| 2 Apr 2025 |
Andrew | aaaand do I open an issue in gnome or? | 20:15:01 |
K900 | I would probably do that yeah | 20:15:15 |
K900 | Actually | 20:15:19 |
K900 | Maybe remove any extensions you have | 20:16:06 |
K900 | If you have any | 20:16:11 |
Andrew | plenty, actually | 20:16:30 |
K900 | Yeah maybe try removing some | 20:17:19 |
K900 | Or all | 20:17:20 |
Andrew |  Download image.png | 20:17:21 |
K900 | Ideally all | 20:17:22 |
K900 | It's entirely possible for an extension to leak VRAM | 20:17:34 |
Andrew | and then what? | 20:17:34 |
K900 | And then see if it's still leaking | 20:17:42 |
K900 | And if it isn't, enable them one by one | 20:17:52 |
K900 | Until it starts leaking again | 20:17:56 |
Andrew | which means I need to reboot? | 20:17:57 |
K900 | And then you'll know what to blame | 20:18:00 |
K900 | Ideally | 20:18:05 |
Andrew | eh... ok | 20:18:13 |
K900 | You can also take the current state as a baseline | 20:18:17 |
K900 | But that will probably be harder to tell | 20:18:27 |
Andrew | I guess this is my homework | 20:18:39 |
Andrew | surely tray icons extension is not it | 20:19:32 |
Andrew | otherwise the system literally becomes unusable. | 20:20:02 |
K900 | You can also bisect the list I guess | 20:20:26 |
Andrew | well, I can say that for many of extensions | 20:20:29 |
K900 | As in, disable all, see if it leaks, enable half | 20:20:32 |
K900 | If it leaks, disable half of what you've enabled | 20:20:39 |
K900 | If it doesn't, enable half of what's left | 20:20:45 |
K900 | etc | 20:20:46 |