On Sun, Nov 10, 2013 at 04:07:34PM -0600, Dale wrote: > >> I have noticed something that really bugs me. I sometimes have a few > >> Firefox sessions running. I do this because I have to be logged into a > >> website with more than one user/password. Here is my issue. If I click > >> the X box to close a session of Firefox, it doesn't seem to kill the > >> process. [...]
> > What version of Firefox? What addons (if any) do you use with Firefox? > Oh good heavens. I have lots of add ons installed. It would take me a > while to list them all, heck, just to get a list much list post them > here. There’s an addon for that. ;-) But if you start like that, I would recommend to thin out the list. You never know what kind of conflicts and other interactions there might be between addons. We could discuss this in another thread. ;-) > lol I recall abduction, tab utilities, last pass off the top of > my head. However, I have a test session that has very very few add ons > and it does the same way. With session you mean firefox profile? I know of no other way of having different sets of addons simultaneously (short of Walter’s idea of using different unix users). > Also, I run into this with other processes as well. It seems to me > that some package or the kernel is not killing processes as it should. > I just don't know what that is. What processes? If it’s Seamonkey which you mentioned elsewhere, it may be the same problem/cause. You could possibly identify the perpetrating process by looking at its memory footprint. A process that is close to terminating would use much less memory than a fully running process with tabs. > It could even be a KDE bug. I don’t really think so. You click the X, the window manager notifies the program in the window to quit. The program destroys its X client, KWin processes that event and poof. Nothing more KDE can do (IMHO). > I know when I go to boot runlevel, I have to kill quite a few > processes that are pretty stubborn to kill. kill -15 usually doesn't > work so I end up using -9 to get it to die. If you go to *that* length (switch to boot and kill processes manually), why not do the *cough* Ubuntu way and simply reboot, since killing X means killing most of your environment of running applications anyway? -- Gruß | Greetings | Qapla’ Please do not share anything from, with or about me with any Facebook service. The total intelligence on a planet is constant. Population grows...
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