Hello, from time to time, Thunderbird crashes on my computer. It doesn't happen all that often and so far I haven't lost any data, so this actually doesn't bother me that much. But, when it happens, suddenly the process systemd-journald starts allocating more and more memory (this last time it went up to 1.3 GB), which makes the computer start swapping and for a few minutes it becomes quite unusable. I have no idea what journald is trying to log at that moment. This is what I found in the journal afterwards (also notice that last lines are out of order): May 19 10:24:18 rory systemd-journal[7906]: Permanent journal is using 28.0M (max allowed 15.0M, trying to leave 4.0G free of 131.5G available → current limit 28.0M). May 19 10:24:19 rory systemd[1]: Starting Journal Service... May 19 10:24:19 rory systemd[1]: systemd-journald.service stop-sigterm timed out. Killing. May 19 10:24:19 rory systemd[1]: Starting Journal Service... May 19 10:24:19 rory systemd[1]: systemd-journald.service: main process exited, code=killed, status=9/KILL May 19 10:24:19 rory systemd[1]: Unit systemd-journald.service entered failed state. May 19 10:24:19 rory systemd[1]: systemd-journald.service has no holdoff time, scheduling restart. May 19 10:24:19 rory systemd[1]: Stopping Journal Service... May 19 10:24:19 rory systemd[1]: Starting Journal Service... May 19 10:24:19 rory systemd[1]: Started Journal Service. May 19 10:24:19 rory systemd-journal[7906]: Journal started May 19 10:22:31 rory systemd[1]: systemd-journald.service watchdog timeout! May 19 10:24:05 rory systemd[1]: Starting Trigger Flushing of Journal to Persistent Storage... May 19 10:24:08 rory systemd[1]: Started Trigger Flushing of Journal to Persistent Storage. Is there a journald setting I could use to prevent this huge memory allocation? Ondřej -- Greetings, Ondřej Kučera