On Monday 17 December 2007 08:58:18 am JP Rosevear wrote:
Beagle already does nice itself and employ strategies for reducing work when the CPU is not idle. However I/O is a problem and non-root processes can't change their own I/O priority iirc.
-JP -- JP Rosevear
Novell, Inc.
and what happens when it fills the swap space and brings *every* app to a grinding halt all while it nices itself to 19 or 38 or whatever? when things get as bad as beagle often makes them, the simplest thing to do is to throw the whole package away and start from scratch; yes, that would be hard, difficult and costly, but, a proper end product would more than pay for itself and would bring fame and fortune to the developer. some problems can not be solved simply by connecting dots among prefabricated libs. d. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org