On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 16:26:39 -0700 Hugh Caley wrote: > Problem: After running Firefox for a time (a few minutes to 30 minutes) > it will start taking 80%+ of CPU (as shown in top) and will keep taking > it until I restart the browser. This machine is running Fedora 10 > 32-bit. Firefox firefox-3.0.8-1 flash-plugin-10.0.22.87 I actually haven't seen that problem on any of the Fedora and Centos machines that I look after. At least, not in quite some time as I don't remember anything about it at the moment. (Knock on wood and so on, of course.) > This is usually associated with heavy CPU from npviewer.bin, hence the > association with flash and flashplayer. That does make it sound like a Flash problem. > > There are several open tickets on this and similar problems on Adobe's > website: > > https://bugs.adobe.com/flashplayer/ That's probably the best place to take this issue up; Flash is a closed-source program that nobody can fix other than Adobe. > I do definitely get the problem on sites such as youtube; however, I > also get the problem on sites that don't have any obvious flash content, > and frankly, I'm not sure which ones at this point. Flashblock doesn't > seem to catch all of them. Still trying to find out. You might want to look at using noscript instead of Flashblock. It does what Flashblock does, plus more. Perhaps a combination of Flashblock and Flash content contributes to or causes the problem. What happens if you uninstall Flashblock and install noscript instead? Again, that's what I use and I haven't seen that problem so perhaps that's the reason why. The last Adobe run-away that I had was a rogue acroread process on Centos 5 that ate up everything to a point that you could barely enter a single character on the keyboard any more. When I eventually managed to log into it I killed that process and everything returned to normal. But that was acroread, not Flash. -- MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Melville Sask ~ http://www.melvilletheatre.com -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines