On Sat, 2005-07-16 at 15:10 -0800, John Andersen wrote:
On Saturday 16 July 2005 01:28 pm, Mike McMullin wrote:
What does top indicate?
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND 18729 Mike 16 0 2052 884 676 R 3.8 0.1 0:00.04 top 18216 Mike 15 0 11384 8676 3328 S 1.9 1.1 0:37.96 wish 18220 Mike 15 0 42172 26m 19m S 1.9 3.5 0:56.45 konqueror 18251 Mike 16 0 28372 15m 11m S 1.9 2.0 0:17.00 kbearsitemanage 1 root 16 0 680 248 216 S 0.0 0.0 0:04.78 init 2 root 34 19 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.14 ksoftirqd/0 3 root 10 -5 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:03.09 events/0 4 root 10 -5 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.15 khelper 9 root 10 -5 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.00 kthread 22 root 10 -5 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:01.18 kblockd/0 78 root 15 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:01.83 pdflush 79 root 15 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 1:44.57 pdflush 81 root 13 -5 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.00 aio/0 80 root 15 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:17.27 kswapd0 57 root 15 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:01.51 kapmd 673 root 15 0 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.00 kseriod 1121 root 10 -5 0 0 0 S 0.0 0.0 0:12.80 reiserfs/0
Dont worry about kbear, its not your problem. In fact nothing is your problem, the machine is not using any cpu time at all.
This sounds like a net problem.
Post your /etc/hosts file. I suspect either a routing problem or the machine does not know how to reach itself. (There are a lot of things in unix that use tcp sockets to talk to other processes in the same machine.
Your hosts should look something like this: 127.0.0.1 localhost 127.0.0.1 <your real host name here, as listed in /etc/HOSTNAME>
Missing from my file
# special IPv6 addresses ::1 localhost ipv6-localhost ipv6-loopback fe00::0 ipv6-localnet ff00::0 ipv6-mcastprefix ff02::1 ipv6-allnodes ff02::2 ipv6-allrouters ff02::3 ipv6-allhosts
127.0.0.1 localhost # special IPv6 addresses ::1 localhost ipv6-localhost ipv6-loopback fe00::0 ipv6-localnet ff00::0 ipv6-mcastprefix ff02::1 ipv6-allnodes ff02::2 ipv6-allrouters ff02::3 ipv6-allhosts 127.0.0.2 P-733.MWMCMLLN P-733 What does this last line do? This is the actual machine I'm on, but it;s .2 not .1? Mike