From owner-freebsd-stable Fri Aug 8 02:23:52 1997 Return-Path: Received: (from root@localhost) by hub.freebsd.org (8.8.5/8.8.5) id CAA05423 for stable-outgoing; Fri, 8 Aug 1997 02:23:52 -0700 (PDT) Received: from terror.hungry.com (fn@terror.hungry.com [169.131.1.215]) by hub.freebsd.org (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id CAA05418 for ; Fri, 8 Aug 1997 02:23:48 -0700 (PDT) Received: (from fn@localhost) by terror.hungry.com (8.8.6/8.8.4) id CAA08109; Fri, 8 Aug 1997 02:23:46 -0700 (PDT) To: freebsd-stable@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Netscape native version References: <21563.863844380@time.cdrom.com> <19970808014355.44693@vinyl.quickweb.com> From: Faried Nawaz Date: 08 Aug 1997 02:23:46 -0700 In-Reply-To: mark@quickweb.com's message of 7 Aug 1997 23:26:05 -0700 Message-ID: Lines: 30 X-Mailer: Gnus v5.3/Emacs 19.34 Sender: owner-freebsd-stable@freebsd.org X-Loop: FreeBSD.org Precedence: bulk mark@quickweb.com (Mark Mayo) writes: Anyone else notice that it often just refuses to die?? I'd say about 60% of the time for me, when I close it by selecting "Exit" from the menu, or close the window using the window manager, Netscape disapears from the screen, but a process list shows me it's still there, eating up 20MB or RAM and burning away my CPU. 'kill -9' is your friend.. It dies for me -- you just have to wait a few seconds or so. It takes about 15-20 seconds to go away on my machine (486-100, 48mb ram, 2.2-STABLE). Finally, Communicator locked up on me last night - actuallly it locked up and took out my system with it.. complete freeze. X was still "displaying", but the keyboard and mouse were dead. The machine wouldn't even answer pings... complete freeze. Needless to say, since I've been running FreeBSD (almost 2 years) this is the first time this has ever happened to me. Lock up. Not even a crash. Nothing is worse, and horrible images of win95 were filling my head. I've had this happen on rare occasions in the past two years. Also, at least twice, I've gone away for a while, come back, hit some key to turn off the X screensaver (the 'blank' screen xset gives you), and the machine's rebooted. This was usually after a make world or some other long-running, vm-intensive process (hasn't happened recently). I don't think you can explicitly blame Communicator here.