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CasTTeLLo's Avatar
Posts: 335 | Thanked: 51 times | Joined on May 2010
#41
Originally Posted by superjunior View Post
Open Xterm and run "top" or install "htop" and look the Prozess with high CPU and MEM.
is it normal?
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CasTTeLLo
 
Posts: 135 | Thanked: 158 times | Joined on Sep 2009 @ Germany
#42
Yes it is normal. 2-3% Xorg, 2-3% Hildon


I have no Idea why your N900 feels slow. Sorry
 

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Posts: 4 | Thanked: 1 time | Joined on Aug 2010 @ Australia
#43
Originally Posted by superjunior View Post
You must be root !!!

open Xterm
Type root
Type mc (MidnightCommander)

go to /etc/event.d/apmonitord

F8= delete
gday all - first post and all that.........

for n00bs such as myself, you need to have rootsh and midnightcommander installed.

thanks guys I also had this issue after installing advanced power app and luckily people on here are well on top of the situation.
 

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Posts: 466 | Thanked: 418 times | Joined on Jan 2010
#44
So last night I was playing around with the advanced-power-monitor, trying to get it to work, and while I had uninstalled the package, and rebooted, I had left my phone charging all night, went into work, and 2 and a half hours into the day, my phone gives that whimpering beep of a low battery. I was thinking "wtf?" So I looked and sure enough, it was this issue with Xorg being at 95% and more.

The cleanest solution is to open xterm and type
Code:
sudo dpkg -P advanced-power-monitor
That should purge all files from the advanced-power-monitor.

If you still have advanced-power, you may want to run it on that as well.

The -P option is to purge all extra files. For some reason the post remove script isn't removing the /etc/event.d/apmonitord. Purge does though.

I did have to reboot afterward as well.

slaapliedje
 

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Posts: 57 | Thanked: 15 times | Joined on Apr 2010
#45
Originally Posted by hawaii View Post
FIXED.

Manually remove /etc/event.d/apmonitord and reboot / kill the xserver.

The project bugtracker is broken, so...
works for me too.

thanks alot
 
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Posts: 156 | Thanked: 27 times | Joined on Jun 2010 @ Los Angeles
#46
Originally Posted by slaapliedje View Post
Code:
sudo dpkg -P advanced-power-monitor
It asked for a password when i tried this.
 
cfh11's Avatar
Posts: 1,062 | Thanked: 961 times | Joined on May 2010 @ Boston, MA
#47
Originally Posted by garen View Post
It asked for a password when i tried this.
you need to have rootsh installed
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garen's Avatar
Posts: 156 | Thanked: 27 times | Joined on Jun 2010 @ Los Angeles
#48
Originally Posted by cfh11 View Post
you need to have rootsh installed
I do have rootsh installed.
 
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Posts: 1,034 | Thanked: 784 times | Joined on Dec 2007 @ Annapolis, MD
#49
Originally Posted by garen View Post
I do have rootsh installed.
Then type:
sudo gainroot

THEN type:

dpkg -P advanced-power-monitor


you should only use sudo if you actually (as root) added the "user" username to the /etc/sudoers file.
 
garen's Avatar
Posts: 156 | Thanked: 27 times | Joined on Jun 2010 @ Los Angeles
#50
Originally Posted by cddiede View Post
Then type:
sudo gainroot

THEN type:

dpkg -P advanced-power-monitor


you should only use sudo if you actually (as root) added the "user" username to the /etc/sudoers file.
Ok, now Xorg is jumping between 70 and 96%.
 
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