On Wednesday 10 January 2007 04:32, Boris Glawe wrote: >Gene Heskett schrieb: >> On Tuesday 09 January 2007 14:52, Boris Glawe wrote: And I put this back in the list. >>> Hi, >>> >>> I don't like beagle, since I don't need it and it eats 50% of my >>> system resources. The CPU usage is regularly at 100% for example (has >>> beagle ever heard something about a nice value??), because beagle >>> runs pdftotext on pdf files, which I haven't touched for years. >>> >>> Beagle is crap. It assumes that all system resources are reserved for >>> beagle only and it assumes that the user does nothing but searching >>> lost stuff on his/her Desktop. >>> >>> My problem: I can't get rid of it! I run >>> >>> mono --debug /usr/lib/beagle/Settings.exe >>> (started from the settings menu) >>> >>> and disable all checkboxes, and close the dialog again. After that >>> this god damn beagle still runs. I have to kill those processes >>> manually or log off and on. These settings are valid until the next >>> system reboot. Beagle is then active again and magically all >>> checkboxes in this config GUI are enabled again. I don't know whether >>> the reactivation of beagle happens with every reboot, but I have >>> experienced it a dozens of times, that beagle is active, though I >>> have explicitly disabled it before. >>> >>> So, how can can I get rid of beagle? >>> >>> greets Boris >> >> Call up a session of yumex as root, and have yum remove it? ISTR >> there were 3 items to remove. But before it removed beagle-gui, I >> tried to get it to run and it, if it existed at all, wasn't in the >> $PATH, so I removed them. > >That's what I did (actually I'm preferring yum at the terminal)! >The problem remains: If beagle is installed it's hardly possible to >disable it! Though a user disables beagle (with the configuration GUI), >it will be reenabled a few system reboots later. I don't know the reason >of how beagle can suddenly be active after having disabled it. Maybe >it's because of some system updates, that overwrite my configuration, >maybe it has some other reasons. > >And in addition: An unexperienced user does not find out, that he/she is >working with something called "beagle" at all. Neither the configuration >GUI nor any search tools show me, that beagle does the searching job. >The CPU usage is also caused by other tools (pdftotext, for example) and >not by beagle itself. To find out, that it's beagle who i's to blame, >requires a lot of knowledge. A task like "which of my directories >consumes more then 100MB of space" cannot be easily done by beginners. >Also questions like "which process has started pdftotext", can only be >asked, if you know at all, that there's something like a process >hierarchy in unix. Beagle is definitely addressed to unexperienced > users. > >Fedora's acceptance suffers from tools like beagle, as it makes the >system slow and and can hardly be identified as the reason for the >performance loss. > >The confusion is perfect, if beagle suddenly running, though it was >explicitly disabled before!! > >> Let us know please when this thing is ready for prime time, and what >> exactly its supposed to do for us when it runs. > >Well, searching with beagle is extremely fast and saves a lot of system >resources - at the cost, that I haven't left any system resources in >the time when I don't search things on my desktop :-) > >greets Boris Sorry, to me its a waste of time and electricity to have it on a system. On this FC6 system, and let me repeat this, there is no beagle related option anywhere in the menu's that is capable of showing so much as a blank open windowframe. The most obvious thingy was 'kerry beagle' right on the main menu, which was a total no-op, no launch feedback adjacent to the mouse cursor, nothing. There was another entry someplace, a 'beagle configuration' I believe, that did cause the cursor to dance for the usual 30 second timeout, but in the end did nothing, and the find selection on the menu takes a good 20 seconds to open a screen, but then when a search term is entered that you know is existant, eventually comes back empty. Does this use a database beagle has built? In which case it was defective I assume. The worst part is that when I had removed all traces of it I could find with yumex's search pattern set to 'beagle', then I had to go through the menu's by hand and remove those entries. The rpm -e should have taken care of that IMO. Now if they come up with an update that actually does something worthwhile, I might put it back in. -- Cheers, Gene "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) Yahoo.com and AOL/TW attorneys please note, additions to the above message by Gene Heskett are: Copyright 2007 by Maurice Eugene Heskett, all rights reserved.