Bug#503451: gnome: Hang and 100 % CPU load after small appearance change
Josselin Mouette schrieb: > Le dimanche 26 octobre 2008 à 09:51 +0100, Richard Scherping a écrit : >> gnome-appearance-properties output when started from command line: >> >> --- >> (gnome-appearance-properties:7061): appearance-properties-WARNING **: >> Unknown Tag: comment >> >> >> (gnome-appearance-properties:7061): appearance-properties-WARNING **: >> Unknown Tag: comment >> --- >> >> Please direct me to some usefull steps to resolve that issue. I do not have >> the problem with a similar machine (that is running Lenny for one year now, >> never having Etch there). > > This clearly looks like the result of having a b0rked ~/.gtkrc-* file. Thanks for this hint - it really solved my issue to delete those two files. They contained the following before: ~# cat .gtkrc-2.0 # -- THEME AUTO-WRITTEN DO NOT EDIT include "/usr/share/themes/Clearlooks/gtk-2.0/gtkrc" include "/home/richard/.gtkrc-2.0.mine" # -- THEME AUTO-WRITTEN DO NOT EDIT ~# cat .gtkrc-1.2-gnome2 # Autowritten by gnome-settings-daemon. Do not edit include "/home/richard/.gtkrc.mine" ~# Those .mine files did not exist. On another system (running Lenny from the beginning, no upgrade from Etch), there is only the .gtkrc-1.2-gnome2 file and I have had no problems. So maybe the upgrade process should recommend removing the .gtkrc-2.0 file? Richard -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Bug#503451: gnome: Hang and 100 % CPU load after small appearance change
Le dimanche 26 octobre 2008 à 09:51 +0100, Richard Scherping a écrit : > gnome-appearance-properties output when started from command line: > > --- > (gnome-appearance-properties:7061): appearance-properties-WARNING **: > Unknown Tag: comment > > > (gnome-appearance-properties:7061): appearance-properties-WARNING **: > Unknown Tag: comment > --- > > Please direct me to some usefull steps to resolve that issue. I do not have > the problem with a similar machine (that is running Lenny for one year now, > never having Etch there). This clearly looks like the result of having a b0rked ~/.gtkrc-* file. Cheers, -- .''`. : :' : We are debian.org. Lower your prices, surrender your code. `. `' We will add your hardware and software distinctiveness to `-our own. Resistance is futile. signature.asc Description: Ceci est une partie de message numériquement signée
Bug#503451: gnome: Hang and 100 % CPU load after small appearance change
Package: gnome Severity: important Having upgraded my amd64 system from etch to lenny, I tried changing some appearance options and this is the result: - gnome-appearance-properties takes 100 % cpu load (one core fully loaded) and does not load theme previews (big question mark stays there) - changing two small options ("Glanz" (german) and different foreground color) resulted in gnome-settings-daemon to take 100 % cpu load, too. This also occured after rebooting and logging in again (without running anything in Gnome) - this also resulted in a "gnome-settings-daemon could not be started" message when trying to launch the appearance properties - removed .gconf and .gconfd in home folder -> no longer 100 % gnome-settings-dameon load, but of course lost all my configuration - still having 100 % load when launching gnome-appearance-properties, closing the window does not help, SIGTERM needed. gnome-appearance-properties output when started from command line: --- (gnome-appearance-properties:7061): appearance-properties-WARNING **: Unknown Tag: comment (gnome-appearance-properties:7061): appearance-properties-WARNING **: Unknown Tag: comment --- Please direct me to some usefull steps to resolve that issue. I do not have the problem with a similar machine (that is running Lenny for one year now, never having Etch there). -- System Information: Debian Release: lenny/sid APT prefers testing APT policy: (500, 'testing') Architecture: amd64 (x86_64) Kernel: Linux 2.6.26-1-amd64 (SMP w/2 CPU cores) Locale: LANG=de_DE.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=de_DE.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8) Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]