Bug#222731: More info on this bug

2004-01-19 Thread Juanjo Alvarez
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 I've just installed non-Debian OpenOffice.org 1.1 (from his web page) and I don't have those problems with it (it starts in about 20 seconds, after a strip), so definitively the problem is in the packages. Hope this helps. PS: If you need a shell acc

Bug#222731: Even more info

2003-12-11 Thread Juanjo Alvarez
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On Wed, Dec 10, 2003 at 03:27:51PM +0100, Chris Halls wrote: > Good work, thanks. Do you still have an .openoffice directory that has > the problem somewhere, or can you now no longer reproduce the problem? Unfortunately after some use OO has starte

Bug#222731: Even more info

2003-12-10 Thread Juanjo Alvarez
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 More info: I've found that just deleting the .openoffice directory on a user directory fixes the problem for that user. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.2.3 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQE/1yFP7WKWOGMJ2fkRAikYAJwINQikeVTyBfCXzymtEwd7dhYrvgCfaX31 J

Bug#222731: Even more info

2003-12-10 Thread Juanjo Alvarez
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 I've looked at the strace output. It seems that 99% of the (huge) time is spend doing something related to fonts. 99% of the output is like: 17:15:02 lseek(18, 48937584, SEEK_SET) = 48937584 17:15:02 lseek(18, 0, SEEK_CUR) = 48937584 17:15:

Bug#222731: More info

2003-12-09 Thread Juanjo Alvarez
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 >Is your /etc/hosts OK? I had that one time ago too as my /etc/hosts >vanished Yes, it is. I've uploaded the timed strace output to: http://www.escomposlinux.org/fer_y_juanjo/oowriter_strace_output.txt.bz2 -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuP

Bug#222731: openoffice.org: OpenOffice programs start really sloooow

2003-12-03 Thread Juanjo Alvarez
Package: openoffice.org Version: 1.1.0-2 Severity: normal Usually OpenOffice.org (oowriter mainly) started on my system (2Ghz Athlon XP 256 DDRAM) in about 20-30 seconds. On the last days (and two or three aptupgrades) I've noted that it now takes about 80 seconds to start (with any user of the s