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Maxim Volodchenko2019-07-08 11:07:32
Google Chrome
Maxim Volodchenko, 2019-07-08 11:07:32

How to provide maximum resources for Google Chrome?

There is a TX computer:
- CPU core i9 9900k (8 cores, 16 threads, frequencies raised from 3.6 to 4.3 for all cores);
- RAM 32 Gb, frequency 3200;
- SSD 120 Gb;
- built-in graphics;
- Windows 10, x64, 1804;
- Chrome x64 (latest version).
How is it used?
I work in 10+ Chrome profiles at the same time. Each has 10-15 tabs.
How to make Chrome take absolutely any system resources that it needs? What boosts or extensions should be used? What to configure in flags?
So that not a single tab is unloaded, does not go into the background, or something like that. You need maximum flexibility. I don't use any other programs besides Google Chrome.
At all.
The issue with the size of the RAM is not worth it. As with any technical support. Right now it is possible to put at least a cluster, but it is not clear whether this will help.
Now sometimes there is a problem that one of the profiles closes with a black screen, but the cursor continues to find links and buttons on the site. Site - ok.ru The processor goes into "flight" and is loaded at 100%. On the old i5 6400|16gb this screen could not pass for hours. On the new i9 9900k|32gb - disappears in a minute or two. Those. on the face of some kind of background processing and a bottleneck.
The question is just this, how to give out Chrome resources as much as possible? For example, enable forced processing of graphics, set some priorities, force a pile of resources "with a margin". I no longer know where to poke and what to look. Make it so that Chrome could, at any of its desires, devour any resource from the system in any amount.

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1 answer(s)
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dollar, 2019-07-08
@dollar

If you have not activated the option to delete the contents of inactive tabs (flags/#enable-tab-discarding), then why are you unloading them?
If the tab falls (crashes), then no settings can save you from this. The reasons for this need to be analyzed separately. For example, if the size of the tab in the RAM reaches 2 GB, then this is a crash.
The background mode is also not clear what it is. An inactive tab lowers the frequency of JS events. Plus, the site itself can find out that it is inactive. For example, a site with a video might stop downloading the video, leaving only the sound. A smart approach that saves computer resources. But which of these is called background mode?
There is a process priority. If you have so many windows, then it makes sense not to touch their priority, but to set a lower priority for other processes. For example, if you compress a 1 TB file in parallel, then you can set a low priority for this process, and even though the percentage will be loaded at 100%, the browser will fly as if nothing had happened.
If you do not have enough RAM, and the swap starts, then what settings do not set, you will not be saved from the brakes. It is necessary to increase the amount of RAM. So far, no extension has been invented that would magically solve the problem of lack of memory (except for unloading tabs, but this is not for you).

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