On Mon, 15 Oct 2012 03:57:05 -0400, Peter Chant <
pe...@petezilla.co.uk>
wrote:
> I like KDE but I've had Slack 14 installed over a week now and the system
> _still_ seems to be indexing things.
[...]
> Any thoughts? Binning kmail etc and turning off nepomuk seems like one
> option and switching to xcfe another. But I would rather that KDE
> worked.
In 13.1 I found Nepomuk and its related ilk rather annoying, and they
didn't seem to help much. However, with this upgrade and my subsequent
upgrade to KDE 4.9.2 (from Alien's Ktown) and starting from a completely
fresh installation, I can report that Nepomuk seems to behave very well
for me, and I have no had indexing troubles. Indeed, I actually was rather
surprised at how little it used my processor.
There is a setting in the Desktop Search settings for controlling how much
of the currently available resources Nepomuk and others try to use when
doing their indexing, you may want to tweak that. Additionally, you may
have a corrupted database or index if it is behaving really erratically.
In my own tests, Nepomuk was quick to pause or disable indexing when I
started to do real work, and only enabled when my system was idle, so I
did not notice any hit to performance even when Nepomuk was completely
enabled and in the process of indexing.
As a benchmark, my home directory contains over 250GB of data of varying
types, many photo, text files, PDFs, movies, and other data, including
databases and the like. I have not tried indexing email with KMail, but I
might give it a go. Right now I am using Opera to do my mail and it is
serving its own search database.
Indexing might take a while to go through, and you may want to see what
happens if you leave it overnight. If it is finished in the morning and
then gives you problems, then maybe something is borked and you need to
re-index afresh.
I am now relatively happy with Nepomuk, and it makes desktop searching
really easy from inside of Dolphin. It's fast and responsive for me, so at
least you have one data point that says it actually works and works well.
--
Aaron W. Hsu |
arc...@sacrideo.us |
http://www.sacrideo.us
Programming is just another word for the Lost Art of Thinking.