 
> > 
> >>Unfortunately I don't have another system to ssh from.
> >>
> >>As a test, I tried playing UT from twm, with none of the Gnome stuff 
> >>running. The same problem occurs. It appears to be kind of progressive: 
> >>it's fine for a good while, then slows for a moment, then is fine for a 
> >>shorter time, then slows, then fine, slows, fine, slows, et c.
> > 
> > 
> > Have you tried any other games, like tuxracer?
> > 
> > 
> >>Just from sitting here watching top for a while, it appears my highest 
> >>memory hog is Mozilla Mail checking for new messages, but that never 
> >>gets above 4%. I've run the game without Mozilla in the background, with 
> >>the same behavior.
> >>
> >>I've never noticed this effect in Windows.
> > 
> > 
> > exim?  SpamAssassin?  PostgreSQL?
> > 
> 
> As a test, I closed all open apps, turned off apache and mysqld, and 
> start up a round of Unreal Tournament. The problem continued, with 
> alternating periods of normal speed and slow speed, with the periods of 
> normal speed getting shorter as time went on.
> 
> The only syslog entries during this time period were:
> 
> --
> Nov 11 23:26:38 Moe gnome-name-server[6073]: server_is_alive: 
> cnx[IDL:GNOME/Terminal/TerminalFactory:1.0] = (nil)
> Nov 11 23:26:38 Moe gnome-name-server[6074]: server_is_alive: 
> cnx[IDL:GNOME/Terminal/TerminalFactory:1.0] = 0x80561c0
> Nov 11 23:26:40 Moe gnome-name-server[6081]: server_is_alive: 
> cnx[IDL:GNOME/Terminal/TerminalFactory:1.0] = (nil)
> Nov 11 23:26:40 Moe gnome-name-server[6082]: server_is_alive: 
> cnx[IDL:GNOME/Terminal/TerminalFactory:1.0] = 0x8056630
> Nov 11 23:27:14 Moe gconfd (joeljkp-5739): GConf server is not in use, 
> shutting down.
> Nov 11 23:27:14 Moe gconfd (joeljkp-5739): Exiting
> Nov 11 23:34:45 Moe gnome-name-server[6162]: server_is_alive: 
> cnx[IDL:GNOME/Terminal/TerminalFactory:1.0] = (nil)
> Nov 11 23:34:45 Moe gnome-name-server[6163]: server_is_alive: 
> cnx[IDL:GNOME/Terminal/TerminalFactory:1.0] = 0x80561c0
> --
> 
> Any idea what these are, and if they could cause something like this?
> 
> Or there some other problem here?

They are related, obviously, to Gnome.  Other than that, I don't
know.

-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Ron Johnson, Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jefferson, LA USA

"Object-oriented programming is an exceptionally bad idea which
could only have originated in California."
Edsger Dijkstra


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