Nepomuk memory limit.

I’m running KDE 4.4.0 on openSUSE 11,2 and nepomuk/virtuoso is running
slower than in RC3. It’s also a bit of a memory hog. By late yesterday, one
of the nepomukservicestubs had reached 2.2GiB! The limit I’d configured it
with was 200MiB. Does this limit do anything?

By this morning, the machine had ground almost to a halt so I gave it the
Vulcan neck pinch. Nothing happened so I went for a leisurely bath. Later,
as I was getting out of the bath, I heard the chimes of the logoff. Now all
seems OK but I wonder how long that will last?


Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks., UK. E-mail: newsman not newsboy
“I wear the cheese. It does not wear me.”

I would recommend checking bugzilla. Post it as a bug. You never know…

On Sunday 14 Feb 2010 15:46, Romanator scribbled:

>
> I would recommend checking bugzilla. Post it as a bug. You never
> know…
>
>

Some of my bugzillas at KDE date back to last spring and haven’t been
acknowledged yet. Is that what you meant by the " . . . "? :wink:

I’ll have a look anyway. It seems to be a new problem as RC3 was OK, which
is a bit frustrating. It’s also time I tried 11.3 and see how 4.4 behaves on
that. I’d try it on my other machine but that’s making nasty rumbles and
beeps when trying - and failing - to boot. Nasty!


Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks., UK. E-mail: newsman not newsboy
“I wear the cheese. It does not wear me.”

@Cloddy: the beeps mean something, depending on the motherboard/BIOS you have:
videocard
memory

I agree. Those beeps could meaning something. What machine are you using?

Good Luck!

On Sunday 14 Feb 2010 20:06, Romanator scribbled:

>
> I agree. Those beeps could meaning something. What machine are you
> using?
>

It’s a Heinz 58, also known as a Bitza, i.e. one I built myself.

The noises sound a bit like my old car did when a wheel bearing was going -
but then it always used to make noises like that every so often. Been
generally quite though in recent years.

As you say, I should try to find out what the beeps mean, otherwise it can
be trial and error. I’ll have to find all the relevant bits of paper and
booklets, the main one being for the motherboard which, if I remember
correctly, is a Gigabyte.

>
> Good Luck!
>
>

I’ll need it.


Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks., UK. E-mail: newsman not newsboy
“I wear the cheese. It does not wear me.”

I always search Google with the motherboard and BIOS brand (Award, Phoenix etc ) and the number of beeps, i.e.:

asus award three beeps. The first page usually contains the answer. Saves a lot of paper searching.

On Monday 15 Feb 2010 21:56, Knurpht scribbled:

>
> I always search Google with the motherboard and BIOS brand (Award,
> Phoenix etc ) and the number of beeps, i.e.:
>
> asus award three beeps. The first page usually contains the answer.
> Saves a lot of paper searching.
>

Thanks, I’d already gone to the Gigabyte site and found on page one hundred
and something of the manual (memo to self to make better use of Google) that
it is supposed to be a memory problem - assuming I’ve remembered what bios
it was and selected the right list for the beep code. Swapped memory cards
around but no joy. Looks like a motherboard problem, especially as there’s
nothing much left plugged into it now.


Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks., UK. E-mail: newsman not newsboy
“I wear the cheese. It does not wear me.”

If you installed a Gigabyte motherboard, the entire manual can be found on the driver CD.

On Tuesday 16 Feb 2010 15:36, Romanator scribbled:

>
> If you installed a Gigabyte motherboard, the entire manual can be found
> on the driver CD.
>
>

First I’d have to find the driver CD! Organisation was never my strong
point. :wink:


Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks., UK. E-mail: newsman not newsboy
“I wear the cheese. It does not wear me.”