Hi, Ian,
thank you!
~$ dmesg
...
[2.172067] clocksource: tsc: mask: 0x max_cycles:
0x2281b7b41ef, max_idle_ns: 440795228866 ns
[2.332227] firewire_core :02:09.0: created device fw0: GUID
424fc00027eae870, S400
[2.985529] input: AlpsPS/2 ALPS GlidePoint as
/d
Hi Ian,
I use systemd-analyze blame:
~$ systemd-analyze
Startup finished in 35.673s (kernel) + 6.998s (userspace) = 42.671s
graphical.target reached after 6.974s in userspace
~$ systemd-analyze blame
4.156s NetworkManager-wait-online.service
1.657s plymouth-start.servic
Walter, et al:
So, does that have any real "meaning" in the day to day use and/or
installation . . . ?? Would having a swap partition already there create
some problem for post 18.04 installations as far as the new file method is
concerned? Is the swap file placed in the swap partition?
Over th
Aere:
Interesting question, up to your usual standards . . . short answer, I
certainly don't know. My last fresh install is Lu Next 18.04 and I did
"manual" and the installer "found" my two swap partitions in two different
drives and in Gparted it shows the swap partition with "keys" next to them
On 2018-05-15 10:28, Aere Greenway wrote:
> It seems I read somewhere, that at least with Ubuntu 18.04, they were
> abandoning the use of swap partitions, and instead using swap files.
> Does this apply to all Ubuntu variants, or is it only for Ubuntu?
You [read it right][1] and it does apply to
On 05/15/2018 10:36 AM, Fritz Hudnut wrote:
Hmmm, well I don't know if that fits the same "multi-boot" scenario
that I'm referring to, where the last installed system will take over
the swap partition, leaving the other distros without a linked swap
UUID . . . and seeming to take a lot longer t
On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 12:07 AM, RB wrote:
> Hi, Fritz,
>
>
> yes, I had 2 systems installed:
> Lubuntu and Ubuntu 17.10 17.10.
> 2 / boot partition.
> I changed GDM to LightDM.
> The startup and shutdown of Ubuntu 17.10 was quick.
>
> After upgrade Ubuntu to Lubuntu 17.10 18.04 ( sudo apt dist-
Hi, Fritz,
yes, I had 2 systems installed:
Lubuntu and Ubuntu 17.10 17.10.
2 / boot partition.
I changed GDM to LightDM.
The startup and shutdown of Ubuntu 17.10 was quick.
After upgrade Ubuntu to Lubuntu 17.10 18.04 ( sudo apt dist-upgrade) Ubuntu 18.04 became
slow load.
14.05.2018 16:47,
Hi Ian,
Thank you!
This command will help you analyse system boot-up perfornance:
systemd-analyze blame
I will try it.
I have noticed that some shutdowns can be slower because security updates are being
applied. I would like the option to have the system tell me that it is doing that. That
Ubuntu 18.04 slow boot and shutdown
Good day!
After upgrading from Ubuntu 17.10 to lub Although 18.04 LTS (Bionic Beaver), loading and
unloading became slow, instead of 10-15 seconds more than a minute.
What can be done?
Lubuntu 18.04 медленная загрузка и выключение
Добрый день!
После обнов
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