Package: gnuplot-x11
Version: 4.0.0-2
Severity: normal
When suspended (using ctrl-z, shell is bash), gnuplot often goes into a
state where it generates a large ammount of cpu usage and communicates
intensively with the X server without apparently doing anything. To
generate this state the following usually works:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ gnuplot
G N U P L O T
Version 4.0 patchlevel 0
last modified Thu Apr 15 14:44:22 CEST 2004
System: Linux 2.4.26-1-386
<...>
Terminal type set to 'x11'
gnuplot> plot sin(x) w l
gnuplot>
[1]+ Stopped gnuplot
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$
Then move the gnuplot X display window. The cpu usage then shoots up to
~100% and large ammounts of X traffic are generated (enough to saturate a
100Mbit network if running over an ssh tunnel).
I have tried this across several machines running sarge, with different
X servers and both local and remote X displays. The version of gnuplot
in woody doesn't seem to demonstrate the problem.
-- System Information:
Debian Release: 3.1
APT prefers testing
APT policy: (500, 'testing')
Architecture: i386 (i686)
Kernel: Linux 2.4.26-1-386
Locale: LANG=en_GB, LC_CTYPE=en_GB (charmap=ISO-8859-1)
Versions of packages gnuplot-x11 depends on:
ii gnuplot-nox 4.0.0-2 A command-line driven interactive
ii libc6 2.3.2.ds1-20 GNU C Library: Shared libraries an
ii libx11-6 4.3.0.dfsg.1-10 X Window System protocol client li
ii xlibs 4.3.0.dfsg.1-10 X Keyboard Extension (XKB) configu
-- no debconf information
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