On Wednesday 25 April 2007 19:03, Kevin Krammer wrote: > On Mittwoch, 25. April 2007 +0100, John wrote: > > It's happened again. This time kmail, 2 copies of kate, ding and 2 konq > > windows running, 3 tabs in one and 1 in the other. Linux is continually > > swapping in and out small portions of memory. Started suddenly for no > > apparent reason. Machine slows down and then goes so slow as to be > > unusable. I had to hit the reset button this time - kmenu wouldn't come > > up. > > One of the possible causes is a memory leak in one of the applications, > i.e. an application continuously requesting new memory and not releasing it > because it "forgot" about having it. > > The problem is that since the swapping makes the machine unresponsive, it > is hard to check which of the processes is doing it. > > Sometimes it is not even an application as such, but a plugin within a > running application, e.g. a Kicker applet, a kded module, etc > > If this happens a lot, you could consider running top, sorted by memory, in > a Konsole window while you are working and try to switch to it once it > starts the swapping. > > Cheers, > Kevin Just an update on this. If it's an application it looks like it was kate. I can't rule out a suse update that has since been corrected though. Yet. I have kate set up so that it sytax highlights all of the languages that it's capable of handling. On kate I miss the inbuilt file manager like facility it used to have. I often use it for editing system files, other oddments and found that an extremely useful memory jogger. i could use the bookmark facility but prefer the filing system as it can cope with more. -- Regards John Suse 10.0 KDE 3.4.2 B ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.