Hi Terry,

> I've been killing bitwarden via htop.

Or not!

> More recently, however, I have found that there seem to be dozens of
> bitwarden processes and as soon as I kill the parent of one set,
> another appears.

Try ‘ps xf’ to see a forest (f) of trees of processes across (x) your
various terminals, etc.  That should might show there's a hierarchy of
bitwardens where you're only killing the lower ones.

If they all have the same process name then ‘killall bitwarden’ might
kill them all in one go.  Another ‘ps xf’ would check.

> $ /snap/bin/bitwarden
> A JavaScript error occurred in the main process

I don't know much about snap.

Another approach would be to configure bitwarden to not be run by the
desktop on logging in, then reboot, and see snap will then update.

-- 
Cheers, Ralph.

-- 
  Next meeting: Online, Jitsi, Tuesday, 2025-01-07 20:00
  Check to whom you are replying
  Meetings, mailing list, IRC, ...  https://dorset.lug.org.uk
  New thread, don't hijack:  mailto:dorset@mailman.lug.org.uk

Reply via email to