On Thu, Oct 29, 2015 at 07:57:26PM +0100, Onno van der Linden wrote: > On Thu, Oct 29, 2015 at 12:12:27PM -0600, Roy Bixler wrote: > > On Mon, Oct 26, 2015 at 09:59:13PM +0530, Mayuresh wrote: > > > On Mon, Oct 26, 2015 at 09:42:11AM -0600, Roy Bixler wrote: > > > > I had the same problem and found that starting up dbus and avahidaemon > > > > solved it. With older versions of Firefox, this wasn't necessary. > > > > I'd be interested to see if there are other solutions to this, since > > > > I'd rather not run dbus/avahi. > > > > > > Entirely agree. It's scary to do so much for a web browser. Can someone > > > confirm this hypothesis? > > > > > > If true, shouldn't it be a captured as a dependency? > > > > I notice that those are dependencies, but only indirectly. The > > problem direct dependency is pulseaudio, which has dbus and avahi as > > its dependencies. I wonder if it's possible to build a recent Firefox > > using some other audio backend. It seems worthwhile, since pulseaudio > > is a real CPU hog and it might also eliminate the need for dbus/avahi. > > Yes, it's possible to use the oss backend of firefox. > See pkg/50306 > (http://gnats.netbsd.org/cgi-bin/query-pr-single.pl?number=50306) > for the stuff I've been using. Depending on the firefox version > you might wanna change/add some of the media.* defaults via > about:config.
Yes, I rebuilt Firefox 41 using your modifications and it works. No more pulseaudio and CPU load is considerably lighter. Thanks! -- Roy Bixler <rcbix...@nyx.net> "The fundamental principle of science, the definition almost, is this: the sole test of the validity of any idea is experiment." -- Richard P. Feynman