> First, run something like "top" to see if anything is taking up
> processor time. If you notice a process using about 95% of the processor,
> this would be the problem.
>
> > Should I be looking for any other problems that I might not be aware of?
> Yes. Some processes can go into uninterup
> Hi folks, little anomyly that I'd like to share. I had a few probs with
> dpkg, and bash, which are now take care of thanks to the list. :-) Only
> things is now I notice a load which doesn't drop below 1, even when I am
> not doing anything.
First, run something like "top" to see if anything
You have not given a sufficient amount of information to diagnose the problem.
What process is causing the high load. I suspect that it is syslogd. If this
is the case, you probably have some directories specified in /etc/syslog.conf
that do not exist on your machine. Comment out the lines in /
3 matches
Mail list logo