Good thing they found out about this before release and are going to fix it. Of course that doesn't stop the Ubuntu haters from taking cheap shots at Ubuntu
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Ubuntu 10.04 Is Hit By Major X.Org Memory Leak
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Originally posted by kUrb1a View PostThis might not be related to anything but Intel hardware but we can all see how well Ubuntu is crafted.
I hope they will fix this issue before releasing -rc, because I want to switch to Kubuntu and stick with it.
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You know, all this can be avoided with the use of smart pointers. There are, certainly, situations where you absolutely can't afford the small overhead of a light object such as a smart pointer, but all in all naked pointers should be only needed when absolutely necessary IMHO.
Also, using smart pointers allow you in many cases to avoid having to make deep copies of objects, so you can get an overall speedup in your code when using them.
But of course, we'll have the usual avalanche of bitching against U
buntu, Canonical and what not.
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Originally posted by mendieta View PostYou know, all this can be avoided with the use of smart pointers. There are, certainly, situations where you absolutely can't afford the small overhead of a light object such as a smart pointer, but all in all naked pointers should be only needed when absolutely necessary IMHO.
Also, using smart pointers allow you in many cases to avoid having to make deep copies of objects, so you can get an overall speedup in your code when using them.
But of course, we'll have the usual avalanche of bitching against U
buntu, Canonical and what not.
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Originally posted by BlackStar View PostAnd how do you propose using smart pointers in freaking C?
Incidentally, I had the chance of browsing some KDE code for a bug fix, and it's all naked pointers, even though Qt provides some shared pointers. Oh well.
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Originally posted by kraftman View PostProbably far better then mentioned OSes.
I hope they will fix this issue before releasing -rc, because I want to switch to Kubuntu and stick with it.
They were releasing this distribution versions (older *buntus) in history with known bugs in kernel or Xorg before because of the strict release dates.
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Originally posted by curaga View PostThese GLX 1.4 changes were from 1.8.0. Why backport them in the first place to a LTS?
In practice, they now have a hybrid mess of the two, probably filled with bugs, and which they'll have to support without independently of upstream Xorg. And for some reason, this seemed preferable to just dropping in 1.8, and fixing any problems that resulted...
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