Zoeken in Support

Vermijd ondersteuningsscams. We zullen u nooit vragen een telefoonnummer te bellen, er een sms naar te sturen of persoonlijke gegevens te delen. Meld verdachte activiteit met de optie ‘Misbruik melden’.

Meer info

Deze conversatie is gearchiveerd. Stel een nieuwe vraag als u hulp nodig hebt.

Firefox freezes every few seconds. I've tried refreshing/reinstalling firefox, running in safe mode, disabling hardware accelartion and unchecking accessability

  • 8 antwoorden
  • 1 heeft dit probleem
  • 1 weergave
  • Laatste antwoord van Luis Pais

more options

Nothing works, firefox just hangs every few seconds, I even disabled session restore, set browser.sessionstore.max_tabs_undo and browser.sessionstore.max_window_undo to 0. It keeps freezing every few seconds.

I'm running firefox on linux.

Nothing works, firefox just hangs every few seconds, I even disabled session restore, set browser.sessionstore.max_tabs_undo and browser.sessionstore.max_window_undo to 0. It keeps freezing every few seconds. I'm running firefox on linux.

Gekozen oplossing

My problem has been fixed!

My system is running on Arch and I just followed Arch's recommendation to fix this: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/.../Unresponsiveness_in_Chromium_and_Firefox. However, I didn't need to disable vsync.

Thank you everyone !

Dit antwoord in context lezen 👍 0

Alle antwoorden (8)

more options

Hi Luis, I don't know much about Linux.

Are you using the build from your distro's repository or directly from Mozilla's site?

Do you have a system-level performance monitoring widget that would show whether Firefox is maxing out CPU or disk, or is making heavy network usage?

Note: Disabling session restore would help reduce disk access, but since the file is only updated every 15 seconds at the most, that isn't frequent enough to account for this problem. Also, you can extend that time by modifying browser.sessionstore.interval with a new value in about:config (60000 milliseconds for 60 seconds, for example).

more options

By the way, if you can use built-in pages, check out the possible automatic connections in this article: How to stop Firefox from making automatic connections.

more options

You can create a new profile to test if your current profile is causing the problem.

See "Creating a profile":

If the new profile works then you can transfer files from a previously used profile to the new profile, but be cautious not to copy corrupted files to avoid carrying over problems.

more options

cor-el said

You can create a new profile to test if your current profile is causing the problem.

I forgot to add that to my question. I already tried that but Firefox keeps freezing in the new account.

more options

jscher2000 said

Hi Luis, I don't know much about Linux. Are you using the build from your distro's repository or directly from Mozilla's site?

Thank you for replying, I'm using my distros build.

jscher2000 said

Do you have a system-level performance monitoring widget that would show whether Firefox is maxing out CPU or disk, or is making heavy network usage?

I do, I'll report to you soon.

jscher2000 said'

'
Note: Disabling session restore would help reduce disk access, but since the file is only updated every 15 seconds at the most, that isn't frequent enough to account for this problem. Also, you can extend that time by modifying browser.sessionstore.interval with a new value in about:config (60000 milliseconds for 60 seconds, for example).

I'm also going to try that to see if the interval between freezes increases.

Thank you.

Bewerkt door Luis Pais op

more options

jscher2000 said

By the way, if you can use built-in pages, check out the possible automatic connections in this article: How to stop Firefox from making automatic connections.

By built in pages, do you mean Firefox's empty homepage ? If so, no, those kind of pages also freeze.

more options

I'm sorry it took me so long to reply, this week has been quite heavy on me. Anyways:

jscher2000 said

Do you have a system-level performance monitoring widget that would show whether Firefox is maxing out CPU or disk, or is making heavy network usage?

I just checked and firefox is not reporting any heavy network/CPU/disk usage.

jscher2000 said

Note: Disabling session restore would help reduce disk access, but since the file is only updated every 15 seconds at the most, that isn't frequent enough to account for this problem. Also, you can extend that time by modifying browser.sessionstore.interval with a new value in about:config (60000 milliseconds for 60 seconds, for example).

I changed the value to 60000 and there was no notable differences with the freezes.


But something unexpectedly weird happened, when I have my system monitor open, firefox doesn't freeze anymore. I think it has to do with my bios setting messing up my CPU. I'm going to explore this further.

more options

Gekozen oplossing

My problem has been fixed!

My system is running on Arch and I just followed Arch's recommendation to fix this: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/.../Unresponsiveness_in_Chromium_and_Firefox. However, I didn't need to disable vsync.

Thank you everyone !

Bewerkt door Luis Pais op