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Date:      Sat, 06 Oct 2007 11:10:21 -0700
From:      Garrett Cooper <youshi10@u.washington.edu>
To:        Marc Fonvieille <blackend@FreeBSD.org>
Cc:        Jeff Roberson <jroberson@chesapeake.net>, Kris Kennaway <kris@FreeBSD.org>, Benjamin Close <Benjamin.Close@clearchain.com>, current@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: ULE/yielding patch for testing.
Message-ID:  <4707CF8D.3070303@u.washington.edu>
In-Reply-To: <20071006143141.GD976@gothic.blackend.org>
References:  <20071002165007.D587@10.0.0.1>	<20071006074429.GB976@gothic.blackend.org>	<20071006102113.GC976@gothic.blackend.org>	<47077951.5030906@clearchain.com> <4707866F.7030605@FreeBSD.org> <20071006143141.GD976@gothic.blackend.org>

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Marc Fonvieille wrote:
> On Sat, Oct 06, 2007 at 02:58:23PM +0200, Kris Kennaway wrote:
>   
>> Benjamin Close wrote:
>>     
>>>> After more testing, the lag problem is caused by the use of firefox.
>>>> Once I try to open a heavy webpage, both firefox and Xorg become slow,
>>>> the rest is fine.  By the "rest" I mean: audacious playing mp3s, wget and
>>>> ncftp downloading huge (100MB) files, compiling wine and aMule running.
>>>>   
>>>>         
>>> I find the lag occuring with the 4BSD scheduler as well. dailytech.com is 
>>> a particularly good site at lagging the system (though a great website).
>>> Perhaps this isn't scheduler related?
>>>       
>
> I don't think its scheduler related, last Jeff's changes helped a bit
> the things with ULE but I also noticed the lag with 4BSD.
>
>   
>> I assume you checked whether you are touching swap.
>>
>>     
>
> In my case, the swap is never used:
>
> Mem: 272M Active, 354M Inact, 157M Wired, 28M Cache, 110M Buf, 178M Free
> Swap: 2023M Total, 2023M Free
>
>   

    Your problem is most likely Flash/Javascript based (I'm basing my 
theory on the fact that there's a lot of Ajax related stuff on the site).

    No matter what OS you have, if a website's slow (and it's not 
because you don't have OpenGL support in your X-server), slowness will 
remain constant. It's just the way unfortunately that browsers are designed.

    NoScript combined with Adblock will help quite a bit though for 
whitelisting domains and javascript/flash content.

-Garrett



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