Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-04-02 Thread Stephan Binner
On Sunday, 1. April 2007 17:50:36 Rajko M. wrote:

 It is Kerry Beagle.
 Little highlight would be helpful to new users.

Just added to Kerry SVN that the background color changes on hover.

Bye,
   Steve
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-04-02 Thread Rajko M.
On Monday 02 April 2007 05:19, Stephan Binner wrote:
 On Sunday, 1. April 2007 17:50:36 Rajko M. wrote:
  It is Kerry Beagle.
  Little highlight would be helpful to new users.

 Just added to Kerry SVN that the background color changes on hover.

 Bye,
Steve

Thanks.

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-04-01 Thread Joe Shaw

Hi,

On 3/31/07, Rajko M. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

The right hand side list of commands has somewhat unusual layout.
I expected that is just textual information about setup.
In setup I couldn't find anything that resembles, so I came on unusual idea to
click on right hand pane entry.

Bingo, text are active links to commands!

Beagle looks quite different afterwards.

I'll check Beagle in 10.3, is there any improvements in layout,
if not it would be very important to make it look different,
classic buttons seems to be first choice.


I'm not sure I understand.  Are you using the KDE front end (called
Kerry) or the GNOME one?

Joe
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-04-01 Thread Rajko M.
On Sunday 01 April 2007 10:11, Joe Shaw wrote:
 Hi,

 On 3/31/07, Rajko M. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  The right hand side list of commands has somewhat unusual layout.
  I expected that is just textual information about setup.
  In setup I couldn't find anything that resembles, so I came on unusual
  idea to click on right hand pane entry.
 
  Bingo, text are active links to commands!
 
  Beagle looks quite different afterwards.
 
  I'll check Beagle in 10.3, is there any improvements in layout,
  if not it would be very important to make it look different,
  classic buttons seems to be first choice.

 I'm not sure I understand.  Are you using the KDE front end (called
 Kerry) or the GNOME one?

 Joe

It is Kerry Beagle. 

I like clean look, and present soultion is very clean. 

The problem is that the first time users something has to tell that they can 
select Kerry Beagle action using this list. Somehow I succeeded to run over 
links fast enough to miss cursor change, or to hover over the title. 
Little highlight would be helpful to new users.  
 
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread James Knott
Kai Ponte wrote:
 I'm waiting for the day when I can push my insignia, say, computer! and a 
 nice lady's voice comes on asking me what I want.

   
Tea, Earl Grey, Hot.  ;-)


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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Kai Ponte
On Saturday 31 March 2007 04:41:23 am James Knott wrote:
 Kai Ponte wrote:
  I'm waiting for the day when I can push my insignia, say, computer! and
  a nice lady's voice comes on asking me what I want.

 Tea, Earl Grey, Hot.  ;-)

LOL!


I remember the Infocom game, Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, where one of 
the goals was to find Tea. It is was powered the infinite improbability 
drive - or something like that.

I wonder if there's a z-somethingoranother emulator for SUSE. I used to have 
one in windows and have the infocom binaries somewhere on a floppy or CD...


Hey! I just realized my KMail spell checker is highlighting SUSE.   

Um, guys?


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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Rajko M.
On Friday 30 March 2007 14:47, Joe Shaw wrote:

 I really suspect that for a lot of people it's the cron job that gives
 them such a negative impression, because that is designed to be a once
 off, middle-of-the-night process and it doesn't do any sort of
 throttling based on system load.

The guess is close enough. 
It is actually the I/O that is slow and faster CPU doesn't help much. 
Problem is when 2 or more programs are trying to access HD at the same time, 
and that happens on the first boot. 

Tweaking Beagle alone is not a solution. 
From your posts it seems that was done quite some work to keep it modest in 
requirements. 

I still have Beagle running and I can't complain on it's regular activity, but 
because of negative opinions that I have picked up around, I didn't tried to 
configure it. I'll see with 10.3 alpha. 

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Rajko M.
On Saturday 31 March 2007 09:22, Kai Ponte wrote:
...
 Hey! I just realized my KMail spell checker is highlighting SUSE.

 Um, guys?

Let me see 
SuSE ... highlighted
S.u.S.E. not

I guess they hadn't time to update the spellchecker ;-)

PS.
i.m.b.i.s. is not highlighted too which is German word imbis (kind of place 
where one can buy a food) with dots added. 

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Joe Shaw

Hi,

On 3/31/07, Rajko M. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

It is actually the I/O that is slow and faster CPU doesn't help much.
Problem is when 2 or more programs are trying to access HD at the same time,
and that happens on the first boot.


Indeed.  As CPUs get faster, the amount of time applications spend
doing IO approaches 100%.

Beagle isn't started at boot though; the cron job is started 15
minutes after the first boot, and the per-user daemon is started
something like 2 or 3 minutes after login (to avoid slowing it down).
So slow boot times (which I agree have gotten worse) have nothing to
do with Beagle.

There is some data and analysis on the boot process here:

   http://en.opensuse.org/Boot_time

In fact, in there I say that a parallel boot process doesn't help much
(and in fact may even hurt us) because most of the time is spend doing
concurrent IO.

Joe
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Rajko M.
On Saturday 31 March 2007 10:04, Joe Shaw wrote:
 Hi,

 On 3/31/07, Rajko M. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  It is actually the I/O that is slow and faster CPU doesn't help much.
  Problem is when 2 or more programs are trying to access HD at the same
  time, and that happens on the first boot.

 Indeed.  As CPUs get faster, the amount of time applications spend
 doing IO approaches 100%.

Yes. 
To load 1 GB from HD with 50 MB/s is 20s, after that it goes fast, but if 
there is 2000 files in that 1 GB, which can easily happen, the speed is down.

I was wondering why is Knoppix booting faster from CD than from HD, but before 
above sentence I never tried to think about I/O impact on boot process.

Maybe we ^H^H^H :-) you, developers, can consider booting the image in the 
similar way Knoppix does. Suspend to disk should be the right way, but right 
now it doesn't work here. I suspect that graphic (nVidia)  initialization 
fails. 

 Beagle isn't started at boot though; the cron job is started 15
 minutes after the first boot, and the per-user daemon is started
 something like 2 or 3 minutes after login (to avoid slowing it down).
 So slow boot times (which I agree have gotten worse) have nothing to
 do with Beagle.

I mentioned that a lot of negative opinions picked up around kept me from 
giving a test ride to Beagle. 

 There is some data and analysis on the boot process here:

 http://en.opensuse.org/Boot_time

 In fact, in there I say that a parallel boot process doesn't help much
 (and in fact may even hurt us) because most of the time is spend doing
 concurrent IO.

After this discussion, it seems clear that concurrent access to HD is bad. 
I'll try to see is it possible to switch to old style in 10.2 and post result 
on above page.
 
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Patrick Shanahan
* Rajko M. [EMAIL PROTECTED] [03-31-07 11:03]:
 On Saturday 31 March 2007 09:22, Kai Ponte wrote:
 ...
  Hey! I just realized my KMail spell checker is highlighting SUSE.
 
  Um, guys?
 
 Let me see 
 SuSE ... highlighted

maybe because it's not SuSE anymore ???

  :^)
  
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Kai Ponte
On Saturday 31 March 2007 08:49:46 am Rajko M. wrote:
 On Saturday 31 March 2007 10:04, Joe Shaw wrote:

  There is some data and analysis on the boot process here:
 
  http://en.opensuse.org/Boot_time
 
  In fact, in there I say that a parallel boot process doesn't help much
  (and in fact may even hurt us) because most of the time is spend doing
  concurrent IO.

 After this discussion, it seems clear that concurrent access to HD is bad.
 I'll try to see is it possible to switch to old style in 10.2 and post
 result on above page.

Just keep in mind what is loading when booting and just be glad you're not 
booting an IBM zSeries machine. :P

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Rajko M.
On Saturday 31 March 2007 11:19, Kai Ponte wrote:

 Just keep in mind what is loading when booting and just be glad you're not
 booting an IBM zSeries machine. :P

Is it longer than booting ext3 after 60 days ;-)

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Kai Ponte
On Saturday 31 March 2007 10:05:22 am Rajko M. wrote:
 On Saturday 31 March 2007 11:19, Kai Ponte wrote:
  Just keep in mind what is loading when booting and just be glad you're
  not booting an IBM zSeries machine. :P

 Is it longer than booting ext3 after 60 days ;-)

Hmm...good to know. Will stick with Reiser.

Let's see - the two times I actually was involved in booting the z890 at my 
last company, it took about two hours each.

I think that's why they never let me to on-call support. My answer to all 
abend situations was - IPL.

My SUSE (there's that spell checker again!)  machines get booted at least 
once - if not several - times a day depending on what I'm doing. 

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Carlos F Lange
On Friday 30 March 2007 13:38, Joe Shaw wrote:
 Hi,

 On 3/29/07, Carlos F Lange [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On Thursday 29 March 2007 08:14, Peter Van Lone wrote:
   though I think there should be options to control WHEN the
   initial and on-going indexing occurs. Basically, we should easily
   be able to get to menus that let us control all aspects of both
   services.
 
  I second that!
  Although beagled-helper runs with nice of 15 (it is at zero now,
  but I remember it was 15 when it was working) it still competes
  with other resources. And on a laptop, you want to have complete
  control because of the power usage too and maybe set the indexing
  when the laptop is plugged in, in addition to a particular time.

 There is an option in the Beagle preferences to turn off all indexing
 when on battery power.  I believe this is in the version that shipped
 with 10.2.

Oh, I see that now. So, this aspect should be covered. 
But the default seems to be to keep search while on battery (at least on 
my desktop; I don't have my laptop with me now) and I would definitely 
suggest this to be reverted, because the hard disk is a big battery 
consumer. 

 Maybe we can add additional control to this.  What did you guys have
 in mind?

OK, here are my thoughts. 
The instantaneous search feature looks cool, but has very little 
practical relevance IMHO.
I think I'll never really need to search the e-mails, or the IM chats or 
documents I'm writing right now. If I want to search a new document I 
just obtained, usually the built-in search in the document viewer is 
good enough. The only case that comes to mind, when I would need Beagle 
to search something right away, is the case of data mining many new 
docs, such as the 1600 PDFs I mentioned before. Beagle becomes most 
useful when I am trying to find old documents or messages, that I don't 
know where I have placed. For these cases, it would be enough for the 
indexer to run in preset times as a cron job. I would like to see the 
config GUI offer the user to run the indexer at a set time (then ask 
for the time) or continuously while logged in.

In addition, right-clicking in the taskbar icon (Kerry in my case) 
should offer the option to start and to stop the deamon immediately. 
This would allow me to have those 1600 new files indexed right away in 
that one case I needed it, while the usual indexing happens when I 
sleep.

I think these 2 additional features would satisfy the increased control 
that Peter mentioned and I supported above.

  Another thing I just noticed. My .beagle/ directory is 1.6GB!
  Is this normal? Can the size of this cache be controlled?
  (My home is ~40GB, ~15GB of that are pictures, sounds and binary
  data.)

 The size of the index obviously can vary a lot with the type of data,
 but we estimate that the index is 5-10% the size of your data, so you
 fall into that range.

 You can reclaim some space by deleting the ~/.beagle/TextCache
 directory.  That directory is used to quickly extract text for
 showing snippets in the user interface, but isn't essential to the
 running of Beagle.  If you delete it, you won't get snippets for most
 documents.  It is probably a couple hundred MB.

Here are the sizes of my .beagle directory:
~/.beagle du -sh *
8.0Kconfig
484MIndexes
265MLog
0   socket
0   socket-helper
1.2GTextCache
2.1MToIndex


I don't see the size of TextCache as a problem on my desktop, but 
definitely on the laptop, where disk space is tight. May I suggest 
another option in the settings, where I can choose not to keep a 
TextCache (with a nice help info explaining to the user its 
consequences). Couldn't it also be mildly compressed, so that 
decompression time is negligible, but space requirements are improved?

Another thing that could definitely be cleaned up is the Log. I have 
logs of a week or so (oldest is March 24) and the Log directory is 
250MB  big!

Thanks,
Carlos FL
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Adam Tauno Williams
though I think there should be options to control WHEN the
initial and on-going indexing occurs. Basically, we should easily
be able to get to menus that let us control all aspects of both
services.
   I second that!
   Although beagled-helper runs with nice of 15 (it is at zero now,
   but I remember it was 15 when it was working) it still competes
   with other resources. And on a laptop, you want to have complete
   control because of the power usage too and maybe set the indexing
   when the laptop is plugged in, in addition to a particular time
  There is an option in the Beagle preferences to turn off all indexing
  when on battery power.  I believe this is in the version that shipped
  with 10.2.
 Oh, I see that now. So, this aspect should be covered. 
 But the default seems to be to keep search while on battery (at least on 
 my desktop; I don't have my laptop with me now) and I would definitely 
 suggest this to be reverted, because the hard disk is a big battery 
 consumer. 

Since Beagle will be indexing only files that just changed,  my
experience is that with sufficient RAM the I/O load increase cause by
Beagle is pretty trivial.  If your system is starved for RAM then of
course if will grind the drives.  

A previous message in this thread mentions two machines each with 256Mb!
Of course Zen and/or Beagle thrash such a machine.  Maybe the sanity of
systems with 900MHz/1GHz processors having only 256Mb should be what is
in question.

The openSUSE manual says: At least 256 MB; 512 MB recommended  If
someone is at the least end of the scale they should expect
concomitant performance.

  Maybe we can add additional control to this.  What did you guys have
  in mind?
 OK, here are my thoughts. 
 The instantaneous search feature looks cool, but has very little 
 practical relevance IMHO.
 I think I'll never really need to search the e-mails, or the IM chats or 
 documents I'm writing right now. If I want to search a new document I 
 just obtained, usually the built-in search in the document viewer is 
 good enough. The only case that comes to mind, when I would need Beagle 
 to search something right away, is the case of data mining many new 
 docs, such as the 1600 PDFs I mentioned before. Beagle becomes most 
 useful when I am trying to find old documents or messages, that I don't 
 know where I have placed. 

I think this depends on how you use Beagle.  Beagle is most useful if it
is the first place you go rather than trying to browse to a file.  If I
start downloading documents in a web browser, Beagle knows about them,
and their contents, right away.

 For these cases, it would be enough for the 
 indexer to run in preset times as a cron job. 

You'd have to create  a cron-job for each user;  which would mean the
user would have to be in the cron/at group, etc...  And for laptop users
where the system is erratically booted it would be problematic.

 In addition, right-clicking in the taskbar icon (Kerry in my case) 
 should offer the option to start and to stop the deamon immediately.

I agree here.
 
 This would allow me to have those 1600 new files indexed right away in 
 that one case I needed it, while the usual indexing happens when I 
 sleep.
 I think these 2 additional features would satisfy the increased control 
 that Peter mentioned and I supported above.

I don't think there is any real serious problem desperate to be solved.
It seems to be working very well with minimal impact on systems with
sufficient resources.

 I don't see the size of TextCache as a problem on my desktop, but 
 definitely on the laptop, where disk space is tight. May I suggest 
 another option in the settings, where I can choose not to keep a 
 TextCache (with a nice help info explaining to the user its 
 consequences). 

Agree.

 Couldn't it also be mildly compressed, so that 
 decompression time is negligible, but space requirements are improved?
 Another thing that could definitely be cleaned up is the Log. I have 
 logs of a week or so (oldest is March 24) and the Log directory is 
 250MB  big!

My .beagle/Log is a scant 8Mb on my Laptop which I use all the time. 

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread James Knott
Kai Ponte wrote:
 On Saturday 31 March 2007 04:41:23 am James Knott wrote:
   
 Kai Ponte wrote:
 
 I'm waiting for the day when I can push my insignia, say, computer! and
 a nice lady's voice comes on asking me what I want.
   
 Tea, Earl Grey, Hot.  ;-)
 

 LOL!


 I remember the Infocom game, Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, where one of 
 the goals was to find Tea. It is was powered the infinite improbability 
 drive - or something like that.

   

It was also the favourite beverage of Captain Pickard on Star Trek TNG.


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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread David Brodbeck
Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
 A previous message in this thread mentions two machines each with 256Mb!
 Of course Zen and/or Beagle thrash such a machine.  Maybe the sanity of
 systems with 900MHz/1GHz processors having only 256Mb should be what is
 in question.

Yeah, those were mine.  When it's a small-format system (a laptop or
set-top-box) you don't always have a lot of choice.  Beagle runs fine on
the former, actually, and I don't need it on the latter.  My complaint
was mainly about Zen.  While it's clear to me why beagle uses the
resources it does, it's not clear to me why Zen needs so much RAM and so
much CPU time to accomplish its job.  Is it really reasonable for a
service to use 100% CPU constantly for hours on end just to check for
updates?
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Larry Stotler

On 3/31/07, Adam Tauno Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

A previous message in this thread mentions two machines each with 256Mb!
Of course Zen and/or Beagle thrash such a machine.  Maybe the sanity of
systems with 900MHz/1GHz processors having only 256Mb should be what is
in question.


I have several machines running v10.2 with 256MB RAM, an Ahlon 1100, a
P3/500 with 160MB running KDE, and a Xeon 2.67Ghz with 128MB as a
server.  My son's PowerBook G3/266 has 320MB RAM, as does my Thinkpad
390X with a P3/500.


The openSUSE manual says: At least 256 MB; 512 MB recommended  If
someone is at the least end of the scale they should expect
concomitant performance.


You can run a text mode install with 64MB RAM.  You just have to have
256MB for the install.  I've run several older machines with 64 or
96MB running text with no issues.


I think this depends on how you use Beagle.  Beagle is most useful if it
is the first place you go rather than trying to browse to a file.  If I
start downloading documents in a web browser, Beagle knows about them,
and their contents, right away.


Yep, I remove Beagle and ZMD as well as OpenOffice during install.
Systems run really well without all those bloated programs running.


I don't think there is any real serious problem desperate to be solved.
It seems to be working very well with minimal impact on systems with
sufficient resources.


And a lot of people are looking at Linux because it runs well on older
systems.  Having a base install with ZMD and Beagle isn't going to
create a good user experience for a first time user wanting to move
away from Windows and the Vista upgrade requirements if you consider a
2Ghz+ system a sufficient system.  I have only 1 machine faster than
2Ghz.  Why should I have a 3Ghz machine when my Dual Xeon 500Mhz
machine with 512MB runs just fine after removing things I don't need?
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Rajko M.
On Saturday 31 March 2007 12:52, Kai Ponte wrote:
 On Saturday 31 March 2007 10:05:22 am Rajko M. wrote:
  On Saturday 31 March 2007 11:19, Kai Ponte wrote:
   Just keep in mind what is loading when booting and just be glad you're
   not booting an IBM zSeries machine. :P
 
  Is it longer than booting ext3 after 60 days ;-)

 Hmm...good to know. Will stick with Reiser.

Hey, that is only once every 60 days :-)
but it is good that is only 30 GB partition ^_^ 

 Let's see - the two times I actually was involved in booting the z890 at my
 last company, it took about two hours each.

Hmm, you can get something similar with SUSE 9.3 on 250 MHz / 128 MB and some 
old, slow hard disk if you install full blown KDE. 

 I think that's why they never let me to on-call support. My answer to all
 abend situations was - IPL.

 My SUSE (there's that spell checker again!)  machines get booted at least
 once - if not several - times a day depending on what I'm doing.

As you use KMail, see in Tools - Spelling and teach the checker what is 
right ;-)

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Kai Ponte
On Saturday 31 March 2007 06:35:52 pm Rajko M. wrote:

  My SUSE (there's that spell checker again!)  machines get booted at least
  once - if not several - times a day depending on what I'm doing.

 As you use KMail, see in Tools - Spelling and teach the checker what is
 right ;-)

Ahh, thank you.

I had looked for such a configuration in the main menu but it wasn't there. I 
see the compose menu is different.

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Rajko M.
On Saturday 31 March 2007 10:49, Rajko M. wrote:
  So slow boot times (which I agree have gotten worse) have nothing to
  do with Beagle.

 I mentioned that a lot of negative opinions picked up around kept me from
 giving a test ride to Beagle.

But after configuring it to pick up few folders, I'll expand the list. 

The right hand side list of commands has somewhat unusual layout. 
I expected that is just textual information about setup. 
In setup I couldn't find anything that resembles, so I came on unusual idea to 
click on right hand pane entry. 

Bingo, text are active links to commands! 

Beagle looks quite different afterwards. 

I'll check Beagle in 10.3, is there any improvements in layout, 
if not it would be very important to make it look different, 
classic buttons seems to be first choice. 

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Larry Stotler

On 3/31/07, Rajko M. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hmm, you can get something similar with SUSE 9.3 on 250 MHz / 128 MB and some
old, slow hard disk if you install full blown KDE.


Nope - I installed v10.1 on a PPro 200Mhz with 128MB EDO RAM and a
slow 4GB IDE and I had a desktop in about 5 minutes.  Now, A 486SX-25
with 32MB RAM would be bad.  Actually, I beta tested v10.0 on a
PowerMac 7500/100 with the original 601 chip at 100Mhz, no L2, and
80MB RAM with the onboard 2MB VRAM.  That was still usable to an
extent.  The 40MB/s SCSI drive helped out so say the least.
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Kai Ponte
On Saturday 31 March 2007 02:45:31 pm James Knott wrote:

 
  Tea, Earl Grey, Hot.  ;-)

  I remember the Infocom game, Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, where one
  of the goals was to find Tea. It is was powered the infinite
  improbability drive - or something like that.

 It was also the favourite beverage of Captain Pickard on Star Trek TNG.

Ahh!

I didn't get the reference. My apologies.  My six-year-old is now discovering 
the original series on Nick at Nite. 

(I'm sure this is SUSE-related *somehow* right?)

Oh, right...

http://www.perfectreign.com/stuff/suse/2007/20070330_kwest.jpg

...there we go! SUSE (spelled right now) related content.

If any one wants a Z5 interpreter RPM file for 10.1 or a few games in .z5 
format I've got them: hitchhikers, planetfall, zork, freefall.

-- 
kai

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-31 Thread Rajko M.
On Saturday 31 March 2007 21:58, Larry Stotler wrote:
 On 3/31/07, Rajko M. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Hmm, you can get something similar with SUSE 9.3 on 250 MHz / 128 MB and
  some old, slow hard disk if you install full blown KDE.

 Nope - I installed v10.1 on a PPro 200Mhz with 128MB EDO RAM and a
 slow 4GB IDE and I had a desktop in about 5 minutes.  Now, A 486SX-25
 with 32MB RAM would be bad.  Actually, I beta tested v10.0 on a
 PowerMac 7500/100 with the original 601 chip at 100Mhz, no L2, and
 80MB RAM with the onboard 2MB VRAM.  That was still usable to an
 extent.  The 40MB/s SCSI drive helped out so say the least.

It was long ago as 9.3 was brand new, so I really can't recall times, but it 
was something like 20-30 minutes to see the desktop. That board had obviously 
more problems, but at the end it was working. It could be disabled cache, 
really slow hard drive, very little RAM on graphic adapter etc. 

Later I did the same on 350 MHz and 128 MB, and it was slow, but nothing 
comparable to one mentioned. I guess it was more like in your example.

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http://en.opensuse.org/Portal 
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-30 Thread Joe Shaw

Hi Randall,

Sorry for the delay.  It's been a very busy week in the Cambridge
office, and I've been pretty overwhelmed by the feedback on the thread
so far. (49 messages!)

On 3/29/07, Randall R Schulz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On Thursday 29 March 2007 11:20, Joe Shaw wrote:
 ... I could rattle
 off a long list of bug fixes and go into technical detail about them
 ...

I'm still interested in knowing if you use the file modification daemon
to minimize the amount of file scanning Beagle performs. And if not,
why not? Could it be incorporated?


Beagle uses inotify for this -- in fact, inotify was basically written
*for* Beagle with its use cases in mind.  inotify is a kernel service,
so you actually don't need a separate daemon to use it.

For noticing file changes and such, Beagle depends heavily on inotify.
We still have to crawl files when the Beagle daemon starts up though,
to set up inotify watches on all the directories it pays attention to
and to notice and index any changes that may have happened while
Beagle wasn't running.

Joe
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-30 Thread Randall R Schulz
Joe,

On Friday 30 March 2007 11:56, Joe Shaw wrote:
 Hi Randall,

 Sorry for the delay.  It's been a very busy week in the Cambridge
 office, and I've been pretty overwhelmed by the feedback on the
 thread so far. (49 messages!)

No problem. Better busy than bored!


 On 3/29/07, Randall R Schulz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On Thursday 29 March 2007 11:20, Joe Shaw wrote:
   ... I could rattle
   off a long list of bug fixes and go into technical detail about
   them ...
 
  I'm still interested in knowing if you use the file modification
  daemon to minimize the amount of file scanning Beagle performs. And
  if not, why not? Could it be incorporated?

 Beagle uses inotify for this -- in fact, inotify was basically
 written *for* Beagle with its use cases in mind.  inotify is a kernel
 service, so you actually don't need a separate daemon to use it.

OK. The whole point was whether or not it had to perform user-level 
polling, which the old FAM (File Alteration Monitory -- note: I had the 
name wrong) used to do.


 For noticing file changes and such, Beagle depends heavily on
 inotify. We still have to crawl files when the Beagle daemon starts
 up though, ...

I think this is a problem worth addressing: Surely there's some way to 
minimize the cost upon start-up? It's probably why some people (those 
whose computers don't run 24/7) experience Beagle as so intrusive.


 ... to set up inotify watches on all the directories it pays 
 attention to and to notice and index any changes that may have
 happened while Beagle wasn't running.

Thanks for the explanation.


 Joe


Randall Schulz
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-30 Thread Joe Shaw

Hi,

On 3/28/07, Boyd Lynn Gerber [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

My main issue is that I can not get it to run only on off hours.  When it
is running I am unable to use my machine for anything worth while.  It
hogs most memory and CPU usuage.  I have problems with even the CLI.


There's an important distinction to be made here, and I'd like to know
which of these (or both) are biting you.  The more resource-intensive
indexing process is broken into two parts:

(a) A systemwide crawler which is run from cron.  This is very much
like the updatedb process you have if you install findutils-locate or
use another distribution like Fedora or Ubuntu.  This is used to index
systemwide resources like application launchers and system
documentation.  This is a one-off process run once a day.  This
process is called beagle-build-index in ps ax and is run from the
beagle-crawl-system cronjob.

(b) A per-user component which crawls your home directory and indexes
your personal data.  This (unless configured otherwise) stays within
your home dir and notices changes, additions, and removals in real
time.  This process exists for only as long as you are logged in.
These processes are called beagled and beagled-helper when you do
a ps ax.

Right now (a) kicks off roughly every 24 hours.  The problem is that
it starts 15 minutes after you first installed the distro, so it often
runs right in the middle of your day!  This is very inconvenient, and
I mentioned that elsewhere in the thread.  Fortunately you can fix
this by editing the /etc/sysconfig/cron file and set the DAILY_TIME
variable to something like 04:00 to run at 4am.  After editing this
file, be sure to run SuSEconfig.

For (b), it's the core component of Beagle and you can't turn it off
without turning search off altogether.  But (b) is also designed to be
as unobtrusive as possible, and so if it's eating your machine, it's a
bug and we need to track down why.


The problem is how do you attempt to debug it when you can not even do CLI
while it is running.  For example if I ssh to the box running beagle...  I
am unable to get a connection.  I am unable to mount or unmount a NFS
share from the machine.  Only when beagle is running.


Install the 0.2.16.3 version I mentioned earlier in the thread.
First, it may have fixed the bug you were seeing in the first place.
Secondly, if it didn't, it now runs at a higher nice level so
interactivity should improve even if it does run away.  And lastly,
you can disable it running at login time and run it in the foreground
and lots of debugging info with the --fg --debug options.  Hopefully
that will at least give you the opportunity to see what's going on and
more importantly to kill it if need be.

Thanks,
Joe
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-30 Thread Joe Shaw

Hi,

On 3/29/07, Carlos F Lange [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On Thursday 29 March 2007 08:14, Peter Van Lone wrote:
 though I think there should be options to control WHEN the initial
 and on-going indexing occurs. Basically, we should easily be able to
 get to menus that let us control all aspects of both services.

I second that!
Although beagled-helper runs with nice of 15 (it is at zero now, but I
remember it was 15 when it was working) it still competes with other
resources. And on a laptop, you want to have complete control because
of the power usage too and maybe set the indexing when the laptop is
plugged in, in addition to a particular time.


There is an option in the Beagle preferences to turn off all indexing
when on battery power.  I believe this is in the version that shipped
with 10.2.

Maybe we can add additional control to this.  What did you guys have in mind?


Another thing I just noticed. My .beagle/ directory is 1.6GB!
Is this normal? Can the size of this cache be controlled?
(My home is ~40GB, ~15GB of that are pictures, sounds and binary data.)


The size of the index obviously can vary a lot with the type of data,
but we estimate that the index is 5-10% the size of your data, so you
fall into that range.

You can reclaim some space by deleting the ~/.beagle/TextCache
directory.  That directory is used to quickly extract text for showing
snippets in the user interface, but isn't essential to the running
of Beagle.  If you delete it, you won't get snippets for most
documents.  It is probably a couple hundred MB.

Thanks,
Joe
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-30 Thread Joe Shaw

Hi,

On 3/30/07, Randall R Schulz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Beagle uses inotify for this -- in fact, inotify was basically
 written *for* Beagle with its use cases in mind.  inotify is a kernel
 service, so you actually don't need a separate daemon to use it.

OK. The whole point was whether or not it had to perform user-level
polling, which the old FAM (File Alteration Monitory -- note: I had the
name wrong) used to do.


Right.  Beagle doesn't do any polling for file changes if you have a
system with inotify.  I believe these days FAM also uses inotify.


I think this is a problem worth addressing: Surely there's some way to
minimize the cost upon start-up? It's probably why some people (those
whose computers don't run 24/7) experience Beagle as so intrusive.


Actually this *is* something that we try to do gracefully.  We monitor
the load on the system to calculate a delay of when next to crawl a
small set of directories, and in more recent versions Beagle has a
very nice CPU priority and instructs the kernel not to automatically
give it a higher one.

What we don't do is immediately crawl through all the directories
adding watches because that was a pretty serious thrashing problem.
(It's basically the same thing as doing find -type d ~.  Painful.)
We did that in very, very early versions of Beagle and it was unusable
even for us developers of it.

I really suspect that for a lot of people it's the cron job that gives
them such a negative impression, because that is designed to be a once
off, middle-of-the-night process and it doesn't do any sort of
throttling based on system load.

Thanks,
Joe
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-30 Thread kanenas
On Friday 30 March 2007, Joe Shaw wrote:
 Hi,

 On 3/30/07, Randall R Schulz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   Beagle uses inotify for this -- in fact, inotify was basically
   written *for* Beagle with its use cases in mind.  inotify is a kernel
   service, so you actually don't need a separate daemon to use it.
 
  OK. The whole point was whether or not it had to perform user-level
  polling, which the old FAM (File Alteration Monitory -- note: I had the
  name wrong) used to do.

 Right.  Beagle doesn't do any polling for file changes if you have a
 system with inotify.  I believe these days FAM also uses inotify.

  I think this is a problem worth addressing: Surely there's some way to
  minimize the cost upon start-up? It's probably why some people (those
  whose computers don't run 24/7) experience Beagle as so intrusive.

 Actually this *is* something that we try to do gracefully.  We monitor
 the load on the system to calculate a delay of when next to crawl a
 small set of directories, and in more recent versions Beagle has a
 very nice CPU priority and instructs the kernel not to automatically
 give it a higher one.

 What we don't do is immediately crawl through all the directories
 adding watches because that was a pretty serious thrashing problem.
 (It's basically the same thing as doing find -type d ~.  Painful.)
 We did that in very, very early versions of Beagle and it was unusable
 even for us developers of it.

 I really suspect that for a lot of people it's the cron job that gives
 them such a negative impression, because that is designed to be a once
 off, middle-of-the-night process and it doesn't do any sort of
 throttling based on system load.

 Thanks,
 Joe

This thread really does show the unfortunate direction that software 
development has taken even in open source: The simplest package is a rube 
goldberg-like conglomeration of pre-packaged code and requires 50 and 100 
other packages, each one recursively depended on it's own set of libs and 
scripts and packages!!!
According to my 10.1 yast2, Beagle requires 65 different items before the 
dependencies are satisfied is too complex for what it does and / or does 
what it does in a confused, roundabout  and cpu time hogging manner. That is 
just taken as fact  above and most of the dialog is about minimizing the 
perceived impact of the application instead of fundamentally correcting 
it!!!.  it boggles my mind when my very average amd3800+ does 2,400,000,000 
operations four bytes at a time every second and an indexing application just 
takes all of that for hours!!! 
Yes, i am an old timer and yes i do remember that the bootstrap on the pdp-8 
was only 8 lines long, yes i used to toggle the switches to load the index 
register to the accumulator, but i would not expect that today. On the other 
hand i can not believe the inefficiency in all sofware except games and math 
packages in today's software, both free and for $$. I used to run fea 
programs that would take 10-12 days of 24/7 work on a dedicated 386, now 
problems 1,000 larger can be run in minutes  or a couple of hours, that makes 
me smile. But it truly is a wonder why it takes 5 seconds for oo to start 
*with* the fast start installed, why a simple update list can not be found 
and processed in a few seconds and why kmail loads stuff for 3 seconds before 
it opens a window!
Creating a darned index should definitely take less time than solving 500,000 
equations with 500,000 unknowns about 100 times over, updating the silly 
thing should be almost instantaneous!!!  
So here is a simple suggestion: PLEASE simplify the package and put in some 
fresh sections, free of pre-canned software! When the list of dependencies is 
around 65 different items long, the end result can only be a cpu overheating 
beast, that does not take rocket science to figure out. I am a very average 
user and probably can not provide detailed debug feedback without a lot of 
hand holding, but, if someone would like to try fresh code, i would be 
willing to test shtuff after 4 May, can't do it before. 
As things are now, beagle and zen/zmd/rug  co are all removed from my 10.1 
and 10.2 installs and any possible new setup will have them removed from the 
initial package list. I wish I could also eliminate libzypp, but yast needs 
it and i am not willing to put all my marbles in smart...
dimitris
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-30 Thread David Brodbeck
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 This thread really does show the unfortunate direction that software 
 development has taken even in open source: The simplest package is a rube 
 goldberg-like conglomeration of pre-packaged code and requires 50 and 100 
 other packages, each one recursively depended on it's own set of libs and 
 scripts and packages!!!
   

That's called not reinventing the wheel.  Often it's a good thing.

One example: The zlib bug.  You may remember this one -- a bug in a
decompression routine that created a security hole.  A lot of packages
had zlib as a dependency.  While they were all affected by the bug,
fixing them was just a matter of replacing one shared library.

Other packages simplified things, in the way you suggest, by simply
including the zlib source code inside their own code.  This meant they
didn't have zlib as a dependency.  But it also meant that every one of
these packages had to be tracked down and fixed individually.

I'd argue that nine times out of ten, using a pre-packaged library is
both simpler and more reliable than rolling your own.  It also saves
space.  Why should every package carry around all the code needed to,
say, draw a window, when they can link to a single library that does it?

 Creating a darned index should definitely take less time than solving 500,000 
 equations with 500,000 unknowns about 100 times over, updating the silly 
 thing should be almost instantaneous!!!

Indexing is I/O-heavy, unlike equation-solving.  This isn't a matter of
CPU power.  Until someone invents a mass storage medium where every
location can be read instantly, indexing is going to be time-consuming,
because you have to wait for data to be read off disk.

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-30 Thread Kai Ponte
On Friday 30 March 2007 05:42:51 pm David Brodbeck wrote:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  This thread really does show the unfortunate direction that software
  development has taken even in open source: The simplest package is a rube
  goldberg-like conglomeration of pre-packaged code and requires 50 and 100
  other packages, each one recursively depended on it's own set of libs and
  scripts and packages!!!

 That's called not reinventing the wheel.  Often it's a good thing.


Yes. In terms of software development, it is a matter of philosophy. You 
can reinvent the wheel each time or use someone else's code. 

Generally it is better to use what already works.


 One example: The zlib bug.  You may remember this one -- a bug in a
 decompression routine that created a security hole.  A lot of packages
 had zlib as a dependency.  While they were all affected by the bug,
 fixing them was just a matter of replacing one shared library.

IIRC, this was pretty widespread.



 Other packages simplified things, in the way you suggest, by simply
 including the zlib source code inside their own code.  This meant they
 didn't have zlib as a dependency.  But it also meant that every one of
 these packages had to be tracked down and fixed individually.

Yes, which is more trouble for fixing, and may - or may not - be a good thing. 
I'm honestly on the fence on this idea.

Seeing how really convoluted and complicated the LFS is, I would tend to argue 
for putting libraries in one location.  But that is a different argument.



 I'd argue that nine times out of ten, using a pre-packaged library is
 both simpler and more reliable than rolling your own.  It also saves
 space.  Why should every package carry around all the code needed to,
 say, draw a window, when they can link to a single library that does it?

  Creating a darned index should definitely take less time than solving
  500,000 equations with 500,000 unknowns about 100 times over, updating
  the silly thing should be almost instantaneous!!!

 Indexing is I/O-heavy, unlike equation-solving.  This isn't a matter of
 CPU power.  Until someone invents a mass storage medium where every
 location can be read instantly, indexing is going to be time-consuming,
 because you have to wait for data to be read off disk.

I'm waiting for the day when I can push my insignia, say, computer! and a 
nice lady's voice comes on asking me what I want.

-- 
kai

Free Compean and Ramos
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-30 Thread David Brodbeck
Kai Ponte wrote:
 I'm waiting for the day when I can push my insignia, say, computer! and a 
 nice lady's voice comes on asking me what I want.

Is Novell working on that yet? ;)
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Kevin Donnelly
On Thursday 29 March 2007 00:51, Rajko M. wrote:
 Someone came on idea to run few processes that use hard disk heavily at
 startup which gives very bad image of openSUSE.

Yes, it is absolutely incredible that things like this (eg find-locate) are 
not configurable, and that they run first time the PC comes up.  Wouldn't it 
be possible to have them look at the system time and not run unless the time 
is between 01.00 and 05.00 (for instance)?  I've been using SUSE for years, 
and this annoys me, so what must it be like for a new user?

-- 
Pob hwyl / Best wishes

Kevin Donnelly

www.kyfieithu.co.uk - KDE yn Gymraeg
www.klebran.org.uk - Gwirydd gramadeg rhydd i'r Gymraeg
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Joe Morris (NTM)
Kevin Donnelly wrote:
 Wouldn't it 
 be possible to have them look at the system time and not run unless the time 
 is between 01.00 and 05.00 (for instance)?  I've been using SUSE for years, 
 and this annoys me, so what must it be like for a new user?
   
There is now a sysconfig variable to set when cron.daily runs, but it
gives the time, not a range.  I still find it a big improvement over the
last few versions.  This is on 10.2.

-- 
Joe Morris
Registered Linux user 231871 running openSUSE 10.2 x86_64





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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Kai Ponte
On Wednesday 28 March 2007 01:26:47 pm Joe Shaw wrote:
 Hi Michael,

 On 3/28/07, Michael Letourneau [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  I know many (most?) dislike beagle and turn it off, but I actually have a
  need to use it right now, and thought it would be a good solution to
  finding some information I have mis-placed.

 I'm the main developer of Beagle, so I'm certainly interested to know
 why people turn it off.  Is it a lack of necessity, is it a failure in
 user experience, is it misbehaving in some way (including CPU pegging
 or memory hogging)?  This is all useful information to me, and I want
 to fix any bugs people come across.

My experiences echo that of others on this list who have already posted. 

On new systems, with beagle turned on, response time becomes erratic or simply 
slow.  These are very noticeable and become quickly annoying to me. Not 
really needing Bob - or beagle - or whatever the name is, I simply euthanize 
it. (Sorry, it is difficult not to poke fun at beagle.)

As a rule, I turn beagle off immediately after install. (I have not done a 
10.2 install yet, because without beagle and zmd running, 10.1 is perfectly 
stable for me and family.)

I noticed that a few others mentioned the possibility of zmd being part of the 
cause. That may be - I tend to remove zmd as soon as possible as well after 
install, because I find it slow and tedious as well.

So, basically, a system not running beagle or bob runs faster and is more 
responsive overall than one running beagle. I've found this on four separate 
systems, all fairly modern systems with at least 1G RAM and either Athlon or 
Pentium 4 processors.

Thanks for listening!

-- 
kai
www.perfectreign.com || www.4thedadz.com
www.filesite.org || www.donutmonster.com

closing the doors that surround me
so no one will ever penetrate
complete my retreat just to wait for the day
that never comes so i will laugh alone
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Patrick Shanahan
* Joe Morris (NTM) [EMAIL PROTECTED] [03-29-07 06:36]:
 [...]
 There is now a sysconfig variable to set when cron.daily runs, but it
 gives the time, not a range.  I still find it a big improvement over
 the last few versions.  This is on 10.2.

And 10.1.

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Adam Tauno Williams
 I noticed that a few others mentioned the possibility of zmd being part of 
 the 
 cause. That may be - I tend to remove zmd as soon as possible as well after 
 install, because I find it slow and tedious as well.

Just to add the other side to this for any lurkers;  I run, and use, and
like Beagle.  I also let ZMD run.  And I have no performance problems,
and neither of the machines are earth-shatteringly powerful.

Laptop: 1.4GHz Celeron M w/2Gb RAM
Workstation: 1.8GHz Pentium 4 w/1.2Gb RAM

Beagle works great,  once you get used to having it you won't want to be
without it.

-- 
--
Adam Tauno Williams
Network  Systems Administrator
Consultant - http://www.whitemiceconsulting.com
Developer - http://www.opengroupware.org

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Peter Van Lone

On 3/29/07, Adam Tauno Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


Just to add the other side to this for any lurkers;  I run, and use, and
like Beagle.  I also let ZMD run.  And I have no performance problems,
and neither of the machines are earth-shatteringly powerful.



me, too ...

though I think there should be options to control WHEN the initial and
on-going indexing occurs. Basically, we should easily be able to get
to menus that let us control all aspects of both services.

I have used beagle alot, and really like it. Partly because I am
perhaps not as organized as I should be. It helps me find misplaced
documents and emails and etc ... when I need them.

P
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Carlos F Lange
I haven't used Beagle so often, but I saw its real benefits when my wife 
needed to analyse a CD with 1600 PDF files. I set it up in her laptop 
(Pentium M) with a copy of the CD and I followed the indexing by 
searching for a word typical for those files and watching the number 
of hits grow. The indexing was basically done in half an hour and from 
then on her searches were instantaneous.

On Thursday 29 March 2007 08:14, Peter Van Lone wrote:
 though I think there should be options to control WHEN the initial
 and on-going indexing occurs. Basically, we should easily be able to
 get to menus that let us control all aspects of both services.

I second that!
Although beagled-helper runs with nice of 15 (it is at zero now, but I 
remember it was 15 when it was working) it still competes with other 
resources. And on a laptop, you want to have complete control because 
of the power usage too and maybe set the indexing when the laptop is 
plugged in, in addition to a particular time.

Another thing I just noticed. My .beagle/ directory is 1.6GB! 
Is this normal? Can the size of this cache be controlled?
(My home is ~40GB, ~15GB of that are pictures, sounds and binary data.)

Carlos FL
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread dwain . alford
Kai Ponte wrote:

snip
 That may be - I tend to remove zmd as soon as possible as well after 
 install,  /snip
   
I have found that on 10.2 you can choose not to install zmd at all in
the package set up during installation.

When I followed the suggestions of removing ZMD, Nokia-pilot, etc. the
system stripped itself and left me with just the command line on
reboot.  My GUI was toast.  I found the above statement true on the
third reinstall.  My system is a little smoother and a tad bit quicker
without Beagle and ZMD.  The only problem I have is there is no software
remover and I have to use YaST2 and delete whatever application(s) I
need.  As a new user, this does not seem to be the way to go.  I know
that ZMD has a software remover, but didn't I just get away from that? 
Is there another or is the YaST2 delete ok?

Dwain


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cellphone:  205.495.5619

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread riccardo35
On Thu 29 Mar 2007 17:44, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 only problem I have is there is no software
 remover

 - maybe, logged in as root , at the console you could do something 
like :

  rpm -qa | grep beagle


 . . . that should show what beagle-related rpms are installed.

 next, you can do :

  rpm -e name of installed stuff you want to remove

  that's it


friendly greetings

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread dwain . alford
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Thu 29 Mar 2007 17:44, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   
 only problem I have is there is no software
 remover
 

  - maybe, logged in as root , at the console you could do something 
 like :

   rpm -qa | grep beagle


  . . . that should show what beagle-related rpms are installed.

  next, you can do :

   rpm -e name of installed stuff you want to remove

   that's it


 friendly greetings

   
Thanks, I'll keep this for future reference.

Dwain

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Kai Ponte
On Thursday 29 March 2007 10:44:56 am [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Kai Ponte wrote:

 snip

  That may be - I tend to remove zmd as soon as possible as well after
  install,  /snip

 I have found that on 10.2 you can choose not to install zmd at all in
 the package set up during installation.

 When I followed the suggestions of removing ZMD, Nokia-pilot, etc. the
 system stripped itself and left me with just the command line on
 reboot.  My GUI was toast.  I found the above statement true on the
 third reinstall.  My system is a little smoother and a tad bit quicker
 without Beagle and ZMD.  The only problem I have is there is no software
 remover and I have to use YaST2 and delete whatever application(s) I
 need.  As a new user, this does not seem to be the way to go.  I know
 that ZMD has a software remover, but didn't I just get away from that?
 Is there another or is the YaST2 delete ok?


You can delete from YAST2 or - like riccardo says - use rpm -e or you can 
install SMART, which is a decent replacement for the YAST software instsaller 
and ZMD...

http://susewiki.org/index.php?title=Smart

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Joe Shaw

Wow!

Thanks everyone for your responses.  I'll respond individually to a
number of you a little later.

Broadly, it seems that people basically fall into two camps:

(a) People who have no need or desire for Beagle.  I can understand
this.  Some people are just inherently organized -- I do not
understand these people. :)  Others don't have enough data for desktop
search to be truly useful for them.  Others seem to get by using
find or locate, although these only search filenames.  (Or, you
can pair them up with xargs and grep and search contents, but this
really only works for text-based files.)  I guess these people have no
need to search their email or IM conversations?

(b) People who experience performance problems when running Beagle.
There are a couple of known reasons for this, and possibly some more
that I'm not aware of.  I ask those who have experienced performance
problems in the past to download Beagle 0.2.16.3 from the build
service:

   http://software.opensuse.org/download/Beagle/openSUSE_10.2/

and let me know if this new version fares any better.  I could rattle
off a long list of bug fixes and go into technical detail about them
here, but that's boring and really the only way we can see if things
have improved is to try it.  The cron job issue is a problem, and I'm
going to try to work with colleagues to see if we can come up with a
solution that works.

Thanks,
Joe
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Patrick Shanahan
* Joe Shaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] [03-29-07 14:21]:
 [...]
 Broadly, it seems that people basically fall into two camps:

This is incorrect. There exists three goups.

 (a) People who have no need or desire for Beagle.
 [...]
 (b) People who experience performance problems when running Beagle.
 [...]

(c) Those who use Beagle and like it and experienct no noticeable
system degradation.

The only problem I see with Beagle is the amount of disk space
required for the indexes.  1.7G on my box, but I have a lot of disk
space and the cost is nothing like what my first 32MB hard drive was.
(I have two 8GB camera chips that combined cost less)

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Joe Shaw

Hey Patrick,

On 3/29/07, Patrick Shanahan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

This is incorrect. There exists three goups.

 (a) People who have no need or desire for Beagle.
 [...]
 (b) People who experience performance problems when running Beagle.
 [...]

(c) Those who use Beagle and like it and experienct no noticeable
system degradation.


Indeed.  Thanks for that. :)


The only problem I see with Beagle is the amount of disk space
required for the indexes.  1.7G on my box, but I have a lot of disk
space and the cost is nothing like what my first 32MB hard drive was.
(I have two 8GB camera chips that combined cost less)


Yeah, I can't believe I ever had a machine with just a 20 meg hard
drive myself.  Of course, I couldn't do a whole lot with it either. :)

One possible remedy for the space issue (if it ever does become a
problem) is that you could delete the ~/.beagle/TextCache directory.
This contains the plain text of complex documents (like files inside
an archive, or MS Office docs) that would take too long to extract
from their source at search-time.  They're used to generate the
snippets of the document you see in results.  Removing that
directory means no more snippets, but I'm guessing that in your setup
it'll save you 500 megs to a gig of space.

Joe
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Kai Ponte
On Thursday 29 March 2007 12:58:29 pm Joe Shaw wrote:
 Hey Patrick,

 On 3/29/07, Patrick Shanahan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  This is incorrect. There exists three goups.
 
   (a) People who have no need or desire for Beagle.
 
   [...]
 
   (b) People who experience performance problems when running Beagle.
 
   [...]
 
  (c) Those who use Beagle and like it and experienct no noticeable
  system degradation.

 Indeed.  Thanks for that. :)

  The only problem I see with Beagle is the amount of disk space
  required for the indexes.  1.7G on my box, but I have a lot of disk
  space and the cost is nothing like what my first 32MB hard drive was.
  (I have two 8GB camera chips that combined cost less)

 Yeah, I can't believe I ever had a machine with just a 20 meg hard
 drive myself.  Of course, I couldn't do a whole lot with it either. :)


Hey - 20 MB is all you'll ever need for a mere $2,000!

I was just thinking of this - wouldn't the meta-information be better suited 
to being put on the filesystem?

I remember back to the OS/2 days and HPFS. That filesystem - IIRC - had meta 
information for each file. I don't remember if it was indexed, but I thought 
that Windows and other filesystems were going to emulate this eventually.

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Billie Erin Walsh
Rajko M. wrote:

 It is:
 http://en.opensuse.org/Zmd
 
 and it is not necessary, since YaST is doing for years all that zmd should do 
 for individual user, but without hogging resources on smaller machines, ie. 
 without problems :-) 
 
 Install opensuseupdater if you want notifications about security updates. 
 I wanted. 
 
 Than remove zmd, zen-updater, zen-installer, zen-remover and rug. 
 

There is one (1) aspect of zen that I DO like. There are certain
packages that I use that do not come from SuSE sources, Gramps for one.
Yast can't seem to install from my Download Directory since about 10.0.
It won't accept it as an install source at all. If I right click on it
there are two (2) Open With  Install Software things to choose
from.  The second one will do a VERY good job of installing the
software. The first one doesn't do much of anything as far as I can tell.

If I click on the RPM in Konqueror it, I guess, opens to another thing
with two boxes at the top. One says Install With Yast and the other
says to make it an install source. OK, Install With Yast - Yes - No
source available. In 9.X [ whatever I was using ] Yast worked just fine
for installing things like Gramps from my Download Directory. Never
argued one bit.

In this one instance Yast does not do as well as zen. In every other
instance Yast is far superior to zen and Smart [ rather more like STUPID
IMHO ].

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Don Raboud
On Thursday 29 March 2007 13:50, Billie Erin Walsh wrote:
 There is one (1) aspect of zen that I DO like. There are certain
 packages that I use that do not come from SuSE sources, Gramps for one.
 Yast can't seem to install from my Download Directory since about 10.0.
 It won't accept it as an install source at all. If I right click on it
 there are two (2) Open With  Install Software things to choose
 from.  The second one will do a VERY good job of installing the
 software. The first one doesn't do much of anything as far as I can tell.

 If I click on the RPM in Konqueror it, I guess, opens to another thing
 with two boxes at the top. One says Install With Yast and the other
 says to make it an install source. OK, Install With Yast - Yes - No
 source available. In 9.X [ whatever I was using ] Yast worked just fine
 for installing things like Gramps from my Download Directory. Never
 argued one bit.

As I recall that was because a command (installation_source or something 
similar I think it was called) got replaced around 10.0 or 10.1, but 
Konqueror Install With YaST still tried to use it, so of course it failed.

The command createrepo can be used to make a directory of downloaded rpms 
visible to YaST as an installation source.  I think this can be done through 
Yast - Installation Sources as well.  After that you should be able to 
install using konqueror.

Createrepo was not installed by default however, and the command needed to be 
run everytime an rpm package was added to or removed from the directory.

 In this one instance Yast does not do as well as zen. In every other
 instance Yast is far superior to zen and Smart [ rather more like STUPID
 IMHO ].

No comment :-)

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Randall R Schulz
Joe,

On Thursday 29 March 2007 11:20, Joe Shaw wrote:
 ... I could rattle
 off a long list of bug fixes and go into technical detail about them
 ...

I'm still interested in knowing if you use the file modification daemon 
to minimize the amount of file scanning Beagle performs. And if not, 
why not? Could it be incorporated?

I believe this is, at least in part, how Apple gets good performance 
from Spotlight.


 Thanks,
 Joe


Randall Schulz
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread Rajko M.
On Wednesday 28 March 2007 22:36, dwain wrote:
 thanks for all of the advise.  i removed a lot of unwanted programs and
 it seemed that with the dependencies stripped the system bare.  i
 haven't rebooted yet, but i'll find out what's what here shortly.  gotta
 reboot.  cross your fingers.

 dwain

Did I mentioned if it complains on dependencies to ignore them. 
Installation pattern works fine without zen stuff. 
No, I didn't. I guess that will be a lot to reinstall. 

It wanted to do the same here, but I choose to ignore dependencies and the 
system works fine. 

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread David Brodbeck
Robert Lewis wrote:
 David Brodbeck wrote:
   
 Not to mention ZMD.  I thought I was going to have to turn off beagle,
 but once I removed ZMD my system stopped becoming unresponsive and I no
 longer felt the need to disable beagle.  I've never had beagle make my
 system unusable but ZMD used to do it all the time.  It was tempting to
 blame beagle because beagle indexing and ZMD updates were often running
 at the same time, and the combination of the two is a real killer.

   
 
 I have not noticed a system slowdown.  2.4-GHZ Pentium 4 and 1-GB of RAM.

 What does your system consist of so that I can learn more to share with
 others?
   

I've experienced problems with ZMD on three different systems.

- A laptop running SuSE 10.2.  900 MHz PIII, 256 MB RAM
- A desktop running SuSE 10.2.  2 GHz Celeron, 768 MB RAM
- A miniITX system running SuSE 10.1.  1 GHz VIA Nehemiah, 256 MB RAM

In all of these cases ZMD would use 100% of the CPU and significant
quantities of RAM for up to an hour at a time, bogging down other
processes.  Since removing ZMD I've had no such problems.  I can't see
any benefit I was getting from ZMD that made it worth the resource
usage.  Now when I install OpenSUSE removing zmd and rug is the first
thing I do.
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-29 Thread dwain . alford
Rajko M. wrote:
 On Wednesday 28 March 2007 22:36, dwain wrote:
   
 thanks for all of the advise.  i removed a lot of unwanted programs and
 it seemed that with the dependencies stripped the system bare.  i
 haven't rebooted yet, but i'll find out what's what here shortly.  gotta
 reboot.  cross your fingers.

 dwain
 

 Did I mentioned if it complains on dependencies to ignore them. 
 Installation pattern works fine without zen stuff. 
 No, I didn't. I guess that will be a lot to reinstall. 

 It wanted to do the same here, but I choose to ignore dependencies and the 
 system works fine. 

   
Now you tell me. ;-)  I figured that out on the third reinstall.  Good
info though, but hopefully I won't be reinstalling anytime soon.  ;-)

Dwain

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Joe Shaw

Hi Michael,

On 3/28/07, Michael Letourneau [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

I know many (most?) dislike beagle and turn it off, but I actually have a
need to use it right now, and thought it would be a good solution to
finding some information I have mis-placed.


I'm the main developer of Beagle, so I'm certainly interested to know
why people turn it off.  Is it a lack of necessity, is it a failure in
user experience, is it misbehaving in some way (including CPU pegging
or memory hogging)?  This is all useful information to me, and I want
to fix any bugs people come across.

I know a lot of people don't want to deal with debugging software, but
especially in a community distribution I hope there are those who will
help, rather than uninstalling it as a workaround for some issue.

Anyway, on to your email. :)


I have a bunch of tar'd gzip'd mail files (plain text nothing outlandish
they were IMAP accessed) that are archives, from reading on the
beagle-project.org site it looks like they should be indexed when beagle
does its indexing, as archive files are supported out of the box (or at
least thats the indication I am getting).


I get to the exact explanation below, but one thing you can try in
general if you can't find a specific file is to run the
beagle-extract-content tool on a file to see how Beagle views it.
Ie, the mime type that is detected, metadata extract from the
document, and the actual content itself.


So I figured maybe its just something thats turned off, and so I did a
beagle-info --list-filters and did not any mime types applicable for
archives.  So now I am left with the question, how do I turn this on, if
its off, or do I need to create my own filter/backend for this?


Archive support wasn't added to Beagle until the 0.2.14 release, and
openSUSE has 0.2.12.  Fortunately there's a Beagle project in the
openSUSE build service which always has the latest version:

   http://software.opensuse.org/download/Beagle/

It has 0.2.16.3 for 10.1 and 10.2.  If you install that, it will have
to reindex your data but it will pick up archive files.

Let me know if you have any problems or want more info.

Thanks,
Joe
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Richard Bos
Joe,

Op Wednesday 28 March 2007 22:26:47 schreef Joe Shaw:
 On 3/28/07, Michael Letourneau [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  I know many (most?) dislike beagle and turn it off, but I actually have a
  need to use it right now, and thought it would be a good solution to
  finding some information I have mis-placed.

 I'm the main developer of Beagle, so I'm certainly interested to know
 why people turn it off.  Is it a lack of necessity, is it a failure in
 user experience, is it misbehaving in some way (including CPU pegging
 or memory hogging)?  This is all useful information to me, and I want
 to fix any bugs people come across.

it's hogging my system.  Sometimes my desktop just hangs for 30 seconds or 
more!  Super annoying!  I have my /home nfs mounted and it seems in 
combination with beagle this is lethal.  Another annoyance is that it runs 
with the highest priority possible, while (as it is a background) process 
should run with a very low prority.  After I removed beagle all this is gone, 
and as kde comes with its own desktop search function, there is no desire on 
my side for beagle.

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It is not inherited from our parents.
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Boyd Lynn Gerber
On Wed, 28 Mar 2007, Joe Shaw wrote:
 On 3/28/07, Michael Letourneau [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  I know many (most?) dislike beagle and turn it off, but I actually have a
  need to use it right now, and thought it would be a good solution to
  finding some information I have mis-placed.

 I'm the main developer of Beagle, so I'm certainly interested to know
 why people turn it off.  Is it a lack of necessity, is it a failure in
 user experience, is it misbehaving in some way (including CPU pegging
 or memory hogging)?  This is all useful information to me, and I want
 to fix any bugs people come across.

My main issue is that I can not get it to run only on off hours.  When it
is running I am unable to use my machine for anything worth while.  It
hogs most memory and CPU usuage.  I have problems with even the CLI.

 I know a lot of people don't want to deal with debugging software, but
 especially in a community distribution I hope there are those who will
 help, rather than uninstalling it as a workaround for some issue.

The problem is how do you attempt to debug it when you can not even do CLI
while it is running.  For example if I ssh to the box running beagle...  I
am unable to get a connection.  I am unable to mount or unmount a NFS
share from the machine.  Only when beagle is running.

Thanks,

--
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ZENEZ   1042 East Fort Union #135, Midvale Utah  84047
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread dwain
Boyd Lynn Gerber wrote:
 On Wed, 28 Mar 2007, Joe Shaw wrote:
   
 On 3/28/07, Michael Letourneau [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
 I know many (most?) dislike beagle and turn it off, but I actually have a
 need to use it right now, and thought it would be a good solution to
 finding some information I have mis-placed.
   
 I'm the main developer of Beagle, so I'm certainly interested to know
 why people turn it off.  Is it a lack of necessity, is it a failure in
 user experience, is it misbehaving in some way (including CPU pegging
 or memory hogging)?  This is all useful information to me, and I want
 to fix any bugs people come across.
 

 My main issue is that I can not get it to run only on off hours.  When it
 is running I am unable to use my machine for anything worth while.  It
 hogs most memory and CPU usuage.  I have problems with even the CLI.

   
 I know a lot of people don't want to deal with debugging software, but
 especially in a community distribution I hope there are those who will
 help, rather than uninstalling it as a workaround for some issue.
 

 The problem is how do you attempt to debug it when you can not even do CLI
 while it is running.  For example if I ssh to the box running beagle...  I
 am unable to get a connection.  I am unable to mount or unmount a NFS
 share from the machine.  Only when beagle is running.

 Thanks,

 --
 Boyd Gerber [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ZENEZ 1042 East Fort Union #135, Midvale Utah  84047
   
Being a newbie to linux, I have no use for beagle. There is find
files/folders and that's enough for me. I too find my system (intel pIII
450mhz and 768mb ram) runs better without beagle than with it.

dwain

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P.O. Box 145
Winfield, Alabama  35594

telephone:  205.487.2570
cellphone:  205.495.5619

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Michael Letourneau
Joe Shaw wrote:
 Hi Michael,

 On 3/28/07, Michael Letourneau [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 [...snip...]
 So I figured maybe its just something thats turned off, and so I did a
 beagle-info --list-filters and did not any mime types applicable for
 archives.  So now I am left with the question, how do I turn this on, if
 its off, or do I need to create my own filter/backend for this?

 Archive support wasn't added to Beagle until the 0.2.14 release, and
 openSUSE has 0.2.12.  Fortunately there's a Beagle project in the
 openSUSE build service which always has the latest version:

http://software.opensuse.org/download/Beagle/

 It has 0.2.16.3 for 10.1 and 10.2.  If you install that, it will have
 to reindex your data but it will pick up archive files.

 Let me know if you have any problems or want more info.

 Thanks,
 Joe
Well Joe, that worked almost perfectly, I added the repo and updated
beagle, and had it re-index, and it understands .tar.gz files fine now. 
Unfortunately since its a mail archive its rather large, and its
skipping it because of the size.  Also unfortunately, looking at the man
for beagle-config and the website, I am not seeing a way to override the
limit.

I looked at the xml config files but there was not a whole lot in that.  

Is there a way to override that?  And if so can you do it for certain
files or is it global?

Thanks for you help, its gotten me 90% there.

Michael
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Rajko M.
On Wednesday 28 March 2007 16:04, Richard Bos wrote:

 it's hogging my system.  Sometimes my desktop just hangs for 30 seconds or
 more!  
...
 Another annoyance is that it runs 
 with the highest priority possible, while (as it is a background) process
 should run with a very low prority.  After I removed beagle all this is
 gone, and as kde comes with its own desktop search function, there is no
 desire on my side for beagle.

Beagle is not alone, the update of manpages is also tax on computer.. 

Someone came on idea to run few processes that use hard disk heavily at 
startup which gives very bad image of openSUSE. 

I'm asking myself how many users ditched openSUSE when after installation it 
was slow. I know how to see what is the reason, and stop processes, but 99% 
of new users will be just disappointed and go away. 

The bad joke is continuing with 10.3 alpha. 

Is it indexing of any kind that important to make first experience with SUSE 
poor as it can be. 
 
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http://en.opensuse.org/Portal 
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread dwain
Rajko M. wrote:
 On Wednesday 28 March 2007 16:04, Richard Bos wrote:

   
 it's hogging my system.  Sometimes my desktop just hangs for 30 seconds or
 more!  
 
 ...
   
 Another annoyance is that it runs 
 with the highest priority possible, while (as it is a background) process
 should run with a very low prority.  After I removed beagle all this is
 gone, and as kde comes with its own desktop search function, there is no
 desire on my side for beagle.
 

 Beagle is not alone, the update of manpages is also tax on computer.. 

 Someone came on idea to run few processes that use hard disk heavily at 
 startup which gives very bad image of openSUSE. 

 I'm asking myself how many users ditched openSUSE when after installation it 
 was slow. I know how to see what is the reason, and stop processes, but 99% 
 of new users will be just disappointed and go away. 

 The bad joke is continuing with 10.3 alpha. 

 Is it indexing of any kind that important to make first experience with SUSE 
 poor as it can be. 
  
   
Opensuse is slow on my old hardware, but Windows 2000 ran faster on this
hardware than Opensuse does.  It would be nice if it ran a little
faster, but even though it is slow, I have come to like Opensuse and
Linux.  I have almost a gigabyte of memory and it is sorely taxed by the
system.  Out of the 768MB of memory I usually have around 130 to 200MB
free memory.  This does cause me some concern, but again, I like the
operating system and I wait for it to do its thing.  I am in no hurry,
so I wait.

I guess if I was in a heavy production environment I would look for a
new Linux OS, but I like the security and the KDE desktop.  I realize
with a faster processor and more RAM I would probably see an improvement
in I/O; and when I find the proper hardware to run Opensuse, I will
build a system to handle over-taxation the OS causes.  Until then I am
happy to wait.

As a newcomer to Linux, and I've tried Ubuntu, Kubuntu and Xubuntu, I
still like Opensuse the best even though it does run slow.

Dwain

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Alford Design Group
P.O. Box 145
Winfield, Alabama  35594

telephone:  205.487.2570
cellphone:  205.495.5619

email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread David Brodbeck
Rajko M. wrote:
 Beagle is not alone, the update of manpages is also tax on computer.. 
   

Not to mention ZMD.  I thought I was going to have to turn off beagle,
but once I removed ZMD my system stopped becoming unresponsive and I no
longer felt the need to disable beagle.  I've never had beagle make my
system unusable but ZMD used to do it all the time.  It was tempting to
blame beagle because beagle indexing and ZMD updates were often running
at the same time, and the combination of the two is a real killer.

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Magnus Boman
On Wed, 2007-03-28 at 19:16 -0500, dwain wrote:

 Opensuse is slow on my old hardware, but Windows 2000 ran faster on this
 hardware than Opensuse does.  It would be nice if it ran a little
 faster, but even though it is slow, I have come to like Opensuse and
 Linux.  I have almost a gigabyte of memory and it is sorely taxed by the
 system.  Out of the 768MB of memory I usually have around 130 to 200MB
 free memory.  This does cause me some concern, but again, I like the
 operating system and I wait for it to do its thing.  I am in no hurry,
 so I wait.

How to you check for free memory? You know that Linux uses available
memory for file system cache? If/when that memory is needed by an app,
the file system cache will give it back.

 Dwain

Cheers,
Magnus


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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Robert Lewis
David Brodbeck wrote:
 Rajko M. wrote:
   
 Beagle is not alone, the update of manpages is also tax on computer.. 
   
 

 Not to mention ZMD.  I thought I was going to have to turn off beagle,
 but once I removed ZMD my system stopped becoming unresponsive and I no
 longer felt the need to disable beagle.  I've never had beagle make my
 system unusable but ZMD used to do it all the time.  It was tempting to
 blame beagle because beagle indexing and ZMD updates were often running
 at the same time, and the combination of the two is a real killer.

   
I have not noticed a system slowdown.  2.4-GHZ Pentium 4 and 1-GB of RAM.

What does your system consist of so that I can learn more to share with
others?
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Robert Lewis
Magnus Boman wrote:
 On Wed, 2007-03-28 at 19:16 -0500, dwain wrote:

   
 Opensuse is slow on my old hardware, but Windows 2000 ran faster on this
 hardware than Opensuse does.  It would be nice if it ran a little
 faster, but even though it is slow, I have come to like Opensuse and
 Linux.  I have almost a gigabyte of memory and it is sorely taxed by the
 system.  Out of the 768MB of memory I usually have around 130 to 200MB
 free memory.  This does cause me some concern, but again, I like the
 operating system and I wait for it to do its thing.  I am in no hurry,
 so I wait.
 

 How to you check for free memory? You know that Linux uses available
 memory for file system cache? If/when that memory is needed by an app,
 the file system cache will give it back.

   
 Dwain
 

 Cheers,
 Magnus
   
Check out ksysguard a neat performance monitor at least on 10.2

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Randall R Schulz
Joe,

On Wednesday 28 March 2007 13:26, Joe Shaw wrote:
 Hi Michael,

 On 3/28/07, Michael Letourneau [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  I know many (most?) dislike beagle and turn it off, but I actually
  have a need to use it right now, and thought it would be a good
  solution to finding some information I have mis-placed.

 I'm the main developer of Beagle, ...

I'm curious if Beagle uses the new non-polling File Modification Daemon 
to identify files newly in need of (re-) indexing?


 Thanks,
 Joe


Randall Schulz
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Billie Erin Walsh
Joe Shaw wrote:
 Hi Michael,
 
 On 3/28/07, Michael Letourneau [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I know many (most?) dislike beagle and turn it off, but I actually have a
 need to use it right now, and thought it would be a good solution to
 finding some information I have mis-placed.
 
 I'm the main developer of Beagle, so I'm certainly interested to know
 why people turn it off.  Is it a lack of necessity, is it a failure in
 user experience, is it misbehaving in some way (including CPU pegging
 or memory hogging)?  This is all useful information to me, and I want
 to fix any bugs people come across.

IMHO

Beagle has a use for someone that needs that type program. However, for
joe user that does e-mail, surfs the web and spends way to much money on
ebay [ myself ] it is not really a necessity. I don't use it simply
because I have no need for it.

It could be offered as an option during install. Sort of like the option
of KDE or Gnome. If someone has a need for it by all means install it.
Otherwise don't.

-- 
(o:]*HUGGLES*[:o)
Billie Walsh
The three best words in the English Language:
I LOVE YOU
Pass them on!
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread dwain
David Brodbeck wrote:
 Rajko M. wrote:
   
 Beagle is not alone, the update of manpages is also tax on computer.. 
   
 

 Not to mention ZMD.  I thought I was going to have to turn off beagle,
 but once I removed ZMD my system stopped becoming unresponsive and I no
 longer felt the need to disable beagle.  I've never had beagle make my
 system unusable but ZMD used to do it all the time.  It was tempting to
 blame beagle because beagle indexing and ZMD updates were often running
 at the same time, and the combination of the two is a real killer.

   
As a new user, what is ZMD and is it necessary for system functionality?

Dwain

-- 
Dwain Alford
Alford Design Group
P.O. Box 145
Winfield, Alabama  35594

telephone:  205.487.2570
cellphone:  205.495.5619

email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
web:http://www.alford-design-group.com

The artist may use any form which his expression demands;
for his inner impulse must find suitable expression.

 Wassily Kandinsky, Concerning The Spiritual In Art

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Rajko M.
On Wednesday 28 March 2007 19:24, David Brodbeck wrote:
 Rajko M. wrote:
  Beagle is not alone, the update of manpages is also tax on computer..

 Not to mention ZMD.  I thought I was going to have to turn off beagle,
 but once I removed ZMD my system stopped becoming unresponsive and I no
 longer felt the need to disable beagle.  I've never had beagle make my
 system unusable but ZMD used to do it all the time.  It was tempting to
 blame beagle because beagle indexing and ZMD updates were often running
 at the same time, and the combination of the two is a real killer.

Thanks for the reminder. The same is here. 
I have no real problems since ZMD is back where it came from. 

I felt that as a problem because few services run at once after installation 
and hard disk is very busy, so even if I know what to do, I have to wait 
console to appear, open new root shell, ps to list processes, type in kill 
command. Than next time as job was not done it started over. 

I didn't looked details, but earlier versions used to look all mounted space, 
including widows partition. To look in tens of GB is not fast, so making it 
nicer will help. 

Little notification, so the people know what is going on, like in 10.3 alpha, 
than set default to be not so aggressive and option to configure services, 
will probably do better to everyone. 

As it is now, it is out of reach and understanding for newcomers, and makes 
system appear dog slow. Experienced users that doesn't need some of services 
have to remove annoyance manually, but as described above, it takes time. 

The hardware:
I use daily older Athlon XP that is now running at 1250 MHz (it was 1667 MHz 
ie. XP 2000+), 512 MB RAM, nVidia FX 5200 / 256 RAM, 2x 80 GB. 

The memory is fine:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~ free
 total   used   free sharedbuffers cached
Mem:516224 477800  38424  0  51636 262480
-/+ buffers/cache: 163684 352540
Swap:  1574360 361574324

The problem was the same on Athlon 64 3500+, 1 GB RAM (- 128 MB for graphic), 
160 GB HD, it was just ending sooner due to faster CPU. 

-- 
Regards, Rajko.
http://en.opensuse.org/Portal 
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread Rajko M.
On Wednesday 28 March 2007 20:39, dwain wrote:
 David Brodbeck wrote:
  Rajko M. wrote:
  Beagle is not alone, the update of manpages is also tax on computer..
 
  Not to mention ZMD.  I thought I was going to have to turn off beagle,
  but once I removed ZMD my system stopped becoming unresponsive and I no
  longer felt the need to disable beagle.  I've never had beagle make my
  system unusable but ZMD used to do it all the time.  It was tempting to
  blame beagle because beagle indexing and ZMD updates were often running
  at the same time, and the combination of the two is a real killer.

 As a new user, what is ZMD and is it necessary for system functionality?

Dwain,

It is:
http://en.opensuse.org/Zmd

and it is not necessary, since YaST is doing for years all that zmd should do 
for individual user, but without hogging resources on smaller machines, ie. 
without problems :-) 

Install opensuseupdater if you want notifications about security updates. 
I wanted. 

Than remove zmd, zen-updater, zen-installer, zen-remover and rug. 

-- 
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http://en.opensuse.org/Portal 
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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread dwain
Rajko M. wrote:
 On Wednesday 28 March 2007 20:39, dwain wrote:
   
 David Brodbeck wrote:
 
 Rajko M. wrote:
   
 Beagle is not alone, the update of manpages is also tax on computer..
 
 Not to mention ZMD.  I thought I was going to have to turn off beagle,
 but once I removed ZMD my system stopped becoming unresponsive and I no
 longer felt the need to disable beagle.  I've never had beagle make my
 system unusable but ZMD used to do it all the time.  It was tempting to
 blame beagle because beagle indexing and ZMD updates were often running
 at the same time, and the combination of the two is a real killer.
   
 As a new user, what is ZMD and is it necessary for system functionality?
 

 Dwain,

 It is:
 http://en.opensuse.org/Zmd

 and it is not necessary, since YaST is doing for years all that zmd should do 
 for individual user, but without hogging resources on smaller machines, ie. 
 without problems :-) 

 Install opensuseupdater if you want notifications about security updates. 
 I wanted. 

 Than remove zmd, zen-updater, zen-installer, zen-remover and rug. 

   
thanks for all of the advise.  i removed a lot of unwanted programs and
it seemed that with the dependencies stripped the system bare.  i
haven't rebooted yet, but i'll find out what's what here shortly.  gotta
reboot.  cross your fingers.

dwain

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Dwain Alford
Alford Design Group
P.O. Box 145
Winfield, Alabama  35594

telephone:  205.487.2570
cellphone:  205.495.5619

email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
web:http://www.alford-design-group.com

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Re: [opensuse] Beagle Configuration

2007-03-28 Thread riccardo35
On Wed 28 Mar 2007 23:51, Rajko M. wrote:
 Beagle is not alone, the update of manpages is also tax on computer..

 Someone came on idea to run few processes that use hard disk heavily
 at startup which gives very bad image of openSUSE.
_

In SuSE 10.2 system-slowing processes seem to be a feature . . . APT is 
memory-demanding [ SMART seems lighter]



friendly greetings




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