the log has no really useful informations, do you still get the issue?
could you describe how to trigger the bug on a standard installation?
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Nautilus rapidly eats memory when video thumbnails are active
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/219878
You received this bug notification because you are
Yes I still get the bug if I set the thumbnails to anything bigger then
100% like M-Theory212 describes.
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Nautilus rapidly eats memory when video thumbnails are active
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/219878
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 204434 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/204434
that's bug #204434 then
** This bug has been marked a duplicate of bug 204434
Thumbnails for 200% zoom are regenerated each time a folder is opened.
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Nautilus rapidly eats memory when video thumbnails
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 204434 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/204434
Me too, still pretty much the same.. That's what system monitor looks
like during the process (att.), 2 pixels = 1 second, and it will keep
doing it for each file, occasionally not dropping or making the
I'm also experiencing this bug.
Nautilus will use most of my system memory when viewing folders with video
files with a zoom of 150% or more. It will always crash and restart when memory
usage builds up to about 500M.
If I set the zoom back to 100% and reload the folder, memory usage will
** Attachment added: backtrace output
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/13586905/gdb-nautilus2.txt
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Nautilus rapidly eats memory when video thumbnails are active
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/219878
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is
Upon further inspection this seems to be caused by nautilus trying to
regenerate the thumbnail each time, and
only happens when zoom is set to higher than 100% (150% in my case), so it must
be related to : https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nautilus/+bug/204434
The weird thing is
Thanks for your bug report. Could you try to get a valgrind log for the
crash (you can follow the instructions on
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Valgrind)?
** Changed in: nautilus (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided = Medium
Assignee: (unassigned) = Ubuntu Desktop Bugs (desktop-bugs)
Status:
Here's two valgrind logs, made with nautilus set at 100% and 150% zoom.
I've tried to let it run for a couple of minutes in each case and kill it with
nautilus -q, only in the second case it took much longer as the system was
crawling.
With zoom 100% the process' memory usage was stable, but at