Re: Help -- My CPU is overrun
Thus spake Giles Constant ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): > > hit ctrl-esc. > > woo! I really should spend more time looking at what else is bound to > various keys.. :-) > > I've always been an alt-f2-"xkill" man up until now.. Well, for that matter, you can get an xkill by hitting Cntl-Alt-Esc :-) -- Justin R. Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> PGP/GnuPG Key ID 0xC9C40C31 (preferred) pgpaQvcakhfNG.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: Help -- My CPU is overrun
On Tue, 6 Nov 2001, David Bishop wrote: > hit ctrl-esc. woo! I really should spend more time looking at what else is bound to various keys.. :-) I've always been an alt-f2-"xkill" man up until now.. -- Giles Constant, Systems Programmer Hyperlink Interactive http://www.hyperlink-interactive.co.uk
Re: Help -- My CPU is overrun
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On Tuesday 06 November 2001 04:40 pm, Robert Tilley wrote: > For the last several days my gkrellm has indicated that 100% of my CPU is > being used, even at system rest, by only 72 processes. kdeinit represents > 80% and above of that load, according to top. > > Should kdeinit be consuming this much processor time? > > Note: I run Debian unstable. kdeinit is the name almost all kde-spawned processes will be named. To see what's *actually* using so much proc, hit ctrl-esc. That will pop-up a kde-based "top" that gives you the real name. Off the cuff, I would guess either a konq session out of control, or possible artsd (the only two I ever have do that). HTH. - -- D.A.Bishop -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org iD8DBQE76HU+KEJ4huP2XBERAgieAKDAZetTeOVvqSgkhXcIQYxTt12VYgCgqdS0 rvJpdT3OijuSjdtR1JAyKKc= =N2Sg -END PGP SIGNATURE-
Help -- My CPU is overrun
For the last several days my gkrellm has indicated that 100% of my CPU is being used, even at system rest, by only 72 processes. kdeinit represents 80% and above of that load, according to top. Should kdeinit be consuming this much processor time? Note: I run Debian unstable. -- Comments and information are appreciated. Flames, rants, and other miscellany are routed to /dev/null. Robert Tilley, [EMAIL PROTECTED]