This is what worked for me, on an Intel-based HP Pavillon dv6000:
First of all, my puzzling started making sense only when I got rid of
the Gnome CPU Frequency Scaling Monitor. It does and displays nonsense.
For example, when the CPU is absolutely constantly at maximum speed, the
Gnome applet will
Hello,
The solution proposed in https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xorg-
server/+bug/186354 worked for me: disable xinerama.
On ubuntu 9.04 (using an Intel GMA chipset), I added this at the bottom
of my /etc/X11/xorg.conf file and then had no more problem after
restarting the X server:
Se
Hello,
Disabling xinerama worked for me too.
On ubuntu 9.04 (using an Intel GMA chipset), I added this at the bottom
of my /etc/X11/xorg.conf file and then had no more problem after
restarting the X server:
Section "Serverflags"
Option "Xinerama" "false"
Endsection
--
X server memory leaks
The problem was due to me accidentally instructing Firefox to no more
load images from that given web server. So I kept having advertising
images, because they are loaded from other servers. But no more cartoon
images from the Slate.com server.
I didn't even know that preventing to load images fro
I almost never restart my laptop (HP Pavilion dv6000, using Ubuntu
9.04), only put it to sleep. After a few days I get this strange
behavior with OpenOffice. Shortly after it is started, the Files menu
just pops open. It will go on popping open and close, sometimes shifting
to other menus, whatever
Using 9.04, my first working workaround was to use this command each
time I wanted to suspend:
sudo pm-suspend
It may require installing the pm-utils package.
Restarting gnome-power-manager seems far superior of course.
--
Multiple applications have stopped the suspend from taking place. vl
Hello everybody,
'Made some tests.
This makes the ext4 magic flow:
* Boot an ext4 system. Mount an ext3 partition as ext4 and perform a
heavy task in that partition.
* Boot an ext4 system. Mount an ext4 partition... everything's fine, of
course.
And this does not work:
* Boot an ext4 syste
As a matter of fact, back in the time when I was using a single-core
Intel P4 CPU, I also tried out different partition formats, like
ReiserFS, XFS, JFS... and never got a significant enhancement regarding
the here-debated problem (though they are real nice file systems) (just
they lack the wonderf
Hello everybody,
A simple experiment: start my ext3 Jaunty install yet forcing the use of
only one processor core, by having added maxcpus=1 in the kernel
parameters list inside /boot/grub/menu.lst
The result is just as bad as usual. Not as bad as when forcing the tar
command and Firefox to use t
Very interesting! I immediately tried that out on my Jaunty install
based on an ext3 partition.
The standard test procedure I use is to first launch this to load the
system:
tar cf 1.tar /usr
Then I launch and quit Firefox several times, open its menus, wait some
time before reattempts... while
Same problem on a HP Pavilion dv6415eb (Intel based) using Ubuntu 9.04.
After many research, kernel compiles and querying the advice of Vincent
Minder I found what seems the base of the problem. Any Linux install
(Ubuntu, Slackware, Fedora) that uses ext4 is perfectly fluent. Any
install based on e
Hello Benito,
It's up to me to close the bug report?! I'll do that immediately.
Since a while the kernel updates for the 9.04 are compiled with the
correct configuration regarding CPU frequency scaling so I stopped using
my custom compiled kernel.
Sincerely.
Eric
** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
** Package changed: ubuntu => linux (Ubuntu)
** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Confirmed
--
cpu frequency scaling monitor does not change frequency in Ubuntu Jaunty (9.04)
alpha 5 on Core 2 system
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/337780
You received this bug notification becaus
There was no obvious graphical way to have the Wi-Fi driver reinstalled
for the custom compiled kernel but commenting away the b43 module and
its friends in the blacklist in /etc/modprobe.d/ and maybe installing
the proprietary driver using b43-fwcutter did the job. So now I have
both a silent and
Well that was indeed the problem. Once the custom kernel was running,
with the CPU frequency throttling simply and basically turned on, there
was no more problem. The low frequency and power saving governors ran
perfectly.
On the other hand I had no more Wi-Fi. 'Going to try to solve that one
now.
I may have done a mistake somewhere but following the standard procedure
to compile a custom kernel and dutifully copying
/boot/config-2.6.28-11-generic to /usr/src/linux-source-2.6.28/.config I
get qconf telling me that the kernel frequency has been locked to the
maximum frequency and cannot be tu
The problem is not with the Gnome frequency scaling applet. I used the
cpufreq-selector command and it doesn't change the frequency either. I
managed to get some reaction yet, by switching the ACPI daemon and
related on and off quickly. Then, sometimes, for a few seconds, the
frequency will decreas
The problem came from the possibility to block the images from a site. I
had inadvertently blocked the images from cartoonbox.slate.com while not
even knowing this feature exists. I had to surf cartoonbox.slate.com
using another browser for almost a year... I believe current versions of
Firefox are
** Attachment added: "Dependencies.txt"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/16563213/Dependencies.txt
** Attachment added: "ExtensionSummary.txt"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/16563214/ExtensionSummary.txt
** Attachment added: "profiles.ini.txt"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/16563215/profiles
Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: firefox-3.0
When visiting the pages from http://cartoonbox.slate.com, the images of
the advertisements will display correctly but not the cartoons. Any
other browser will display the cartoons correctly (Konqueror,
SeaMonkey...)
ProblemType: Bug
Architect
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