On 02/02/2018 04:41 PM, Patrick Serru wrote:
Of course, not generating a core-dump allows one to honorably get out of the thermal envelope, but the system always loses time incomprehensibly from time to time. I had the opportunity to investigate a little more today and it seems to me that it was the "tracker" software that was involved. Here is an excerpt from journalctrl, theses lines being repeated a lot of time : « févr. 02 18:28:35 lin-pat org.freedesktop.Tracker1.Miner.Extract[4991]: (tracker-extract:21230): Tracker-WARNING **: Task 2, error: Unable to insert multiple values for subject `urn:uuid:7979f192-9815-e144-ad9c-bcd5c872babe' and single valued property `nie:contentCreated' (old_value: '<untransformable>', new value: '<untransformable>') févr. 02 18:28:35 lin-pat org.freedesktop.Tracker1.Miner.Extract[4991]: Sparql was: »
I simply deleted this software after watching, of course, what else it could do to generate core-dump.
Patrick
Tracker, if I recall is the follow-on package to the KDE4 system indexing Beagle package ("the dreaded dog"). The very first thing I do after installing a system is pull out the `sudo rpm -e` gun and shoot the dreaded dog in the head to put it out of its misery. I haven't had to do this with tracker, I just disable the indexing completely. I don't need some damn inefficient file indexer to try and help me find files on my system. If I ever get to senile to not know in which handful of directories the file I'm looking for is stored, it's time for me to pack up my computer and retire... Look for options that let you disable indexing altogether. Instead, make sure mlocate is installed. That indexes the files you didn't put on the system in a much more efficient way and with much less overhead. -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-kde3+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-kde3+owner@opensuse.org