Hi
I don’t know if i am posting this to the right place, if not so guide me.
After installed 13.1 Kde. My all yast modules happen to not start because of y2base doesn’t work properly.
it uses %100 cpu and ram usage starts to increase to the infinite.
Opensuse 13.1 Kde live cd has the same problem on my laptop but not 13.1 Gnome live version, on Gnome live cd yast respons.
What information should i give you about my system, I am waiting a reply.
Thaks.
I tried icewm before i my first post. it opens qt version of yast control center, and non of the modules work. (y2base on max cpu)
The command #yast in terminal doesn’t work either (text based yast). Here is my y2log file;***
Thanks. Just a comment. When the system language is not English, you
should do, in order to post here, like this:
minas-tirith:~ # LANG=en_US.UTF-8 zypper info kvm
Loading repository data...
Warning: Repository 'openSUSE-11.4-Update' appears to outdated. Consider
using a different mirror or server.
Reading installed packages...
or this:
minas-tirith:~ # LANG=C zypper info kvm
Loading repository data...
Warning: Repository 'openSUSE-11.4-Update' appears to outdated. Consider
using a different mirror or server.
Reading installed packages...
^C
That way we can all read it, regardless of local languages of sender and
reader. It is not a permanent change, it only applies to one command.
I say this, because I don’t know which of those repos are active or not.
But I do see that you have some 12.3 repos, and some 13.1 repos… a
mixture like that can break the system, and certainly cause your problems.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 12.3 x86_64 “Dartmouth” at Telcontar)
I changed the post immediately to English when it was local language. I am surprised you caught that one.
The active repositories on my system ;
13.1 Oss
13.1 Oss-update
13.1 Non-Oss
13.1 Non-Oss-update
13.1 Nvidia
All the other repos are disabled. There are 12.3 version repos because i upgraded from 12.3, but they are all disabled and my system is now up-to-date.
The problem is not my repos that is obvious but maybe in qt or ruby?
On 2014-01-29 17:36, XEARD wrote:
>
> I changed the post immediately to English when it was local language. I
> am surprised you caught that one.
Oh.
Yes, that’s one of the nuances of this forum. I access via nntp, not
http, and often I get the first version, not the edited one.
> The active repositories on my system ;
> 13.1 Oss
> 13.1 Oss-update
> 13.1 Non-Oss
> 13.1 Non-Oss-update
> 13.1 Nvidia
>
> All the other repos are disabled. There are 12.3 version repos because i
> upgraded from 12.3, but they are all disabled and my system is now
> up-to-date.
Aha. Ok, then.
> The problem is not my repos that is obvious but maybe in qt or ruby?
>
> I am waiting for a reply, Thanks.
The repos are alright, but just in case… try this:
rpm -q -a --queryformat "%{INSTALLTIME} %{INSTALLTIME:day} \
%{BUILDTIME:day} %-30{NAME} %15{VERSION}-%-7{RELEASE} %{arch} \
%25{VENDOR}%25{PACKAGER} == %{DISTRIBUTION} %{DISTTAG}
" \
| sort | cut --fields="2-" | tee rpmlist | less -S
On 2014-01-29 22:36, XEARD wrote:
>
> First rpm command puts very a long output (2341 lines - i will not
> include this part unless it is necessary).
No, not necessary.
I should have told you that the intention was for you to inspect that
list. Older packages are at the top of the list, and tell of likely
packages that were not upgraded when you did the system upgrade.
The second list is more explicit, if we hit on the correct search
string. We were searching for lines in the previous query that do not
contain the string “openSUSE 13.1”
> The second one puts this (60 lines);
Most of them are probably irrelevant, but as you can see yourself, you
still have some packages that pertain to openSUSE 12.3. You should
upgrade them, or remove if they are no longer needed.
Most of them come from packman, they affect multimedia. But there are
also some kernel related packages, and the nvidia drivers. Steam, too.
Nothing that I see at a glance that could cause your current problem,
though.
You could try on a terminal:
su -
yast2 --qt sw_single &
It would allow you to reach the package manager, bypassing y2base, in
order to search and upgrade those packages.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 12.3 x86_64 “Dartmouth” at Telcontar)
On 2014-01-30 12:46, XEARD wrote:
>
>> It would allow you to reach the package manager, bypassing y2base, in
>> order to search and upgrade those packages.
>
> It doesn’t bypass y2base, I thought y2base is the core thread for all
> yast tasks. It must always be run whenever a yast request made, am i
> wrong?
No, you are right. Sigh…
Ok, you should have a look at the yast logs. Under “/var/log/YaST2/”.
Probably “y2log”.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 12.3 x86_64 “Dartmouth” at Telcontar)