Package: kpdf Version: 4:3.4.2-2 Severity: normal
When viewing large pdf files kpdf seems to use an unreasonably large amount of X pixmap resources. After loading iand paging through a large file (eg the IA32 SDM http://www.intel.com/design/pentium4/manuals/index_new.htm ) "xrestop" reports that kpdf is using almost 700MB of pixmaps (machine has 2GB physical RAM). I have the performance/memory usage option to "Normal", so this seems excessive. Changing this setting to "Aggressive" makes no noticable differece. Changing to "Low" fixes the excessive pixmap use, but with a fairly severe performance hit. Also tried on a machine with less physical ram, and the limit seems to be one third of physical ram. I don't know if this limit is imposed by kpdf or Xorg. Paul -- System Information: Debian Release: testing/unstable APT prefers unstable APT policy: (500, 'unstable') Architecture: i386 (i686) Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash Kernel: Linux 2.6.13.2-w64 Locale: LANG=en_GB, LC_CTYPE=en_GB (charmap=ISO-8859-1) Versions of packages kpdf depends on: ii kdelibs4c2 4:3.4.2-4 core libraries for all KDE applica ii libc6 2.3.5-7 GNU C Library: Shared libraries an ii libfontconfig1 2.3.2-1.1 generic font configuration library ii libfreetype6 2.1.10-1 FreeType 2 font engine, shared lib ii libgcc1 1:4.0.2-2 GCC support library ii libjpeg62 6b-10 The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG ii libpaper1 1.1.14-3 Library for handling paper charact ii libqt3-mt 3:3.3.5-1 Qt GUI Library (Threaded runtime v ii libstdc++6 4.0.2-2 The GNU Standard C++ Library v3 ii libx11-6 6.8.2.dfsg.1-9 X Window System protocol client li ii libxft2 2.1.7-1 FreeType-based font drawing librar ii libxrender1 1:0.9.0-2 X Rendering Extension client libra ii xlibs 6.8.2.dfsg.1-9 X Window System client libraries m ii zlib1g 1:1.2.3-6 compression library - runtime Versions of packages kpdf recommends: ii kghostview 4:3.4.2-2 PostScript viewer for KDE -- no debconf information -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]