Matthew Stringer escribió:
> The name changed that's true but it behaves the same, when it
> auto-checks for updates it maxes out the CPU (should have written it
> better).
If you are sure that the new updater tools are going mad as zmd helper
tools did in the past, open a bug report, this should
Benji Weber wrote:
On 05/01/2008, Matthew Stringer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I don't know why it does it but I'll add that it's the same on 10.3,
regardless of the spec of the hardware I've tried the ZMD updater
completely maxes out the CPU.
ZMD isn't included in 10.3, so it sounds li
On 05/01/2008, Matthew Stringer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't know why it does it but I'll add that it's the same on 10.3,
> regardless of the spec of the hardware I've tried the ZMD updater
> completely maxes out the CPU.
ZMD isn't included in 10.3, so it sounds like you're either not
runn
Simon Roberts wrote:
Hi all,
In opensuse 10.2, on a dual core 64 bit CPU, I've noticed that the zmd updater thingy has
a sub-process "update-status" which seems to run flat out from time to time.
Typically it will do this immediately after startup, but it' does it at other times too.
The symp
- Original Message
From: Benji Weber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: opensuse list
Sent: Saturday, January 5, 2008 8:25:33 AM
Subject: Re: [opensuse] ZMD runs flat out?
On 05/01/2008, Simon Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> In opensuse 10.2, on a dual
On 05/01/2008, Simon Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> In opensuse 10.2, on a dual core 64 bit CPU, I've noticed that the zmd
> updater thingy has a sub-process "update-status" which seems to run flat out
> from time to time. Typically it will do this immediately after startup, but
Hi all,
In opensuse 10.2, on a dual core 64 bit CPU, I've noticed that the zmd updater
thingy has a sub-process "update-status" which seems to run flat out from time
to time. Typically it will do this immediately after startup, but it' does it
at other times too. The symptoms are that one core