Multiple Processes for opera.exe
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lando242 last edited by
Yeah, that definitely doesn't sound normal for Opera. If those malware scanners don't turn up anything I can't think of what the source of your problems would be. You don't have Opera Turbo turned on by accident do you?
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A Former User last edited by
If all the specs of your install fit your system reqs, what plug-ins and extensions do you have installed and enabled? I had a certain conflict in my Chrome recently, so...
Actually, it was a player, a separate app but sorta "integrated" etc.
Try running your browser for a while with everything else shut the hell down...:idea: -
Deleted User last edited by
I'm pretty sure my i5 is quite capable.
No plugins extensions etc in opera, pure stock. No malware (have run Malwarebytes to make sure, also run avast constantly)
No Opera turbo.I frequently run the Opera as single app and it's the same as together with some 3d games. Tried without uTorrent -the same.
I guess I'm gonna reinstall 26 /rollback to v25 to see if it makes any difference. -
Deleted User last edited by
mistery solved, I had 3 tabs with apparently overscripted site ( adme.ru ), in Opera 12 I had JS disabled for it.
closed them and everything is back to normal
thanks to everyone for advices -
tinymanticore last edited by
There is no reason to have multiple processes. Proper threading will handle it and save on memory usage.
The real problem with all browsing these days seems to be JavaScript. it is a lethal disease that has crept into internet. A good browser needs to put a muzzlie on JS. Otherwise it will gobble up everything and give you nothing but an "experience" you'll not want to repeat.
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lando242 last edited by
There is no reason to have multiple processes.
Sure there is. If a tab crashes and your whole web browser uses only a single process, welp, back to the desktop you go. If each tab and extension is in its own process, when one crashes it only takes out that one extension or tab. The browser keep on going and you can easily track down whats causing the problem without losing whatever else was open at the time. It also allows you to use multiple CPU cores for your program without having to make complex and difficult to maintain multi-threaded code.
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dawggoodie last edited by
It is not the number of processes, but the amount of memory each demands. The point is that with a couple of open tabs displaying static content, Opera eats half a gig.
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lando242 last edited by
Is half a gig a lot of memory in your opinion? How much RAM does your system have? 4 gigabytes is considered a pretty minimal amount to have if you want to run any version of Windows made after XP. As long as your system isn't using its swap file it doesn't matter how much load your RAM is under. That is what it is there for and you wont see performance fall if its under 90% load as long as the swap file isn't being used.
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kimiraikkonen85 last edited by
I have the same issue. Having Opera 34, i have 7 opera.exe*32 on my Win7 SP 64-bit box. Is it a multithreading way of processing? I have I7 cpu with 4 cores (8 threads).
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blackbird71 last edited by
It's really a multi-process design way of architecting a browser's operation. The browser, its GUI, each of its extensions, and each browser tab all run in their own separate processes. This is supposed to improve crash resistance and security should something in one of the processes go sour or rogue. All the chromish browsers use multi-process mechanisms (Chrome, Opera, Vivaldi, etc, etc) and the story is that Firefox will be moving to some sort of multiple-process system of its own shortly. At the end of the day, the technique does end up requiring a bit more RAM and processor cycles, but I'll leave the quality/magnitude of the crash/security improvements for others to debate.
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albertogrady last edited by
Ya know, my browser never really used to crash at all on opera12. And, if it did, it was very rare, and it didn't bother me at all really. I also was never hacked through the browswer. So, all this undo attention to crash-proof security nonsense is just a flimsy excuse for writing bloatware. There was a time when developers wanted to run their software mean, and lean, but nowadays, they just borrow junk chromium bloat code, and take away all the staple features (like confirm on exit). what happened to you opera?
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A Former User last edited by
I run opera with anywhere from 40 to 50 tabs active at a time and have a whole slew of Opera.Exe*32 processes running.
With it just sitting there doing nothing, one of the processes ranges from 10 to 15% of cpu time. Is there a way to determine which of my tabs that process belongs to?
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A Former User last edited by
Ah, just found out about Opera's own task manager. It reveals what I wanted to know. Thanks for the heads up.
One little question about it though, the bar to the left of each process, when it's two or three lines tall, does that mean a single process is managing more than one tab?
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machinc last edited by
my laptop is 4 months old it came with windows 10 Opera keeps freezing and lagging it runs 8 processors and makes my disk max out 100% i use Internet Explorer and Firefox i don't like Chrome as it uses too may processors as well and i get the same problems as Opera as for Explorer and Firefox my only problems with them is Explorer won't stay in full screen and Firefox's plug-in container keeps crashing other then that i have no problems with Explorer or Firefox what would make me happy to keep Opera is the removal of the multiple processors as they use too much Disk space to run.
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lando242 last edited by
multiple processors as they use too much Disk space to run.
You do not have a proper understanding of how multi-process applications work. They do not require any additional disk space compared to single-process programs. That fact that Chrome also has issues and ever Firefox is experiencing problems tells me there is something wrong with your computer. Age is not a factor in whether a computer can malfunction or not. It does not matter of your computer is 4 months old or 4 years old, if you have damaged system files or malware or something like that it will start acting poorly regardless.
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my1xt last edited by
"I'm wondering why so many people think that this is something bad and start complaining about it cause it's not!"
well it pulls quite a lot of RAM (my GMail tab ALONE has 300 MB)
"They do not require any additional disk space compared to single-process programs"
True but they eat ram for breakfastit would probably already help if not each and every tab gets its process but rather just for each site.
and try getting rid of a forkbomb. (someone actually linked me one. it wasnt a problem because I used firefox and I had only to shoot down one single process, and then unselect all the forkbombs in the sessionrestore "site" from firefox. with opera or chrome you wont be able to kill a forkbomb that easily
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Deleted User last edited by
it wouldn't be a problem if idiots start to compile stable x64 builds
but at this point nothing can "save" opera, its simply crap