Re: Leaky at-spi-registryd update
- From: "Nolan Darilek" <nolan thewordnerd info>
- To: Willie Walker <William Walker Sun COM>
- Cc: gnome-accessibility-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: Leaky at-spi-registryd update
- Date: Wed, 18 Feb 2009 10:55:47 -0600
On 02/17/2009 08:12 AM, Willie Walker wrote:
Hi Nolan:
I wonder if some sort of popup attack might be happening in Firefox
and it's causing degradation in at-spi-registryd (just a guess). If
you kill all firefox-related processes on your machine when the spike
happens, do things end up getting back to normal?
No. That was what I tried for a long time before I ran system-monitor
and saw registryd at 300M memory use. From an earlier message:
It's as if the memory use just hangs around beneath 1%, then as soon as
it breaks beyond that, it's entirely uncontained and nothing can stop
it. Killing apps can make it shrink, but never back to what it was, and
it soon starts growing again. And I can't for the life of me come up
with one task that reliably gets it started.
So no matter what I kill, once it's spiked it's gone and nothing brings
it back. Killing everything and returning to an idle desktop brings
memory use down a bit, but it never even gets near 1% again.
In addition, try running Orca from a console and redirecting the
output to a file: orca > orca.out 2>&1
When you notice the problem crop up, give Firefox focus and press
Orca+Ctrl+Alt+PageDown. This tells Orca to dump the hierarchy of the
current app to the console. The output will be caught in orca.out and
might be informative. Note that you might want to check the contents
of orca.out for any private information before sending it to someone.
Good idea, but that too reveals nothing interesting, not even with other
apps. Everything shown is just what I'd expect to see. :(
The power supply in that box died last night. Since I'm going to have to
open it anyway, I'll upgrade its 512 megs of RAM to a gig and see if
that helps. And since no one else on multiple lists seems to have seen
this behavior, I'm going to call it bad hardware until proven otherwise.
Thanks for the suggestions.
Nolan Darilek wrote:
On 02/16/2009 12:04 PM, Willie Walker wrote:
Hi Nolan:
If one of the suspects is FF, I wonder if we might be able to focus
on it a little more. For example, I wonder if it might be possible
that it is some of the web sites you typically visit and/or maybe
some usage patterns (e.g., frequently opening/closing multiple FF
tabs or windows).
That's one of the many things I've thought of. Unfortunately, try
though I might, I just can't seem to come up with a correlation.
Last night I noticed at-spi-registryd use start climbing when I was
using the totem plugin to listen to a streamed MP3, thought I might
have finally figured out the cause, only the memory use kept spiking
after I'd closed the tab, and in fact, kept growing even when I did
nothing with FF. Just switching between apps could cause its memory
use to grow.
It's as if the memory use just hangs around beneath 1%, then as soon
as it breaks beyond that, it's entirely uncontained and nothing can
stop it. Killing apps can make it shrink, but never back to what it
was, and it soon starts growing again. And I can't for the life of me
come up with one task that reliably gets it started.
While still respecting your privacy, are you able to share some of
the typical pages you visit in a day?
Unfortunately, no. Most of my repeatedly-visited sites are
password-protected--LJ, a work-related site, etc. Beyond that it is
mostly random. The only site I regularly visit that isn't
password-protected is news.thewordnerd.info, my feedreader, but I
don't notice at-spi-registryd spikes correlating with visiting that.
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