Further to all this business: This KDE system has been running continuously (i.e. no reboots) for one week under strace without a single message, despite thunder storms, short blackouts and what not. The only change I have made is to use the Motif CD player, xmcd instead of the KDE one, kscd which crashes regularly and gets a bit confused if you eject using its display button or the button on the CD unit. I find it hard to believe that that might be significant.
I guess I can't complain. Win2k at its best, can't survive more than a day or two. (OS/2 z"l also used to also stay up forever ...) DAF Daniel Feiglin wrote: > > > Tzafrir Cohen wrote: > >> On Sun, 20 Jan 2002, Daniel Feiglin wrote: >> >> >>> Henry Ficher wrote: >>> >>>> Daniel Feiglin wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>>> I looked at anthing even faintly resemmbling a log file unde /var/log. >>>>> It there somewhere else? >>>>> >>>> Check also~/.xsession-errors? That's where KDE and everything else >>>> under XFree86 write debugging info and errors. >>>> >>> Izat so? Under SuSE 7.3 there aint no such thing. Do you need to set >>> something >>> or other in startx or .xinitrc to make it happen? (I'm concurrently >>> doing some >>> RTFM on this, but there is a **lot** of FR to R.) >>> >> >> Why not simply pick a certain process and see to which file its '1' and >> '2' file descriptors are going? >> >> /proc/<process ID>/fd/[12] > > > > For example, kdeinit 1 & 2 got to ... pipes! > > >> >> Note that the X server itself (the process called 'X' probably, and >> run by >> root) may have a different destination to its output. > > > > X server: 1 -> a socket, 2 -> a pipe. > > I guess the next question is: Which process is using pipe number n or > socket number m. Is there some kind of simple inverse ps that does it? > netstat -pa goes part of the way ... > > >> >> > > We're missing something. > > DAF > > > > > ================================================================= > To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with > the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command > echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
