-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 El 2017-02-14 a las 14:25 -0600, Jim Flanagan escribió:
On 2/14/17 11:54 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
browser.sessionstore.interval;15000
Unless that is precissely 15" ? I'll try 15000.
The other thing your link points at is saving cookies. That would depend on the displayed sites, I guess.
Its milliseconds, so every 15 seconds (15,000 ms) it writes its entire state to that file.
I have it at 150" now.
I changed my laptop to 5 minutes, some I've read go much longer, I've read 30 minutes. I think the biggest problem with this is that it is writing the entire content of its browser state, every single time, by default every 15 seconds, over and over again. Hence the wear issues on SSDs. Hopefully Mozilla will fix this behavior soon. (Google Chrome does a similar thing so needs fixing too).
It should save the status when a new tab is added or an url edited. However... I think they should rewrite it. Do not save the entire status, but only the recent changes, incrementally. They are recoding it with threads. If the main thread is a controller and does not crash, it could handle the storing a copy of the status in memory. Something we can do is store it in ramdisk (/run), then copy to hard disk periodically.
I can't help but think it could be causing at least some of your issue, even on a spinning drive. so much writing could weaken that sector on the drive.
Yes, I'll see what happens. But Thunderbird does not have this setting. - -- Cheers Carlos E. R. (from 42.2 x86_64 "Malachite" (Minas Tirith)) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iF4EAREIAAYFAlijcJ0ACgkQja8UbcUWM1wU8gD/XeY/SqVdBOZSETOMKwR8TNMJ GYKcTRJ78yYggeSKOrkA/RUXy0iklF3o+NVPIVJJnCPnUa4yVvZMTPBndWMENgKL =Ho1m -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----