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Improving performance on fast systems

  • 3 răspunsuri
  • 4 au această problemă
  • 2 vizualizări
  • Ultimul răspuns de NoahSUMO

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I use the following hardware:

i5-2500k SSD for OS, applications and app cache 16 GB RAM

I use Crunchbang, a rather lightweight Debian-based distro with Openbox.

My issue is that Firefox (including the most recent 11 release) will slow down and become unresponsive for continuous 5-10 second bursts when opening many (100+?) tabs. This makes clicking and/or text input a work of frustration. The problem only goes away once enough tabs have been closed to get below a certain threshold (I'm unclear as to what the sweet spot is).

At the same time, Firefox is not consuming all that much in the way of CPU or RAM (viz. above, my system has more to give than Firefox seems to want to take). I don't think I've seen Firefox consume more than 2 GB, though I wouldn't mind if it consumed a few times that if it would improve my browsing experience.

I searched high and low, and most of what I find is on how to improve performance on constrained systems, with an emphasis on how to reduce RAM use.

I believe my question is rather the opposite: I would like Firefox to use as much (RAM, CPU) as it can and should in order to give me a smooth, stutter-free experience.

Does anyone have pointers on this?

I've tried installed the fasterfox lite plugin, but it doesn't help this problem. Network speed is hardly a problem, as I am on a VDSL2 line with net speed of 20-25 mbps and latency very low.

I use the following hardware: i5-2500k SSD for OS, applications and app cache 16 GB RAM I use Crunchbang, a rather lightweight Debian-based distro with Openbox. My issue is that Firefox (including the most recent 11 release) will slow down and become unresponsive for continuous 5-10 second bursts when opening many (100+?) tabs. This makes clicking and/or text input a work of frustration. The problem only goes away once enough tabs have been closed to get below a certain threshold (I'm unclear as to what the sweet spot is). At the same time, Firefox is not consuming all that much in the way of CPU or RAM (viz. above, my system has more to give than Firefox seems to want to take). I don't think I've seen Firefox consume more than 2 GB, though I wouldn't mind if it consumed a few times that if it would improve my browsing experience. I searched high and low, and most of what I find is on how to improve performance on constrained systems, with an emphasis on how to reduce RAM use. I believe my question is rather the opposite: I would like Firefox to use as much (RAM, CPU) as it can and should in order to give me a smooth, stutter-free experience. Does anyone have pointers on this? I've tried installed the fasterfox lite plugin, but it doesn't help this problem. Network speed is hardly a problem, as I am on a VDSL2 line with net speed of 20-25 mbps and latency very low.

Toate răspunsurile (3)

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Modificat în de John99

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Do you keep a large history?

A possible cause is a problem with the file places.sqlite that stores the bookmarks and the history.

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Have you tried disabling the plugin container? You might find a significant performance gain. Also I'd disable anything like hardware acceleration and Firefox Sync if you have that enabled (I'm not sure how often it updates but it could be a contributor to the hangs).

Suggestions:
Uncheck "Use hardware acceleration when available" in Tools > Options > Advanced > General tab.

If you disable plugin container and Flash, Silverlight, Java, Quicktime or another plugin crash, you will lose crash protection. So instead of crashing inside the tab. It will crash the entire browser. Something to keep in mind. I find on my system plugin container uses too much memory and CPU so I disable it for a much smoother experience.

To disable plugin container: http://kb.mozillazine.org/Plugin-container_and_out-of-process_plugins#Disabling_crash_protection