I see a message like this in my system journal: Aug 28 08:44:12 acme drkonqi-coredump-launcher[4357]: Authorization required, but no authorization protocol specified It happens quite often (every couple minutes), and when it does, it repeats many many times. It happens when I am not doing anything. So it seems not to be related to my activity. Or at least not directly. I do not know when this started. I just noticed it today because I saw that systemd-journald is taking > 25% CPU time. And rsyslogd is also taking lots of time. That seems wrong. How can I find out what is triggering it? I tried drkonqi-coredump-gui, but it says "No crashes match the search". I don't really need the core dumps. Can this be disabled? I see references (Google) to services with related names (drkonqi-coredump*). But I do not see them on my system. I'm running Leap. It's not the most recent: 20230908. I will be doing an update at some time soon. -- Roger Oberholtzer
Hello, In the Message; Subject : drkonqi-coredump-launcher Message-ID : <CANkOqwNh7S1XPTbwq_7z1aV=gLtcR3H=yyP9L2vULEK6oyh9kQ@mail.gmail.com> Date & Time: Wed, 28 Aug 2024 12:37:26 +0200 [RO] == Roger Oberholtzer <roger.oberholtzer@gmail.com> has written: [...] RO> I don't really need the core dumps. Can this be disabled? I see RO> references (Google) to services with related names RO> (drkonqi-coredump*). But I do not see them on my system. ....? RO> I'm running Leap. It's not the most recent: 20230908. I will be doing RO> an update at some time soon. How about this? $ systemctl --user status drkonqi-coredump-cleanup.service if active, then $ systemctl --user stop drkonqi-coredump-cleanup.timer $ systemctl --user mask drkonqi-coredump-cleanup.timer Best Regards & Good Night. --- ┏━━┓彡 Masaru Nomiya mail-to: nomiya @ lake.dti.ne.jp ┃\/彡 ┗━━┛ "Microsoft is overhauling its cybersecurity strategy, called the Secure Future Initiative, to incorporate key security features into its core set of technology platforms and cloud services. " -- Microsoft overhauls cyber strategy to finally embrace security by default --
participants (2)
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Masaru Nomiya
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Roger Oberholtzer