• flying_sheep@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    Tbf, thanks to X11 Linux isn’t safe from stuff like that.

    When I use my VR glasses, Steam sometimes creates an uncloseable X window that isn’t attached to any process. I don’t think even killing XWayland gets rid of it.

  • Arthur Besse@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    I’m not sure what this comic is trying to say but in my recent experience a single misbehaving website can still consume all available swap at which point Linux will sometimes completely lock up for many minutes before the out-of-memory killer decides what to kill - and then sometimes it still kills the desktop environment instead of the browser.

    (I do know how to use oom_adj; I’m talking about the default configuration on popular desktop distros.)

    • QuazarOmega@lemy.lol
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      1 month ago

      Real, happened too many times to me. What’s that about configuring the OOM, can you give it priorities?

    • kolorafa@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Linux is slow at killing apps when you run out of memory because it was designed to also run on low spec hardware even if very slowly (making the ui totally unrensposnive) due to swapping.

      This comic is about the kill command, how Linux kernel is handling force stopping apps vs (old?) Windows when if App frozed it was hard to close it. Now with modern apps and hardware you very rarely see that as most apps are designed to have asynchronous logic that is correctly handled, but it’s still more or less relevant.

  • Nailbar@sopuli.xyz
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    1 month ago

    I recently had some processes lock up on Linux, and after searching what the “D” symbol in ps aux was (Uninterruptable sleep), i found this little line:

    The only non-sophisticated way to get rid of them is to reboot the system

  • TunaCowboy@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    $ kill -l

     1) SIGHUP	 2) SIGINT	 3) SIGQUIT	 4) SIGILL	 5) SIGTRAP
     6) SIGABRT	 7) SIGBUS	 8) SIGFPE	 9) SIGKILL	10) SIGUSR1
    11) SIGSEGV	12) SIGUSR2	13) SIGPIPE	14) SIGALRM	15) SIGTERM
    16) SIGSTKFLT	17) SIGCHLD	18) SIGCONT	19) SIGSTOP	20) SIGTSTP
    21) SIGTTIN	22) SIGTTOU	23) SIGURG	24) SIGXCPU	25) SIGXFSZ
    26) SIGVTALRM	27) SIGPROF	28) SIGWINCH	29) SIGIO	30) SIGPWR
    31) SIGSYS	34) SIGRTMIN	35) SIGRTMIN+1	36) SIGRTMIN+2	37) SIGRTMIN+3
    38) SIGRTMIN+4	39) SIGRTMIN+5	40) SIGRTMIN+6	41) SIGRTMIN+7	42) SIGRTMIN+8
    43) SIGRTMIN+9	44) SIGRTMIN+10	45) SIGRTMIN+11	46) SIGRTMIN+12	47) SIGRTMIN+13
    48) SIGRTMIN+14	49) SIGRTMIN+15	50) SIGRTMAX-14	51) SIGRTMAX-13	52) SIGRTMAX-12
    53) SIGRTMAX-11	54) SIGRTMAX-10	55) SIGRTMAX-9	56) SIGRTMAX-8	57) SIGRTMAX-7
    58) SIGRTMAX-6	59) SIGRTMAX-5	60) SIGRTMAX-4	61) SIGRTMAX-3	62) SIGRTMAX-2
    63) SIGRTMAX-1	64) SIGRTMAX
    
  • mvirts@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Imho desktop Linux is usually set up where a single bad app can lock up the whole system. This is not every Linux system, but I run across it more than I would like. I believe part of this is an optimistic approach to memory management which makes the system run better overall most of the time.

    Windows seems slow as hell most of the time, but killing a process seems to work reliably (not clicking on the hung app takeover UI, using task kill or task manager)

    I don’t understand these memes about killing processes in Linux vs Windows.

  • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    Quite often double click on the close button will kill a hung app on Windows. Not Al the time, maybe 70%.

    • kn0wmad1c@programming.dev
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      1 month ago

      There’s an old addage when working with any Microsoft product:

      “Wait longer”

      In other words, your first click was probably doing its thing. You just needed to wait a little longer to see it work.

      • rtxn@lemmy.worldM
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        1 month ago

        The wonders of running everything synchronously in the UI event loop…

  • Rin@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    I’m so thankful for the OOM killer for saving my system when i do dumb shit

  • tomjuggler@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Good one! I’m literally dealing with this right now on a server. Turns out you’re expected to deal with long running processes that spawn too many threads yourself, or else…