On Mon, 2006-05-15 at 12:31 -0400, taharka wrote: > Howdy, > > On Sun, 2006-05-14 at 23:10 -0700, Craig White wrote: > > On Sun, 2006-05-14 at 23:42 +0200, András Horváth wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > > > I just upgraded from FC4 to FC5 (and upgraded) and get a strange problem: > > > > > > When I start evolution, it begins to eat 85-90% of CPU continuously. > > > Even if there are no incoming mail to filter or other work to do. The > > > CPU temperature on my laptop is 76-78 C if evolution is running and > > > power consumption is very high. > > > > > > I did not observe such phenomena in earlier versions. > > > > > > What should be the problem? > > > > > > Thank you in advance, > > ---- > > turn off mail filtering in Preferences. > > > > I have found that to be an issue included failing to kill off some spamd > > processes even if you quit evolution. > > Whoa!! Thanks a billion for that tip. Unchecked junk mail filtering here > & retrieving new mail is about 100 times faster :-)) Now, I wonder what > happens to future junk mail? ---- after things have settled down, you can probably turn it back on. It's likely that something has happened to you user bayes db. That's why I find it helpful to kill off any spamd processes that seem to linger after I close evolution. You can try moving your user spamassassin settings... 'mv $HOME/.spamassassin $HOME/.spamassassin.bak and then launching evolution again and then turn on junk mail filtering. In the end, I just shut it off since I do have spamassassin running on my mail server and though having my own user bayes db seemed to pick up some more via the training within Evolution, eventually it became a nightmare. Craig -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list