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Version 7.0.1 is the worst MEMORY HOG YET!!!

  • 3 ردود
  • 73 have this problem
  • 6 views
  • آخر ردّ كتبه Michael Verdi

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I'm online all day as part of my job, this new version causes me to restart my browser at least 3 times per day. This due to memory usage steadily climbing throughout each session. Starts out fine at about 80K, 4 hours later it's pushing 1 gig. Fix this crap or say hello to Chrome. Love the plug-ins I have with FF but...

I'm online all day as part of my job, this new version causes me to restart my browser at least 3 times per day. This due to memory usage steadily climbing throughout each session. Starts out fine at about 80K, 4 hours later it's pushing 1 gig. Fix this crap or say hello to Chrome. Love the plug-ins I have with FF but...

All Replies (3)

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Firefox 7 actually included a really big reduction in the amount of memory it uses. Depending on the sites you use, how many you have open at once, what kind of content they have and how much ram is available on your computer, 1 Gigabyte of ram may not be unusual (in any browser). My Firefox is using nearly 1 GB right now but I have 25 tabs open including things like Google Reader and Google News which are more like programs than static websites.

That said, it appears that you have a lot of plugins installed. Each of them uses some amount of ram (some much more than others). It could be that there is one in particular that is causing problem.

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I used the solution by AliceWyman in this thread.

https://support.mozilla.com/en-US/questions/713600#answer-8632

Disabling that dom.ipc.plugins released 500 MB of RAM straight away and my browsing speed also picked up.

I don't know why FF puts such performance degrading plugins in an updated version.

My FF 8.0 uses about 180 to 350 MB depending on no.of tabs open.

Modified by amkeew

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amkeew,
What those instructions do is make Flash (a plugin that's not part of Firefox) run in the normal Firefox process instead of separately. What that means is that now, when Flash crashes Firefox will also crash. This removes a feature we introduced about a year and a half ago that lets plugins run separately and not crash the whole browser when they crash. See, What is plugin-container