On Mon, 24 Mar 2014, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 03/24/14 05:37, Bill Oliver wrote:
But that's OK. The *problem* is that if I kill firefox by clicking on the
kill-window button rather than the Quit button, the window goes away,
but firefox continues in the background. Thus, if I kill firefox by closing the
window, I can't start it again without running ps, finding the
process, and manually killing it. It's an easy workaround, but a minor
inconvenience.
FWIW, I mostly use chrome, but I have seen cases where firefox continues to run in the
background. If memory serves me, in my case, it was due to the
flash-plugin not exiting.
Instead of using ps, you can simply use "killall /usr/lib64/firefox/firefox"
(note I'm running 64bit)
Worse, however, if I forget to do that and log out, appearently the next time I
turn on KDE, it comes on as a background process but never shows
a window. Once again, that's not a huge problem now that I know to look for
it.
You may find it helpful to do two things...
1. Create a ~/.bash_logout which contains the killall command to make sure firefox is
dead, dead on logout.
2. If you are using KDE and your "session management" is set to "Restore
previous session" it may be helpful to add firefox to the "Applications to be
excluded...." list.
Great suggestions. Thanks.
billo