On Mon, 2008-01-14 at 03:57 -0500, Aaron Kulkis wrote:
Clayton wrote:
Anyone else seeing Beagle really kill performance? I have disabled it and my machine finally is perky, but every now and then, I find it in memory again. How do I arange it to chew up less memory and CPU or kill it once and for all?
Usually this indicates you have a problematic file (usually its broken or corrupt) that causes the index helper to go into a loop while indexing.
See http://beagle-project.org/Troubleshooting_CPU for instructions on how to report such a bug.
A bit late to the discussion here... I also have to kill Beagle every time I do an install. I tried it again with the 10.3 install I did this weekend. It sucked up so much of my system resources that I could barely do anything else... this is on a *clean* default install (not an upgrade) on an AMD Athlon 64 X2 3800+ with 2Gb of RAM, a /home
with basically no data, but about 1.2TB of data on other mount points. My CPU.. both cores.. were running about 99%. RAM was full, and swap was filling up as well. The whole computer was grinding to a halt. When I finally managed top open a terminal and run top... Beagle was there consuming 100% of everything it could. I left Beagle run for a while... an afternoon... and it never changed. Kept my CPU nice and toasty warm though. In the end I sopped the daemon, and removed every trace of Beagle I could find. The result... the computer is back to normal. The 10.3 install is noticeably faster than the previous 10.2 install (also without Beagle).... and I'm happy.. .although a bit puzzled how it is that anyone finds Beagle useable.
This is typical behavior, and the developers have known about it for a long time, because there are written complaints about it all over the place.
And the devs haven't done shit about it.
which is why I joked about beating them with baseball bats until they do fix it. Because apparently, extreme disgust with the horrible performance characteristic of their creation doesn't seem to motivate them one bit.
As a contrast, I can install the Google Desktop indexer (on the dual core system), and I never notice it is there. It indexes roughly the same scope of data (I think). It never runs so that I am aware it's indexing. My other apps carry on with no noticeable impact on performance.
I see a few people here saying Beagle runs fine for them with no noticeable impact on performance... how? I've struggled with Beagle since it first appeared on the openSUSE scene. I have seen it's appalling impact on performance over several installs on several different hardware configurations. Not once have I seen it "work" in any measure that could be considered good.
Personally, I think they're either lying, or not paying attention.
I will continue to try it out with each new install I do, but... i don't hold out a lot of hope. I've kind of lumped it in with zmd... another app that is on my search and destroy list for a new install. Once those two apps are gone from a default install the computer works great with openSUSE.
Yep!
Why these system-resource hogs which offer functionality which is .. peripheral at best... are installed by default is utterly insane.
Aaron... I would really like to thank you for calling me a liar and ignorant. To say the devs are lazy and not doing anything is pure stupidity on your part. I'm sorry, you need to go to the Beagle list and talk to them if this is your problem. Desktop Search is NOT a peripheral tool... for many users who have started to use it, it is just as important to the system use as a file manager. Just ask users of Beagle for a long time, or longtime users of Mac OS X Tiger who have used Spotlight. If you do not use it, then you are more than welcome to uninstall it. You, I believe, are NOT welcome to remove the application from users, particularly new users who like it and may not know how to install it manually. -- Kevin "Yo" Dupuy | Public Email: <kevin@kevinsword.com> Happy New Year from Yo.media! -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org