Frequent crashes - using 900,00k + memory, many tabs open - is memory usage an issue?
I am having frequent crashing of firefox, several times a day.
I do have many tabs open, 100+, and memory usage is around 900,000 and up.
I am wondering if the memory usage is causing the crashing, or something else I can fix?
My task manager says I am using 67% of available memory.
Total: 2941
Cached:1202
Free: 74
Total: 207
Paged: 153
NonPaged: 53
Page File 2981M / 6116M
Here are the id's of the last 10 crash reports:
bp-c79bc97e-d502-4319-a49e-7bc0b2130917 9/16/201311:38 PM bp-19f60b05-f268-4693-b622-066f42130917 9/16/20139:59 PM bp-f43d9597-9023-487a-90d4-994d32130916 9/16/20137:15 PM bp-b552cdc4-6920-4eed-bff7-cb7cf2130916 9/16/20136:04 PM bp-b62272cb-f4ef-4f30-acc9-4a1752130916 9/16/20135:02PM bp-f4bebdd3-20f9-4444-8245-520c42130916 9/16/20133:08 PM bp-bad99992-5b2b-4ac1-96bc-e03812130915 9/14/201311:31 PM 962c451e-dc19-4707-9def-b2dd5cd4caed 9/14/201310:07 PM bp-8de4bc69-0f86-417a-9727-e88622130914 9/14/20132:29 AM bp-6ae9815f-1472-492d-8738-1cd842130914 9/14/20131:01 AM
ఎంపిక చేసిన పరిష్కారం
Where do I set the dom.ipc.plugins.* preferences? ( I do not see any plugins or extensions from Tools-Addons that look like dom.ipc.plugins?)
Extensions I have are:
Addblock
Browsing protection
Troubleshooter
YesScript
PLugins:
Java
Shockwave
Would you point me to where in the mozilla crash reports I would find the number of tabs open, and the memory as the crash cause? (just so I can check out after I try resetting that plugin.exe to begin running again I can take a look and see if memory usage is better - or should I be looking at task manager for that information also)?
I did notice the crash reason in the report was 'EXCEPTION_BREAKPOINT', I suppose that is an error exception reason due to many different causes?
I also noticed one crash report listed:
Total Virtual Memory: 2147352576
Available Virtual Memory: 533061632
System Memory Use Percentage: 72
Available Page File: 3324129280
Available Physical Memory: 852447232
Is that the indication for out of memory you are seeing?
Are these 'bad' (too high of usage) memory values?
ఈ సందర్భంలో ఈ సమాధానం చదవండి 👍 0ప్రత్యుత్తరాలన్నీ (5)
These crash reports can be hard to interpret, but at least the six from 9/16 seem to be "out of memory" (OOM) errors. Assuming that is the case, the question is what might be done about that.
This support article has a range of suggestions, including not having more than 100 tabs open and possibly useful add-ons. Firefox uses too much memory or CPU resources - How to fix. In a bug report, I also saw an extension that displays the usage on the add-on bar, which might help in keeping an eye on it.
I noticed you have several dom.ipc.plugins.* preferences set to False, which may force some plugins to run in firefox.exe rather than plugin-container.exe. The design of the process isolation feature is that plugin crashes will take down plugin-container.exe rather than firefox.exe. It may also be that overriding process isolation is ballooning the memory usage by firefox.exe rather than more evenly distributing it between the two processes. You may want to restore those settings to their defaults and see whether that helps.
Finally, to reduce the size of your sessionrestore.js file you could omit personal data (e.g., cookies, form data), but this will make it a bit harder after a crash to get back to where you were.
ఎంపిక చేసిన పరిష్కారం
Where do I set the dom.ipc.plugins.* preferences? ( I do not see any plugins or extensions from Tools-Addons that look like dom.ipc.plugins?)
Extensions I have are:
Addblock
Browsing protection
Troubleshooter
YesScript
PLugins:
Java
Shockwave
Would you point me to where in the mozilla crash reports I would find the number of tabs open, and the memory as the crash cause? (just so I can check out after I try resetting that plugin.exe to begin running again I can take a look and see if memory usage is better - or should I be looking at task manager for that information also)?
I did notice the crash reason in the report was 'EXCEPTION_BREAKPOINT', I suppose that is an error exception reason due to many different causes?
I also noticed one crash report listed:
Total Virtual Memory: 2147352576
Available Virtual Memory: 533061632
System Memory Use Percentage: 72
Available Page File: 3324129280
Available Physical Memory: 852447232
Is that the indication for out of memory you are seeing?
Are these 'bad' (too high of usage) memory values?
On the first page of the crash report, after the table of data, is a link to the bug tracking system (Bugzilla) with discussion of that particular crash signature.
You can adjust your dom.ipc settings using the about:config preferences editor:
(1) In a new tab, type or paste about:config in the address bar and press Enter. Click the button promising to be careful.
(2) In the search box above the list, type or paste ipc and pause while the list is filtered
To reset non-default values to default, you can right-click a preference and choose Reset from the context menu. These changes seem likely to take effect after your next restart.
Edit: Please ignore that extraneous paragraph about new tabs, that related to a different thread.
OK, I found that, I have 5 preferences set to FALSE with .ipc. in the name:
dom.ipc.plugins.enabled
dom.ipc.plugins.flash.subprocess.crashreporter.enabled
dom.ipc.plugins.reportCrashURL
dom.ipc.plugins.java.enabled
network.disable.ipc.security
Are you suggesting all of these, some of these?
Are any of these preferences related in such a way that they are dependant on another one? (I was wondering if the wrong changes could crash FF, or use the pulgin.exe, or something els, incorrectly
Hi mnalep, this is my understanding:
dom.ipc.plugins.enabled -- this is the "master" preference that should be true
dom.ipc.plugins.flash.subprocess.crashreporter.enabled -- if true, increases detail in crash reporting (probably doesn't affect stability)
dom.ipc.plugins.reportCrashURL -- if true, increases detail in crash reporting (probably doesn't affect stability)
dom.ipc.plugins.java.enabled -- the default appears to be false
network.disable.ipc.security -- not sure ipc means the same thing here, probably unrelated