View Full Version : [SOLVED] CPU Usage in idle 18-23%...?
vickoxy
April 9th, 2010, 01:40 PM
Hi,
i have dell mini 10v and i noticed that for last few days my cpu usage in idle (nothing is running) stays at 18-23%. Before that i had 9-10%.
Isnīt it little bit too much?
Ram stays low-at 140-170 MB
Running Ubuntu 9.10 (gnome) on Dell mini 10v. I installed HTOP too and it shows same usage...
moetunes
April 9th, 2010, 01:47 PM
In htop what is the app that is using the cpu so much?
shaka_zulu
April 9th, 2010, 02:39 PM
check system activity and see what application "eats" processor?
vickoxy
April 9th, 2010, 02:40 PM
smfpd is only app that i do not recognize-running at about 20%.
All other: cairo-dock, conky, gnome-terminal, htop, usr/bin/X... are having very low cpu usage.
What is this smfpd? In conky/system there is no sign of this process-i see it only in htop...
vickoxy
April 9th, 2010, 02:43 PM
Ok, there is something-i installed yesterday samsung drivers an found that smfpd have something to do with it:
http://blog.rtg.in.ua/2009/09/what-is-smfpd.html
Is there any way to kill this process? Should it disable my printer?
moetunes
April 9th, 2010, 02:51 PM
htop will show its' pid - process id
exit htop and enter - kill -15 "pid"
vickoxy
April 9th, 2010, 02:54 PM
check system activity and see what application "eats" processor?
Well, in system activity there is nothing unususal. smfpd is not there- i can see it in htop eating 15-20%
And it has something to do with samsung drivers-that is some their daemon. Any idea how to remove it or shut it down?
vickoxy
April 9th, 2010, 02:57 PM
htop will show its' pid - process id
exit htop and enter - kill -15 "pid"
That did, it, but after reboot-will it be there again? Is this permanent solution?
Thanks
vickoxy
April 9th, 2010, 03:01 PM
I just printed one document. So, this smfpd is not necessary to have installed for printing (http://blog.rtg.in.ua/2009/09/what-is-smfpd.html), but can i disable this process or should i delete /usr/sbin/smfpd?
moetunes
April 9th, 2010, 03:02 PM
That did, it, but after reboot-will it be there again? Is this permanent solution?
is there anything in the folder
/etc/init.d
that relates to it?
vickoxy
April 9th, 2010, 03:13 PM
is there anything in the folder
/etc/init.d
that relates to it?
Yes there is:
/ets/init.d/smfpd -some Shell-Skript
and here:
/usr/sbin/smfpd -this is some x application
On this forum i found some other places where it could be:
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=341621
vickoxy
April 9th, 2010, 03:14 PM
And yes-after reboot there is again this process running.
As said, i killed it and printing is working just fine without it..
But how to remove it permanently?
Thanks for help
vickoxy
April 9th, 2010, 04:58 PM
Well, i removed those two files:
/etc/init.d/smfpd
/usr/sbin/smfpd
Have no problems at all with printing and my cpu usage at idle is now at 6-8% again. So, i will make this thread solved.
Thanks
Neovos
December 1st, 2010, 06:31 AM
I had this issue too. If you look at the contents of /etc/init.d/smfpd it shows you everything you need to know to "disable" it. Uncomment the "exit 0" like it says and you should be good.
#!/bin/sh
# smfpd is a parallel port handling daemon. It needs root privileges
# to use iopl(2), inb(2) and outb(2) system calls.
#
# smfpd uses inet domain socket, this script should be run
# after network initialization.
#
# This script is a part of Unified Linux Driver package.
# If your MFP device is not connected to LPT port, you can safely
# disable execution of this script - uncomment 'exit 0' at the next line.
exit 0
SMFPD=/usr/sbin/smfpd
test -x $SMFPD || exit 5
PATH=/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/bin
SMFPD=smfpd
PROCESS_PID=`ps ax | grep "[0-9]:[0-9][0-9] $SMFPD" | awk '{print $1}'`
case "$1" in
check)
if test -z "$PROCESS_PID"; then
echo "Process is not running"
else
echo "Process $SMFPD[$PROCESS_PID] is running"
fi
;;
start)
if test -z "$PROCESS_PID"; then
echo -n "Starting smfpd daemon ... "
$SMFPD
echo "done"
$0 check
else
echo "Process $SMFPD[$PROCESS_PID] is already running"
fi
;;
stop)
if test -n "$PROCESS_PID"; then
echo -n "Stopping smfpd daemon ... "
kill -TERM $PROCESS_PID
echo "done"
else
echo "Process is not running"
fi
;;
restart)
$0 stop
sleep 1
$0 start
;;
*)
echo "Usage: $0 {check|start|stop|restart}"
exit 1
;;
esac
exit 0
fwahl
December 20th, 2010, 09:26 PM
sudo update-rc.d -f smfpd remove should do the trick.
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