Re: how to kill zombies

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On Saturday 27 April 2024 11:27:02 Dr. Nikolaus Klepp via tde-users wrote:
> Anno domini 2024 Sat, 27 Apr 10:44:36 -0700

> For what it's worth: today I purged network-manager and replaced it by
> connman + cmst. My networkmanager-related problems (not finding networks,
> not connecting ...) are gon now. That is, I still have dropping connections
> etc. but now I can detect if I got an incomplet network configuration and
> restart the connection if needed - and that takes seconds, not tenths of
> minutes.
>
> As for the "w"-zombie: it might be a corrupt library. You can try this to
> check if the checksums match:
>
> dpkg -l | awk {'print $2'} | xargs | debsums | grep -v 'OK'
>
> ... but as you live in the land-of-the-free™  I'd also run a check for a
> rootkit, just in case you had a visitor ...
>
> Nik

Well, I thought I would give those packages a try, so I installed connman, 
cmst and a dependency, ofono. I like the look of it, and it does seem to be 
useful as a backup plan, if my connection is giving me problems, and I want 
to do some testing and troubleshooting, trying to find out the source of the 
problem. 

In this case, however, as soon as I installed these packages, I could neither 
send nor receive emails. No other internet programs seem to have been 
affected, so far as I can tell, though I did not search too far. My browser 
still works the same, my internet radio kept working throughout, except when 
I restarted the connection. So it appears that these packages at least have 
some conflict. I did not uninstall tdenetworkmanager, but I don't think that 
I am using the gnome networkmanager itself, unless it's hiding somewhere in 
the background. When I do a fresh system installation, I am used to seeing 
both the gnome networkmanager and tdenetworkmanager both in the systray. 
After I finish the setup of my system (which usually involves getting rid of 
unnecessary programs, especially KDE Plasma or Gnome packages, if they 
somehow creep in. 

I tried restarting the connection, etc.: I did not go so far as to reboot, as 
I have a few other things to do before the sun goes down. 

Then I purged these packages, and again, email is back and functioning 
normally. So I may hang onto this connman and its helpers, just for backup, 
but for now I think I'll just stick with the tdenetworkmanager. 

I will try out some of those other suggestions later today, after I spend a 
few hours outdoors. 

Bill







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