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]

Reply via email to