Does anyone have this issue were firefox becomes slow if left open for a long time. In my case after a couple of weeks rendering becomes slow and when I use youtube for example if is laggy, just trying to change volume taka few second to show the volume bar. It also happens to my laptop at work. I have around 30 tabs open.

  • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
    ·
    4 hours ago

    Yes it happens. As others have said: just restart.

    What might not be as clear: when you restart, if it doesn't just come up and offer to restore your session, you can go to History and Restore Previous Session. This reopens all your tabs (actually, they won't fully reload until you view them).

  • monovergent 🏁@lemmy.ml
    ·
    6 hours ago

    Only the part with youtube. Don't know if they are pulling some tricks on uBlock users, but about 10 tabs of youtube can get nasty, even with a somewhat recent workstation.

  • Zetta@mander.xyz
    ·
    6 hours ago

    Dawg I had like ~35 tabs open and hadn't restarted my PC in over three weeks. Fucking Firefox was sucking back 80 gigs of RAM. 80 fucking gigs.

    On the bright side all the tabs were still loaded when I clicked through them.

    • Atemu@lemmy.ml
      ·
      5 hours ago

      I've seen poorly made websites taking gigabytes of RAM before. It's not firefox' fault they do that.

      • Zetta@mander.xyz
        ·
        4 hours ago

        True that, I just thought it was crazy. I had recently upgraded to 96 gigs of RAM and I just never imagined a browser would actually suck up that much.

        • Atemu@lemmy.ml
          ·
          edit-2
          2 hours ago

          If you had 80GB worth of websites that did something actually useful with it, you'd want Firefox to use it all.

          I usually have dozens of tabs loaded due to usage and I want Firefox to keep all of them into memory so that I can switch between them quicker.

          Though I do also want Firefox to shed load by unloading some of them whe I need memory for something else. There just simply isn't a mechanism in Linux to do that AFAIK; Firefox will happily keep all of its tabs loaded all the way until OOM eventhough it could shed most of them with little impact on user experience. There isn't a way for the kernel to ask applications to shed memory load on their own and I think there should be.
          macOS has such a mechanism and Firefox uses it but it didn't have much effect IME, so it might have been bugged. That was a good while ago that I tested it though.

      • Zetta@mander.xyz
        ·
        edit-2
        3 hours ago

        I'm so hyped as well! Just read their monthly update blog today actually! I'm mostly hyped because it's the first actual new web browser in a very, very long time, and that's just plain exciting!

            • TheMachineStops@discuss.tchncs.de
              hexagon
              ·
              edit-2
              2 hours ago

              I test firefox vs edge in my pc, both with ublock origin. Firefox noticeably uses more ram than edge which uses same engine as chrome.

              Here this person saw the same results as me: https://libreddit.bus-hit.me/r/firefox/comments/18gp19l/ram_usage_in_firefox_vs_edge

              • Atemu@lemmy.ml
                ·
                edit-2
                2 hours ago

                Their methodology (and therefore likely yours aswell) is flawed and it was immediately pointed out in that thread too: https://libreddit.bus-hit.me/r/firefox/comments/18gp19l/ram_usage_in_firefox_vs_edge/kd2u2pq/?context=3#kd2u2pq

                Measuring the memory "a process" actually "uses" is not trivial.

  • hackerwacker@lemmy.ml
    ·
    14 hours ago

    I had the same problem recently. Especially the youtube UI became very unresponsive and would take several seconds to respond. I have 96G ram...

    I downloaded ESR instead. So far so good.