* [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
@ 2006-12-29 18:23 maxim wexler
2006-12-29 18:33 ` Mark M
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: maxim wexler @ 2006-12-29 18:23 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Hi group,
mplayer has some problems that xmms doesn't.
Whenever a lot of hard-drive activity takes place on
my PC, mplayer faulters and sputters. I have to run
xmms if I want uninterrupted music. And this is a
fairly up-to-date unit with a Gig o' RAM.
If I want shuffle mode I must first open xmms, shuffle
the playlist and save it before using it in mplayer
cause shuffle mode in mplayer only plays a few tunes
over and over.
With xmms it's easy to cue up as many tunes as I like.
Haven't been able to do that in (g)mplayer.
xmms has a neat feature that lets you arrange the
playlist in the order the dir was filled allowing you
to hear your tunes in the order they were acquired.
Cause, naturally, I prefer to hear the newer tunes
more that the older ones. How do I do that with
mplayer?
mplayer *can* play wmas, so that's a plus.
Maxim
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2006-12-29 18:23 [gentoo-user] I want my xmms maxim wexler
@ 2006-12-29 18:33 ` Mark M
2006-12-29 18:44 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
2006-12-29 21:31 ` [gentoo-user] " Bo Ørsted Andresen
2006-12-29 23:22 ` Michael Sullivan
2 siblings, 1 reply; 27+ messages in thread
From: Mark M @ 2006-12-29 18:33 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On 12/29/06, maxim wexler <blissfix@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> Hi group,
>
> mplayer has some problems that xmms doesn't.
>
> Whenever a lot of hard-drive activity takes place on
> my PC, mplayer faulters and sputters. I have to run
> xmms if I want uninterrupted music. And this is a
> fairly up-to-date unit with a Gig o' RAM.
>
> If I want shuffle mode I must first open xmms, shuffle
> the playlist and save it before using it in mplayer
> cause shuffle mode in mplayer only plays a few tunes
> over and over.
>
> With xmms it's easy to cue up as many tunes as I like.
> Haven't been able to do that in (g)mplayer.
>
> xmms has a neat feature that lets you arrange the
> playlist in the order the dir was filled allowing you
> to hear your tunes in the order they were acquired.
> Cause, naturally, I prefer to hear the newer tunes
> more that the older ones. How do I do that with
> mplayer?
>
> mplayer *can* play wmas, so that's a plus.
>
> Maxim
>
> __________________________________________________
> Do You Yahoo!?
> Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
> http://mail.yahoo.com
> --
> gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
>
> Hi,
how about media-sound/audacious ?
its a nice and lightweight player.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2006-12-29 18:33 ` Mark M
@ 2006-12-29 18:44 ` Grant Edwards
2006-12-29 18:50 ` Mark M
2006-12-29 18:55 ` Ryan Crisman
0 siblings, 2 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Grant Edwards @ 2006-12-29 18:44 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 2006-12-29, Mark M <makalsky@gmail.com> wrote:
> how about media-sound/audacious ?
> its a nice and lightweight player.
Lightweight??
It's the biggest virtual memory user on my system with a
virtial set size of 58M and resident set size of 14M. The only
thing with a slightly larger resident size is the X server.
Audacious takes three times as much memory as Apache.
--
Grant Edwards grante Yow! Do you have exactly
at what I want in a plaid
visi.com poindexter bar bat??
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2006-12-29 18:44 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
@ 2006-12-29 18:50 ` Mark M
2006-12-29 19:20 ` Grant Edwards
2006-12-29 19:42 ` Mick
2006-12-29 18:55 ` Ryan Crisman
1 sibling, 2 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Mark M @ 2006-12-29 18:50 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On 12/29/06, Grant Edwards <grante@visi.com> wrote:
>
> On 2006-12-29, Mark M <makalsky@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > how about media-sound/audacious ?
> > its a nice and lightweight player.
>
> Lightweight??
>
> It's the biggest virtual memory user on my system with a
> virtial set size of 58M and resident set size of 14M. The only
> thing with a slightly larger resident size is the X server.
>
> Audacious takes three times as much memory as Apache.
>
> --
> Grant Edwards grante Yow! Do you have
> exactly
> at what I want in a plaid
> visi.com poindexter bar bat??
>
> --
> gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
>
> My bet, sorry.
Still nice one ;)
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2006-12-29 18:44 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
2006-12-29 18:50 ` Mark M
@ 2006-12-29 18:55 ` Ryan Crisman
2006-12-29 19:21 ` Grant Edwards
1 sibling, 1 reply; 27+ messages in thread
From: Ryan Crisman @ 2006-12-29 18:55 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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He may have meant lightweight as in easy to use. And compared to mplayer it
is lightweight on the memory side.
On 12/29/06, Grant Edwards <grante@visi.com> wrote:
>
> On 2006-12-29, Mark M <makalsky@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > how about media-sound/audacious ?
> > its a nice and lightweight player.
>
> Lightweight??
>
> It's the biggest virtual memory user on my system with a
> virtial set size of 58M and resident set size of 14M. The only
> thing with a slightly larger resident size is the X server.
>
> Audacious takes three times as much memory as Apache.
>
> --
> Grant Edwards grante Yow! Do you have
> exactly
> at what I want in a plaid
> visi.com poindexter bar bat??
>
> --
> gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
>
>
--
Ryan Crisman
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2006-12-29 18:50 ` Mark M
@ 2006-12-29 19:20 ` Grant Edwards
2006-12-29 19:42 ` Mick
1 sibling, 0 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Grant Edwards @ 2006-12-29 19:20 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 2006-12-29, Mark M <makalsky@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> how about media-sound/audacious ?
>>> its a nice and lightweight player.
>>
>> Lightweight??
>>
>> It's the biggest virtual memory user on my system with a
>> virtial set size of 58M and resident set size of 14M. The only
>> thing with a slightly larger resident size is the X server.
>>
>> Audacious takes three times as much memory as Apache.
> Still nice one ;)
No argument there. (It's what I usually use.)
--
Grant Edwards grante Yow! If Robert Di Niro
at assassinates Walter Slezak,
visi.com will Jodie Foster marry
Bonzo??
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2006-12-29 18:55 ` Ryan Crisman
@ 2006-12-29 19:21 ` Grant Edwards
0 siblings, 0 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Grant Edwards @ 2006-12-29 19:21 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 2006-12-29, Ryan Crisman <nxarmada@gmail.com> wrote:
> He may have meant lightweight as in easy to use. And compared
> to mplayer it is lightweight on the memory side.
On my system mplayer uses about 1/3 the memory that audacious
does, but that's the non-gui version of mplayer -- I don't
think I've got a GUI for it installed.
--
Grant Edwards grante Yow! Hey, I LIKE that
at POINT!!
visi.com
--
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2006-12-29 18:50 ` Mark M
2006-12-29 19:20 ` Grant Edwards
@ 2006-12-29 19:42 ` Mick
2006-12-29 19:58 ` Grant Edwards
2006-12-29 20:18 ` fire-eyes
1 sibling, 2 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Mick @ 2006-12-29 19:42 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
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On Friday 29 December 2006 18:50, Mark M wrote:
> On 12/29/06, Grant Edwards <grante@visi.com> wrote:
> > On 2006-12-29, Mark M <makalsky@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > how about media-sound/audacious ?
> > > its a nice and lightweight player.
> >
> > Lightweight??
> >
> > It's the biggest virtual memory user on my system with a
> > virtial set size of 58M and resident set size of 14M. The only
> > thing with a slightly larger resident size is the X server.
> >
> > Audacious takes three times as much memory as Apache.
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
10124 michael 15 0 113m 30m 22m R 0.5 4.9 0:02.38 amarokapp
and that's when it's not playing anything! When streaming the %CPU goes up to
8.5-9.0.
I'm missing xmms too. I hope xmms2 will eventually be developed enough to use
as a stable package, but without the bloatware that winamp has become.
--
Regards,
Mick
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2006-12-29 19:42 ` Mick
@ 2006-12-29 19:58 ` Grant Edwards
2006-12-29 20:18 ` fire-eyes
1 sibling, 0 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Grant Edwards @ 2006-12-29 19:58 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 2006-12-29, Mick <michaelkintzios@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> how about media-sound/audacious ?
>>>> its a nice and lightweight player.
>>>
>>> Lightweight??
>>>
>>> It's the biggest virtual memory user on my system with a
>>> virtial set size of 58M and resident set size of 14M. The only
>>> thing with a slightly larger resident size is the X server.
>>>
>>> Audacious takes three times as much memory as Apache.
>
> PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
> 10124 michael 15 0 113m 30m 22m R 0.5 4.9 0:02.38 amarokapp
Damn. Compared to that, I guess audacious is lightweight. I
probably need to re-calibrate my "weight-meter".
> and that's when it's not playing anything! When streaming the
> %CPU goes up to 8.5-9.0.
>
> I'm missing xmms too. I hope xmms2 will eventually be
> developed enough to use as a stable package, but without the
> bloatware that winamp has become.
--
Grant Edwards grante Yow! Should I get
at locked in the PRINCICAL'S
visi.com OFFICE today -- or have
a VASECTOMY??
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2006-12-29 19:42 ` Mick
2006-12-29 19:58 ` Grant Edwards
@ 2006-12-29 20:18 ` fire-eyes
1 sibling, 0 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: fire-eyes @ 2006-12-29 20:18 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Friday 29 December 2006 14:42, Mick wrote:
> I'm missing xmms too. I hope xmms2 will eventually be developed enough to
> use as a stable package, but without the bloatware that winamp has become.
xmms2 is nothing like the first version. It is a client / daemon setup really.
Few users of xmms1 would enjoy it.
--
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2006-12-29 18:23 [gentoo-user] I want my xmms maxim wexler
2006-12-29 18:33 ` Mark M
@ 2006-12-29 21:31 ` Bo Ørsted Andresen
2006-12-30 4:56 ` maxim wexler
2006-12-29 23:22 ` Michael Sullivan
2 siblings, 1 reply; 27+ messages in thread
From: Bo Ørsted Andresen @ 2006-12-29 21:31 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1064 bytes --]
On Friday 29 December 2006 19:23, maxim wexler wrote:
> mplayer has some problems that xmms doesn't.
[SNIP]
So why don't you just keep using xmms? Do you have any problems with it?
> mplayer *can* play wmas, so that's a plus.
Doesn't the xmms-wma plugin work for you?
$ eix -c xmms-wma
[N] media-plugins/xmms-wma [1] ((~)1.0.5): XMMS plugin to play wma
[1] (layman/zugaina)
Personally I most certainly wouldn't use the zugaina overlay through layman
since it contains a lot of packages that are also in the tree and I really
want to use the official versions of those packages. It is, however, quite
easy to manually pull xmms and the xmms media-plugins from the zugaina overlay.
E.g.:
# mkdir -p /usr/local/xmms-overlay
# rsync -rlp rsync://gentoo.zugaina.org/zugaina-portage/media-sound/xmms /usr/local/xmms-overlay/media-sound
# rsync -rlp rsync://gentoo.zugaina.org/zugaina-portage/media-plugins /usr/local/xmms-overlay
# echo 'PORTDIR_OVERLAY="${PORTDIR_OVERLAY} /usr/local/xmms-overlay"' >> /etc/make.conf
--
Bo Andresen
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2006-12-29 18:23 [gentoo-user] I want my xmms maxim wexler
2006-12-29 18:33 ` Mark M
2006-12-29 21:31 ` [gentoo-user] " Bo Ørsted Andresen
@ 2006-12-29 23:22 ` Michael Sullivan
2006-12-30 5:00 ` maxim wexler
2 siblings, 1 reply; 27+ messages in thread
From: Michael Sullivan @ 2006-12-29 23:22 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Fri, 2006-12-29 at 10:23 -0800, maxim wexler wrote:
> Hi group,
>
> mplayer has some problems that xmms doesn't.
>
> Whenever a lot of hard-drive activity takes place on
> my PC, mplayer faulters and sputters. I have to run
> xmms if I want uninterrupted music. And this is a
> fairly up-to-date unit with a Gig o' RAM.
>
> If I want shuffle mode I must first open xmms, shuffle
> the playlist and save it before using it in mplayer
> cause shuffle mode in mplayer only plays a few tunes
> over and over.
>
> With xmms it's easy to cue up as many tunes as I like.
> Haven't been able to do that in (g)mplayer.
>
> xmms has a neat feature that lets you arrange the
> playlist in the order the dir was filled allowing you
> to hear your tunes in the order they were acquired.
> Cause, naturally, I prefer to hear the newer tunes
> more that the older ones. How do I do that with
> mplayer?
>
> mplayer *can* play wmas, so that's a plus.
>
> Maxim
Will audacious not work for you?
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2006-12-29 21:31 ` [gentoo-user] " Bo Ørsted Andresen
@ 2006-12-30 4:56 ` maxim wexler
0 siblings, 0 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: maxim wexler @ 2006-12-30 4:56 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
> So why don't you just keep using xmms? Do you have
> any problems with it?
>
> > mplayer *can* play wmas, so that's a plus.
>
> Doesn't the xmms-wma plugin work for you?
No. It just skips the wmas.
>
> $ eix -c xmms-wma
>
heathen@localhost ~ $ eix -c xmms-wma
[I] media-plugins/xmms-wma (1.0.5): XMMS plugin to
play wma
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* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2006-12-29 23:22 ` Michael Sullivan
@ 2006-12-30 5:00 ` maxim wexler
2006-12-30 5:27 ` Daniel Barkalow
0 siblings, 1 reply; 27+ messages in thread
From: maxim wexler @ 2006-12-30 5:00 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
> Will audacious not work for you?
Haven't tried yet. Fellow down the list says it's a
resource hog like mplayer.
Maxim
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* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2006-12-30 5:00 ` maxim wexler
@ 2006-12-30 5:27 ` Daniel Barkalow
2007-01-03 13:17 ` Nelson, David (ED, PAR&D)
0 siblings, 1 reply; 27+ messages in thread
From: Daniel Barkalow @ 2006-12-30 5:27 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Fri, 29 Dec 2006, maxim wexler wrote:
> > Will audacious not work for you?
>
> Haven't tried yet. Fellow down the list says it's a
> resource hog like mplayer.
I don't have xmms any more to compare against, but audacious seems to be
almost identical to it as far as I can tell. As far as memory usage, it's
much less than, say, firefox. It is presently at the top of my CPU usage,
but it's still only taking 1% of the CPU, so it's hard to complain.
-Daniel
*This .sig left intentionally blank*
--
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* RE: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2006-12-30 5:27 ` Daniel Barkalow
@ 2007-01-03 13:17 ` Nelson, David (ED, PAR&D)
2007-01-03 14:05 ` Alan McKinnon
0 siblings, 1 reply; 27+ messages in thread
From: Nelson, David (ED, PAR&D) @ 2007-01-03 13:17 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Daniel Barkalow [mailto:barkalow@iabervon.org]
> Sent: 30 December 2006 05:28
> To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
>
>
> On Fri, 29 Dec 2006, maxim wexler wrote:
>
> > > Will audacious not work for you?
> >
> > Haven't tried yet. Fellow down the list says it's a
> > resource hog like mplayer.
>
> I don't have xmms any more to compare against, but audacious
> seems to be
> almost identical to it as far as I can tell. As far as memory
> usage, it's
> much less than, say, firefox. It is presently at the top of
> my CPU usage,
> but it's still only taking 1% of the CPU, so it's hard to complain.
>
> -Daniel
> *This .sig left intentionally blank*
> --
> gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
>
>
I moved to amarok, I might give audacious a shot.
What about noatun for a smallish player? Not sure on it's RAM usage.
Also look at Quod Libet or Banshee which are meant to be similar in
features to amarok but lighter in terms of resource usage (or so I
hear).
David
Note: These views are my own, advice is provided with no guarantee of
success. I do not represent anyone else in any emails I send to this
list.
--
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2007-01-03 13:17 ` Nelson, David (ED, PAR&D)
@ 2007-01-03 14:05 ` Alan McKinnon
2007-01-03 15:27 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
2007-01-03 21:43 ` [gentoo-user] " Robert Cernansky
0 siblings, 2 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Alan McKinnon @ 2007-01-03 14:05 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wednesday 03 January 2007 15:17, Nelson, David (ED, PAR&D) wrote:
> I moved to amarok, I might give audacious a shot.
>
> What about noatun for a smallish player? Not sure on it's RAM usage.
> Also look at Quod Libet or Banshee which are meant to be similar in
> features to amarok but lighter in terms of resource usage (or so I
> hear).
>
> David
David, this reply isn't directed at you. You just happen to be the most
recent post and a convenient reply point.
Throughout this thread many people have commented on audacious being a
resource hog of monumental proportions. Every single one of them is
wrong and this myth really needs to be debunked. Here's why:
Look at the libs it links against:
nazgul ~ # ldd `which audacious`
linux-gate.so.1 => (0xffffe000)
libaudacious.so.4 => /usr/lib/libaudacious.so.4 (0x440bf000)
libgtk-x11-2.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libgtk-x11-2.0.so.0 (0x43c9d000)
libgdk-x11-2.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libgdk-x11-2.0.so.0 (0x4401d000)
libatk-1.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libatk-1.0.so.0 (0x47ad0000)
libgdk_pixbuf-2.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libgdk_pixbuf-2.0.so.0
(0x47a3e000)
libpangocairo-1.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libpangocairo-1.0.so.0
(0x4409c000)
libcairo.so.2 => /usr/lib/libcairo.so.2 (0xb7ed8000)
libgthread-2.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libgthread-2.0.so.0 (0x480d5000)
libpango-1.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libpango-1.0.so.0 (0x47b29000)
libgobject-2.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libgobject-2.0.so.0 (0x47a00000)
libgmodule-2.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libgmodule-2.0.so.0 (0x47a39000)
libdl.so.2 => /lib/libdl.so.2 (0x4f44f000)
libglib-2.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libglib-2.0.so.0 (0x47970000)
libglade-2.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libglade-2.0.so.0 (0x440a6000)
libxml2.so.2 => /usr/lib/libxml2.so.2 (0x4b9db000)
libz.so.1 => /lib/libz.so.1 (0x4f560000)
libm.so.6 => /lib/tls/libm.so.6 (0x4f429000)
libstdc++.so.6
=> /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.1.1/libstdc++.so.6 (0x4f583000)
libgcc_s.so.1
=> /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.1.1/libgcc_s.so.1 (0x4f6ef000)
libpthread.so.0 => /lib/tls/libpthread.so.0 (0x4f455000)
libc.so.6 => /lib/tls/libc.so.6 (0x4f306000)
libX11.so.6 => /usr/lib/libX11.so.6 (0x4b8be000)
libfontconfig.so.1 => /usr/lib/libfontconfig.so.1 (0x4baee000)
libXext.so.6 => /usr/lib/libXext.so.6 (0x4b9aa000)
libXrender.so.1 => /usr/lib/libXrender.so.1 (0x4bb19000)
libXi.so.6 => /usr/lib/libXi.so.6 (0x4bb3a000)
libXrandr.so.2 => /usr/lib/libXrandr.so.2 (0x4bb35000)
libXcursor.so.1 => /usr/lib/libXcursor.so.1 (0x4bb23000)
libXfixes.so.3 => /usr/lib/libXfixes.so.3 (0x4bb2e000)
libpangoft2-1.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libpangoft2-1.0.so.0
(0x47aeb000)
libfreetype.so.6 => /usr/lib/libfreetype.so.6 (0x4f682000)
libdirectfb-0.9.so.25 => /usr/lib/libdirectfb-0.9.so.25
(0xb7e61000)
libfusion-0.9.so.25 => /usr/lib/libfusion-0.9.so.25 (0xb7e5a000)
libdirect-0.9.so.25 => /usr/lib/libdirect-0.9.so.25 (0xb7e4c000)
libglitz.so.1 => /usr/lib/libglitz.so.1 (0x48191000)
libpng12.so.0 => /usr/lib/libpng12.so.0 (0xb7e29000)
librt.so.1 => /lib/tls/librt.so.1 (0x4f8a8000)
/lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0x4f2e8000)
libXau.so.6 => /usr/lib/libXau.so.6 (0x4b9a5000)
libXdmcp.so.6 => /usr/lib/libXdmcp.so.6 (0x4f559000)
It's those libs that are using the memory, not audacious. Those are
shared libs, meaning many other apps on the system use them and the
total memory they consume is used by all apps that use the libs. And,
every one of those libs (apart from libaudacious) can reasonably be
expected to be in use already on any desktop machine running X
Here's 'free' before and after I started audacious in another session:
nazgul ~ # free
total used free shared buffers
cached
Mem: 2076984 1844696 232288 0 246056
1220848
-/+ buffers/cache: 377792 1699192
Swap: 0 0 0
nazgul ~ # free
total used free shared buffers
cached
Mem: 2076984 1851528 225456 0 246060
1222324
-/+ buffers/cache: 383144 1693840
Swap: 0 0 0
So starting audacious consumed an extra 6M of memory - that's nowhere
near the 240M other posters are incorrectly stating it uses.
Top shows me this for audacious while playing a song:
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
9077 alan 15 0 62112 16m 11m R 0.3 0.8 0:01.00 audacious
It's using 62M of VIRTUAL memory, shared with every other app that uses
the same libs.
It uses 16M of resident memory (i.e. stuff in RAM), which is the 6M it
used at start up, plus 10M for the song that's playing. It's a 5.5M mp3
which needs to be decompressed so any music player will use that much.
Finally audacious is using 11M of shared memory, probably via /dev/shm -
but that is backed by swap anyway and can be swapped out easily.
So, anyone that says audacious is a resource hog is plain flat out wrong
and does not know how the Linux virtual memory system works. It is
complex and almost impossible to know what is going on at any instant
in time, but that's no excuse for people being wrong by a factor of
500%
alan
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* [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2007-01-03 14:05 ` Alan McKinnon
@ 2007-01-03 15:27 ` Grant Edwards
2007-01-03 16:20 ` Hans-Werner Hilse
2007-01-03 21:43 ` [gentoo-user] " Robert Cernansky
1 sibling, 1 reply; 27+ messages in thread
From: Grant Edwards @ 2007-01-03 15:27 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 2007-01-03, Alan McKinnon <alan@linuxholdings.co.za> wrote:
> On Wednesday 03 January 2007 15:17, Nelson, David (ED, PAR&D) wrote:
>
>> I moved to amarok, I might give audacious a shot.
>>
>> What about noatun for a smallish player? Not sure on it's RAM usage.
>> Also look at Quod Libet or Banshee which are meant to be similar in
>> features to amarok but lighter in terms of resource usage (or so I
>> hear).
>>
>> David
>
> David, this reply isn't directed at you. You just happen to be the most
> recent post and a convenient reply point.
>
> Throughout this thread many people have commented on audacious being a
> resource hog of monumental proportions. Every single one of them is
> wrong and this myth really needs to be debunked. Here's why:
>
> Look at the libs it links against:
[...]
> It's those libs that are using the memory, not audacious. Those are
> shared libs, meaning many other apps on the system use them
That's only relevent if there are other apps running that use
those libraries.
Even if you assume they _are_ all used by other apps, audacious
still uses huge amounts of non-shared memory:
Here's my "top" display sorted by memory usage:
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
2743 root 15 0 56604 33m 9.9m S 0.0 2.2 10:59.72 X
20384 grante 15 0 58696 14m 9696 R 0.0 1.0 0:00.54 audacious
2771 grante 15 0 32796 12m 7968 S 0.0 0.8 0:04.56 xfce4-session
2782 grante 15 0 31176 9784 6968 S 0.0 0.6 0:04.66 xfce4-panel
7195 root 18 0 20692 9200 4476 S 0.0 0.6 0:00.41 apache2
2784 grante 15 0 32304 9096 7076 S 0.0 0.6 0:31.95 gkrellm
2773 grante 15 0 30912 8876 5832 S 0.0 0.6 0:03.89 xfce-mcs-manage
2780 grante 18 0 13508 8352 6052 S 0.0 0.5 0:09.53 xfdesktop
7696 roundup 18 0 11400 7268 1464 S 0.0 0.5 0:00.41 roundup-server
2778 grante 15 0 12488 7148 5740 S 0.0 0.5 0:07.98 xftaskbar4
18057 apache 17 0 20692 6672 1924 S 0.0 0.4 0:00.00 apache2
18058 apache 20 0 20692 6672 1924 S 0.0 0.4 0:00.00 apache2
18059 apache 19 0 20692 6672 1924 S 0.0 0.4 0:00.00 apache2
The X server is using 56M of virtual memory with 33M resident
and 10M shared. Audacious is using 58M of with 14M resident
and 10M shared.
> and the total memory they consume is used by all apps that use
> the libs. And, every one of those libs (apart from
> libaudacious) can reasonably be expected to be in use already
> on any desktop machine running X
Nonsense. Audacious is using 44MB of non-shared virtual memory
on my system. 44MB out of 58MB is not shared.
> Here's 'free' before and after I started audacious in another session:
>
> nazgul ~ # free
> total used free shared buffers
> cached
> Mem: 2076984 1844696 232288 0 246056
> 1220848
> -/+ buffers/cache: 377792 1699192
> Swap: 0 0 0
> nazgul ~ # free
> total used free shared buffers
> cached
> Mem: 2076984 1851528 225456 0 246060
> 1222324
> -/+ buffers/cache: 383144 1693840
> Swap: 0 0 0
>
> So starting audacious consumed an extra 6M of memory - that's nowhere
> near the 240M other posters are incorrectly stating it uses.
I've no idea where the number 240M came from, you didn't hear
it from me. It's about 14MB of resident (6MB reduction in
"free" memory) on my system, which makes it the second largest
memory user (second only to the X server).
> So, anyone that says audacious is a resource hog is plain flat
> out wrong
You don't think that 58M of virtual memory usage isn't a
resource hog when the X server only requires 56M and the next
largest program is 32M? Virtual memory _is_ a resource,
though not an expensive one.
> and does not know how the Linux virtual memory system works.
> It is complex and almost impossible to know what is going on
> at any instant in time, but that's no excuse for people being
> wrong by a factor of 500%
--
Grant Edwards grante Yow! All this time I've
at been VIEWING a RUSSIAN
visi.com MIDGET SODOMIZE a HOUSECAT!
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2007-01-03 15:27 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
@ 2007-01-03 16:20 ` Hans-Werner Hilse
2007-01-03 17:07 ` Grant Edwards
0 siblings, 1 reply; 27+ messages in thread
From: Hans-Werner Hilse @ 2007-01-03 16:20 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Hi,
On Wed, 3 Jan 2007 15:27:41 +0000 (UTC) Grant Edwards <grante@visi.com>
wrote:
> The X server is using 56M of virtual memory with 33M resident
> and 10M shared. Audacious is using 58M of with 14M resident
> and 10M shared.
"possibly" shared, to be exact. Whether it actually _is_ shared is not
determined by ps.
> > and the total memory they consume is used by all apps that use
> > the libs. And, every one of those libs (apart from
> > libaudacious) can reasonably be expected to be in use already
> > on any desktop machine running X
>
> Nonsense. Audacious is using 44MB of non-shared virtual memory
> on my system. 44MB out of 58MB is not shared.
And what exactly was the nonsense?
> I've no idea where the number 240M came from, you didn't hear
> it from me. It's about 14MB of resident (6MB reduction in
> "free" memory) on my system, which makes it the second largest
> memory user (second only to the X server).
Most probably not considering openoffice, Thunderbirg, Firefox/Opera &
Co, right? In order to have huge VSZ, you just have to mmap a big fat
file. And there you go. And what does that mean for the memory
footprint of the program? Can you now call it a "resource hog"? Most
likely not.
> > So, anyone that says audacious is a resource hog is plain flat
> > out wrong
>
> You don't think that 58M of virtual memory usage isn't a
> resource hog when the X server only requires 56M and the next
> largest program is 32M? Virtual memory _is_ a resource,
> though not an expensive one.
Errrm, to get back to my example above: Mmap'ing a file (and increasing
your programs VSZ) is often much more elegant than classic procedural
fseek'ing and fread'ing. Nothing, absolutely nothing makes that causing
the program to become a "resource hog". The VM subsystem will care that
exactly those parts of the file will be cached, buffered, accessed and
(if needed) copied that are used.
On the opposite, if the program was programmed to overcommit absurd
amounts of memory, mmap'ing wrong/unneeded files or even doesn't free()
correctly, then I would agree that it's likely to be a resource hog.
But your points just aren't valid by themselves for that statement here.
"Virtual Memory" is _not_ the summed up amount of RAM and Swap. It's an
abstracted memory, on kernel code layer. Also, remember that Linux has
per process page tables. So VSZ isn't expensive by any means -- up to the
point that the process itself reaches the system's limit for virtual
memory.
And what does that mean for the "memory hog" claim? Nothing, absolutely
nothing.
-hwh
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2007-01-03 16:20 ` Hans-Werner Hilse
@ 2007-01-03 17:07 ` Grant Edwards
0 siblings, 0 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Grant Edwards @ 2007-01-03 17:07 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 2007-01-03, Hans-Werner Hilse <hilse@web.de> wrote:
>> You don't think that 58M of virtual memory usage isn't a
>> resource hog when the X server only requires 56M and the next
>> largest program is 32M? Virtual memory _is_ a resource,
>> though not an expensive one.
>
> Errrm, to get back to my example above: Mmap'ing a file (and increasing
> your programs VSZ) is often much more elegant than classic procedural
> fseek'ing and fread'ing. Nothing, absolutely nothing makes that causing
> the program to become a "resource hog". The VM subsystem will care that
> exactly those parts of the file will be cached, buffered, accessed and
> (if needed) copied that are used.
You're right. For some reason I was thinking that that virtual
memory was taking up swap space, but it's almost certainly just
read-only pages that never hit swap at all.
--
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at
visi.com
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2007-01-03 14:05 ` Alan McKinnon
2007-01-03 15:27 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
@ 2007-01-03 21:43 ` Robert Cernansky
2007-01-04 7:49 ` Alan McKinnon
2007-01-04 18:46 ` Dan
1 sibling, 2 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Robert Cernansky @ 2007-01-03 21:43 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wed, 3 Jan 2007 16:05:18 +0200 Alan McKinnon <alan@linuxholdings.co.za> wrote:
> Throughout this thread many people have commented on audacious being a
> resource hog of monumental proportions. Every single one of them is
> wrong and this myth really needs to be debunked. Here's why:
I agree. I'm still using xmms so I can compare. Here are few lines
from top (displaying a Mem window - 'Shift+g 3'). Both players were
playing same mp3 file.
PID %MEM VIRT SWAP RES CODE DATA SHR nFLT nDRT S PR %CPU COMMAND
8810 10.9 172m 62m 109m 1620 108m 9104 779 0 S 15 0.0 X
11170 9.7 308m 210m 97m 80 129m 19m 897 0 S 15 0.0 firefox-bin
7750 2.0 164m 143m 20m 480 41m 11m 117 0 R 15 0.0 audacious
7810 1.8 49940 30m 17m 1524 9m 5016 72 0 S 15 0.0 emacs
7739 1.1 149m 138m 11m 984 59m 7816 49 0 R 15 0.0 xmms
Although audacious eats twice more resident memory than xmms, I think
it's not that bad to call it 'resource hog'. You can see real resource
hogs on the first two lines. :-)
Btw, how do you guys get so little virtual memory? :-O
Robert
--
Robert Cernansky
E-mail: hslists2@zoznam.sk
Jabber: HS@jabber.sk
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2007-01-03 21:43 ` [gentoo-user] " Robert Cernansky
@ 2007-01-04 7:49 ` Alan McKinnon
2007-01-04 13:07 ` Boyd Stephen Smith Jr.
` (2 more replies)
2007-01-04 18:46 ` Dan
1 sibling, 3 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Alan McKinnon @ 2007-01-04 7:49 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wednesday 03 January 2007 23:43, Robert Cernansky wrote:
> On Wed, 3 Jan 2007 16:05:18 +0200 Alan McKinnon
<alan@linuxholdings.co.za> wrote:
> > Throughout this thread many people have commented on audacious
> > being a resource hog of monumental proportions. Every single one of
> > them is wrong and this myth really needs to be debunked. Here's
> > why:
>
> I agree. I'm still using xmms so I can compare. Here are few lines
> from top (displaying a Mem window - 'Shift+g 3'). Both players were
> playing same mp3 file.
>
> PID %MEM VIRT SWAP RES CODE DATA SHR nFLT nDRT S PR %CPU
> COMMAND 8810 10.9 172m 62m 109m 1620 108m 9104 779 0 S 15 0.0
> X 11170 9.7 308m 210m 97m 80 129m 19m 897 0 S 15 0.0
> firefox-bin 7750 2.0 164m 143m 20m 480 41m 11m 117 0 R 15
> 0.0 audacious 7810 1.8 49940 30m 17m 1524 9m 5016 72 0 S
> 15 0.0 emacs 7739 1.1 149m 138m 11m 984 59m 7816 49 0 R
> 15 0.0 xmms
Ah, a real comparison - I don;t have xmms anymore so couldn't do the
same in my post. These numbers are interesting, although audacious is
using more resident memory, xmms is using way much more for DATA.
IMHO audacious is using a perfectly reasonable amount of resources,
considering what it's being asked to do - decode and play an mp3 file
which is probably about 5M or so.
Incidentally, I just did a similar comparison on my machine between
audacious and amarok, and found that amarok consistently uses at least
2.2 times the amount of memory that audacious does. And I've never
heard anyone call amarok a resource-hog.
I think the problem here is that very few folk have any comprehension at
all what that VIRT column means and how the kernel has been coded to
deal with virtual memory and COW. For an in-depth technical handling of
the subject, I recommend the book "Understanding the Linux Virtual
memory Manager" as part of the Bruce Perens Open Source Series
>
> Although audacious eats twice more resident memory than xmms, I think
> it's not that bad to call it 'resource hog'. You can see real
> resource hogs on the first two lines. :-)
Hehe, I see you have a firefox that's probably a) been up for several
days and b) is very aggressively caching everything it can lay it's
hands on
> Btw, how do you guys get so little virtual memory? :-O
Dunno :-) Right now it's not so lean anymore, X has caused 173M virtual
memory to be used, most of it kde-libs related stuff. The *real*
resource hog on this machine strangely enough is kontact - memory usage
can jump 60M when I start it up. It's probably because it needs most of
konqueror loaded to render this other idiotic thing that corporate
users seem to love - I believe it's called "HTML mail"....
alan
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2007-01-04 7:49 ` Alan McKinnon
@ 2007-01-04 13:07 ` Boyd Stephen Smith Jr.
2007-01-04 15:57 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
2007-01-04 18:28 ` [gentoo-user] " maxim wexler
2 siblings, 0 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. @ 2007-01-04 13:07 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 769 bytes --]
On Thursday 04 January 2007 01:49, Alan McKinnon <alan@linuxholdings.co.za>
wrote about 'Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms':
> Incidentally, I just did a similar comparison on my machine between
> audacious and amarok, and found that amarok consistently uses at least
> 2.2 times the amount of memory that audacious does. And I've never
> heard anyone call amarok a resource-hog.
While I am a proud amaroK user, it does tend toward being resource-heavy
and do-everything. [But, with my "monster" system, that's what I
like. :)]
--
"If there's one thing we've established over the years,
it's that the vast majority of our users don't have the slightest
clue what's best for them in terms of package stability."
-- Gentoo Developer Ciaran McCreesh
[-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2007-01-04 7:49 ` Alan McKinnon
2007-01-04 13:07 ` Boyd Stephen Smith Jr.
@ 2007-01-04 15:57 ` Grant Edwards
2007-01-04 18:28 ` [gentoo-user] " maxim wexler
2 siblings, 0 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Grant Edwards @ 2007-01-04 15:57 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 2007-01-04, Alan McKinnon <alan@linuxholdings.co.za> wrote:
>>> Throughout this thread many people have commented on audacious
>>> being a resource hog of monumental proportions. Every single
>>> one of them is wrong and this myth really needs to be
>>> debunked. Here's why:
>>
>> I agree. I'm still using xmms so I can compare. Here are few
>> lines from top (displaying a Mem window - 'Shift+g 3'). Both
>> players were playing same mp3 file.
>>
>> PID %MEM VIRT SWAP RES CODE DATA SHR nFLT nDRT S PR %CPU COMMAND
>> 8810 10.9 172m 62m 109m 1620 108m 9104 779 0 S 15 0.0 X
>> 11170 9.7 308m 210m 97m 80 129m 19m 897 0 S 15 0.0 firefox-bin
>> 7750 2.0 164m 143m 20m 480 41m 11m 117 0 R 15 0.0 audacious
>> 7810 1.8 49940 30m 17m 1524 9m 5016 72 0 S 15 0.0 emacs
>> 7739 1.1 149m 138m 11m 984 59m 7816 49 0 R 15 0.0 xmms
[I attempted un-wrap the TOP output]
> Ah, a real comparison - I don;t have xmms anymore so couldn't
> do the same in my post. These numbers are interesting,
> although audacious is using more resident memory, xmms is
> using way much more for DATA.
>
> IMHO audacious is using a perfectly reasonable amount of resources,
> considering what it's being asked to do - decode and play an mp3 file
> which is probably about 5M or so.
Playing an mp3 file doesn't actually require much memory:
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
3608 grante 15 0 1936 748 484 S 0.7 0.0 0:00.19 mpg123
All that memory is for GUI bells and whistles. The memory
required to play an MP3 file is measured in KB not in MB.
> Incidentally, I just did a similar comparison on my machine between
> audacious and amarok, and found that amarok consistently uses at least
> 2.2 times the amount of memory that audacious does. And I've never
> heard anyone call amarok a resource-hog.
Amarok is a resource-hog. ;)
>> Although audacious eats twice more resident memory than xmms, I think
>> it's not that bad to call it 'resource hog'. You can see real
>> resource hogs on the first two lines. :-)
Very true, but there is little alternative to X and Firefox.
--
Grant Edwards grante Yow! RELAX!!... This
at is gonna be a HEALING
visi.com EXPERIENCE!! Besides,
I work for DING DONGS!
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2007-01-04 7:49 ` Alan McKinnon
2007-01-04 13:07 ` Boyd Stephen Smith Jr.
2007-01-04 15:57 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
@ 2007-01-04 18:28 ` maxim wexler
2 siblings, 0 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: maxim wexler @ 2007-01-04 18:28 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
> IMHO audacious is using a perfectly reasonable
> amount of resources,
OP here. My original problem was that xmms wouldn't
play wmas and mplayer, which does, sputtered whenever
the hard drive was active.
Following the thread led me to audacious which I
hadn't even heard of.
So far it's performed well and I like the xmms-like
gui that allows lots of different file manipulation
options.
Maxim
__________________________________________________
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Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] I want my xmms
2007-01-03 21:43 ` [gentoo-user] " Robert Cernansky
2007-01-04 7:49 ` Alan McKinnon
@ 2007-01-04 18:46 ` Dan
2007-01-04 19:46 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
1 sibling, 1 reply; 27+ messages in thread
From: Dan @ 2007-01-04 18:46 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wed, 03 Jan 2007 22:43:48 +0100
Robert Cernansky <hslists2@zoznam.sk> wrote:
> On Wed, 3 Jan 2007 16:05:18 +0200 Alan McKinnon
> <alan@linuxholdings.co.za> wrote:
>
> > Throughout this thread many people have commented on audacious
> > being a resource hog of monumental proportions. Every single one of
> > them is wrong and this myth really needs to be debunked. Here's why:
>
> I agree. I'm still using xmms so I can compare. Here are few lines
> from top (displaying a Mem window - 'Shift+g 3'). Both players were
> playing same mp3 file.
>
> PID %MEM VIRT SWAP RES CODE DATA SHR nFLT nDRT S PR %CPU COMMAND
> 8810 10.9 172m 62m 109m 1620 108m 9104 779 0 S 15 0.0 X
> 11170 9.7 308m 210m 97m 80 129m 19m 897 0 S 15 0.0
> firefox-bin 7750 2.0 164m 143m 20m 480 41m 11m 117 0 R 15
> 0.0 audacious 7810 1.8 49940 30m 17m 1524 9m 5016 72 0 S
> 15 0.0 emacs 7739 1.1 149m 138m 11m 984 59m 7816 49 0 R
> 15 0.0 xmms
>
> Although audacious eats twice more resident memory than xmms, I think
> it's not that bad to call it 'resource hog'. You can see real resource
> hogs on the first two lines. :-)
>
> Btw, how do you guys get so little virtual memory? :-O
>
> Robert
>
>
thanks, nice to have some terminal ouput sent along to substantiate
this discussion! i like the 'mem window' a lot. top is cool...
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: I want my xmms
2007-01-04 18:46 ` Dan
@ 2007-01-04 19:46 ` Grant Edwards
0 siblings, 0 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Grant Edwards @ 2007-01-04 19:46 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 2007-01-04, Dan <dan@spore.ath.cx> wrote:
> thanks, nice to have some terminal ouput sent along to
> substantiate this discussion! i like the 'mem window' a lot.
> top is cool...
VMS used to have a very cool program that would watch the
address space of a specified process. It displayed a "live"
status in a rectangular array on a terminal with a character
for each page's status (readable, writable, dirty, swapped out,
etc.). IIRC there was an "@" that showed the page contained the
program counter. The display updated several times per second,
and it was pretty interesting to watch long-running programs
(compiles, LaTeX runs, etc.). I've always sort of kept an eye
out for something like that for Linux, but have never stumbled
acrosss anything...
--
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at SEATS...
visi.com
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2007-01-04 19:51 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 27+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2006-12-29 18:23 [gentoo-user] I want my xmms maxim wexler
2006-12-29 18:33 ` Mark M
2006-12-29 18:44 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
2006-12-29 18:50 ` Mark M
2006-12-29 19:20 ` Grant Edwards
2006-12-29 19:42 ` Mick
2006-12-29 19:58 ` Grant Edwards
2006-12-29 20:18 ` fire-eyes
2006-12-29 18:55 ` Ryan Crisman
2006-12-29 19:21 ` Grant Edwards
2006-12-29 21:31 ` [gentoo-user] " Bo Ørsted Andresen
2006-12-30 4:56 ` maxim wexler
2006-12-29 23:22 ` Michael Sullivan
2006-12-30 5:00 ` maxim wexler
2006-12-30 5:27 ` Daniel Barkalow
2007-01-03 13:17 ` Nelson, David (ED, PAR&D)
2007-01-03 14:05 ` Alan McKinnon
2007-01-03 15:27 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
2007-01-03 16:20 ` Hans-Werner Hilse
2007-01-03 17:07 ` Grant Edwards
2007-01-03 21:43 ` [gentoo-user] " Robert Cernansky
2007-01-04 7:49 ` Alan McKinnon
2007-01-04 13:07 ` Boyd Stephen Smith Jr.
2007-01-04 15:57 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
2007-01-04 18:28 ` [gentoo-user] " maxim wexler
2007-01-04 18:46 ` Dan
2007-01-04 19:46 ` [gentoo-user] " Grant Edwards
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