Bárbara Jiménez [2009-10-21 12:52 -0000]:
> Yes, it is GNOME. Why not?
Because with GNOME ~/.xsession-errors is cleaned on every session
startup. So either that's broken for you for some reason, or you just
have run your session for a very long time, or there is some
particular process which spews a lot of messages into it.
Can you please copy it aside (copy it to ~/xsession-errors.old),
log out, back in, and check how big ~/.xsession-errors is? Did it get
appended on or emptied?
If it got emptied, how long have you run your previous session since
the last login from gdm? (suspending/hibernating continues an existing
session)
If the last session isn't that old yet (like only a day old), is there
something in ~/.xsession-errors which got repeated over and over?
Bárbara Jiménez [2009-10-21 12:52 -0000]:
> Yes, it is GNOME. Why not?
Because with GNOME ~/.xsession-errors is cleaned on every session
startup. So either that's broken for you for some reason, or you just
have run your session for a very long time, or there is some
particular process which spews a lot of messages into it.
Can you please copy it aside (copy it to ~/xsession- errors. old),
log out, back in, and check how big ~/.xsession-errors is? Did it get
appended on or emptied?
If it got emptied, how long have you run your previous session since hibernating continues an existing
the last login from gdm? (suspending/
session)
If the last session isn't that old yet (like only a day old), is there
something in ~/.xsession-errors which got repeated over and over?
Thanks, Martin
-- www.piware. de
Martin Pitt | http://
Ubuntu Developer (www.ubuntu.com) | Debian Developer (www.debian.org)