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2019 Aug 04
4
browsers slowing Centos 7 installation to a crawl
My video problems mentioned in a previous thread are gone, though I do not know why. Now my problem is that whenever I have a browser open and an internet connection, my Centos 7 slows to a crawl. Chromium seems to be the least bad. Sometimes it slows to the point that I cannot even move the mouse. Even switching between virtual terminals takes a while sometimes. When I get there, top generally
2019 Aug 04
0
browsers slowing Centos 7 installation to a crawl
...n?t have other processes or users running on the system? It only happens when you have a network connection? It might also be swapping heavily, check to see how much RAM you have. Check the output of ?free?. Look at the syslogs/journal when you?re logged in (in a terminal, run ?sudo journalctl -xfl?). You will see a lot of stuff printed, but it might give you an idea of what?s going on. -- Jonathan Billings <billings at negate.org>
2019 Sep 11
0
Increase logging verbosity of saslauthd?
...ve to do is edit /etc/sysconfig/saslauthd and put the additional flags in the $FLAGS definition (which is empty by default). Then the output of the saslauthd will be sent to stdout, which is captured by the journal. You can watch the journal for the saslauthd service unit by running: journalctl -xfl -u saslauthd.service -- Jonathan Billings <billings at negate.org>
2019 Sep 11
3
Increase logging verbosity of saslauthd?
Hi CentOS 7.X, sendmail.x86_64 8.14.7-5.el7, cyrus-sasl.x86_64 2.1.26-23.el7 There are conflicting message on how to increase the logging of saslauthd. I know I can do this: /usr/sbin/saslauthd -d -n0 -m /var/run/saslauthd -a pam but that requires a terminal as saslauthd logs the output to STDOUT, this is not what I want. I would like to have it started as a daemon and verbosity of
2019 Aug 04
3
browsers slowing Centos 7 installation to a crawl
...re at least two D's. Of course, 'tain't as crawly as it often gets. Mem: 2020144 1454904 76140 204764 489100 135004 Swap: 4883724 978480 3905244 > Look at the syslogs/journal when you?re logged in (in a terminal, run ?sudo journalctl -xfl?). You will see a lot of stuff printed, but it might give you an idea of what?s going on. I think this qualifies as interesting. I have rather a lot of it: Aug 04 17:28:20 localhost.localdomain chromium-browser.desktop[26614]: [26647:26728:0804/172820.614816:ERROR:latency_info.cc(149)] Surface::...