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jc123 | 10 years ago

With crashes, though rare in Chrome, when one does happen it usually kills all my Chrome windows instead of a single tab as is touted :/

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frik|10 years ago

It depends which process crashes. Usually and rare a sub-process crash which means a few tabs need a page reload. If your main process crash (which should be very very rare) then I would suspect you have a faulty memory module in your device or you have little free memory or your operating system has not optimal scheduler (e.g. server OS on a desktop).

hyperpape|10 years ago

I've seen it irregularly on multiple machines, Windows 7, Windows 8 and now Mac OS X. It's actually really soured me on the whole idea of a multi-process architecture. I understand the theoretical benefits, but I don't see messages that a particular tab crashed that much more often than that the entire browser crashed.

wooger|10 years ago

"Little free memory" means that Chrome has eaten all my ram though.

Chrome is really lagging behind Firefox in this, as it has no backgrounding / unloading process that I'm aware of to maintain a reasonable memory footprint.

It also attempts to render every tab at once when restoring after a crash - another obvious problem.

higherpurpose|10 years ago

Let me guess, it's a process like Flash that kills all of your tabs?

That's why having proprietary technology in browsers sucks because you can't really implement it the way you want to (as a browser vendor).

Tyr42|10 years ago

If you can reproduce that, I'm sure the Chrome team would be very, very interested in that.

Quiark|10 years ago

Or maybe not, I think they have automated crash reporting (I even used their library, breakpad) but my Chrome has been very consistent in crashing on Windows wakeup for over a year now.