On 5/21/20 3:38 PM, Frank-Rainer Grahl wrote:
Ant wrote:
On 5/20/2020 3:49 PM, Frank-Rainer Grahl wrote:
Ant wrote:
On 5/20/2020 10:00 AM, Doors wrote:
On Sun, 17 May 2020 05:40:47 -0700, flyguy <[email protected]>
wrote:
Windows 10, SM 2.49.4
Task Manager showed SM using 32% memory with email and one browser
window open.
The browser had only one tab with the Washington Post front page.
Closing the
browser reduced memory use to 24%; after closing the email then
reopening it, it
used only 7%. I've noticed this high memory usage before. Is there
a way to avoid
it, or to reduce it without closing the program? I don't mind
closing/reopening
the email, but often I have several windows and tabs open, so it's
a nuisance to
close the browser, too.
It isn't just you.
SM has always been a memory hog.
I run it with disk cache disabled, set to 1Mb that is.
Prefetching disabled, check page on every load.
It exceeds 2Gb for me daily, at times spiking to 4Gb.
Thank goodness for the restart button.
The pattern I have noticed indicates not all memory is released when a
page is closed.
If a page takes 150Mb to render, 25-50Mb is not released.
It could be an incomplete release list, or some automatic allocator
that
fails to report memory usage correctly.
Not that FF is much better behaved.
No idea on chrome, I won't allow it on my system.
Still better than the mess that is FF.
I am so glad I can kill tabs, I hate those things.
Ditto. SM v2.53.2 and earlier still use old Gecko's web browser
engine. I was told v2.57 uses the newer one that current Firefox
uses. It still has a long way to go before it's stable for the
public though. :( I have to exit and restart my SeaMonkey often
because of bloated web sites like YouTube, LinkedIn, Facebook,
Twitter, Reddit's new design (old design is fine), etc. It really
hogs resources like memories, CPU, etc. SeaMonkey even freezes and
sometimes get stuck forever! It doesn't even take long too for these
issues to come up too! :(
Ther is no new web browser engine. Actually 2.53.x has many backports
here. 2.57 and up are not really faster. Just bloated sites these days.
Oh. Firefox's newer Geck web engine is much faster than the one in
SeaMonkey. :(
There is no new web engine.
FRG
So Gecko 78 with all the mozilla-central commits wouldn't be a new and
improved Gecko engine?
I think 76 may also have some improvements like WebRender for some
Windows users on modern Intel laptops with a small screen for improved
graphics rendering.
YMMV
--
OS: Ubuntu Linux 18.04LTS - Gnome Desktop
https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/get-involved/
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