https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=239211 eich@novell.com changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |dmueller@novell.com Severity|Normal |Minor Status|ASSIGNED |NEEDINFO Info Provider| |c_weidmann@gmx.net ------- Comment #9 from eich@novell.com 2007-01-28 08:40 MST ------- (In reply to comment #5)
Only very small improvements with 16 Bit color depth, if any!
I noticed that high CPU consumption isn't only while scrolling: Try to move a windows in front of a Konqueror instance with one of such sites loaded and it will need a lot of CPU time, too.
Redraw only depends on what's on the screen not what's loaded into the browser. If it depends on the number of 'sites' loaded it seems to indicate that you are running low on memory (or that the browsers consume too much memory). What is your memory size and your memory utilization? Is your system swapping? What's the CPU frequency when this happens (Intel Mobility chipsets have SpeedStepping)? I've just tried the page on an R200 system (the only one I have access to right now). It scrolls relatively smooth, CPU usage peaks at ~50 percent with konqueror. The consantly changing advertising banner on top seems to take some more CPU time and scrolls a little less smoothly. Static banners don't exhibit this behavior. On firefox this is less noticeable and the CPU usage is lower (never over 25 percent). Another thing I have noiticed in your log: (II) RADEON(0): AGP Fast Write disabled by default Please try: Option "AGPFastWrite" "1" All in all the problem seems to be related to a suboptimal optimal konqueror-X interaction. However this effect seems to be far from being distracting here. Maybe Dirk has some ideas on the rendering differences between konqueror and firefox. Assigning to reporter for further tests. -- Configure bugmail: https://bugzilla.novell.com/userprefs.cgi?tab=email ------- You are receiving this mail because: ------- You are on the CC list for the bug, or are watching someone who is.