Terribly slow boot on Ubuntu 17.04 Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Why Windows 8 is a lot faster than Ubuntu 13.10 on the same laptop?Ubuntu 17.04 takes 3 minutes from GRUB to the login screenWindows 7 doesn't boot after Ubuntu installHow do I use dmesg to diagnose slow boot speed?Ubuntu 16.04 boot taking more then 5 minsSlow boot after fresh install and updateUbuntu 17.04 ugly boot upSlow Ubuntu 16.04 bootSlow boot, long kernel load time, due to wrong resume deviceSlow Boot in Ubuntu 18.04Very slow load on Ubuntu 18.04Ubuntu 18.04 Slow Boot Time

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Terribly slow boot on Ubuntu 17.04



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Why Windows 8 is a lot faster than Ubuntu 13.10 on the same laptop?Ubuntu 17.04 takes 3 minutes from GRUB to the login screenWindows 7 doesn't boot after Ubuntu installHow do I use dmesg to diagnose slow boot speed?Ubuntu 16.04 boot taking more then 5 minsSlow boot after fresh install and updateUbuntu 17.04 ugly boot upSlow Ubuntu 16.04 bootSlow boot, long kernel load time, due to wrong resume deviceSlow Boot in Ubuntu 18.04Very slow load on Ubuntu 18.04Ubuntu 18.04 Slow Boot Time



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








1















I just moved on from Windows 10 to Ubuntu 17.04 Zesty Zapus one day ago. Everything is fine except the boot up time. In my Windows 10 my pc would take probably less than 10 secs to boot up. But in Ubuntu it is taking 2-3 mins to take me to the log in screen. I have run dmesg and it seems that something is getting wrong after 7 seconds. I'm attaching the result below. I also ran the boot process in cui mode and found that there was a hold for 1 min and 30 secs saying 'A start job is running for dev disc'. In other answers it has been provided that editing fstab file, checking for correct UUID will solve the matter but I have done with all this still the problem goes on.



I currently have one partition installed that is the entire disc (/dev/sda1). I did a clean install of ubuntu and erased the whole disc while installing.
My configuration is 3 GHz intel Pentium dual core CPU, 4 GB RAM, 1 TB HDD with no other os installed except Ubuntu 17.04 with latest updates.
I hope anyone could solve this problem for me. Thank you very much.



dmesg output










share|improve this question
























  • what does systemd-analyze blame say?

    – Sethos II
    May 29 '17 at 9:53











  • I went on a gui mode while bootup and found out there was a hold saying a sart job is running by dev mapper... and a start job is running by dev disc.. simultaneously, one for 1 min 30 sec and one for no limit. After 1 min 30 sec the boot process continued. I also chkecked the etc/fstab and saw there were swap partitions written but I actually don't have any seperate partitions for that so I removed them keeping only the partition ubuntu is using. I also ckecked UUID using lsblk -f and it was correct. Still the problem is going on.

    – Pronil Halder
    May 29 '17 at 13:56






  • 3





    Possible duplicate of Why Windows 8 is a lot faster than Ubuntu 13.10 on the same laptop?

    – Melebius
    May 29 '17 at 13:58






  • 1





    Please post your UPDATE as an answer to the question, instead of adding it to the question

    – Zanna
    May 31 '17 at 4:49






  • 1





    If you solved your problem yourself, please answer your own question and accept your answer. Don’t put the answer in your question or the comments! Send me a message in the comments if you want my up-vote. I'm taking the liberty to revert your edit. :-)

    – David Foerster
    May 31 '17 at 9:23

















1















I just moved on from Windows 10 to Ubuntu 17.04 Zesty Zapus one day ago. Everything is fine except the boot up time. In my Windows 10 my pc would take probably less than 10 secs to boot up. But in Ubuntu it is taking 2-3 mins to take me to the log in screen. I have run dmesg and it seems that something is getting wrong after 7 seconds. I'm attaching the result below. I also ran the boot process in cui mode and found that there was a hold for 1 min and 30 secs saying 'A start job is running for dev disc'. In other answers it has been provided that editing fstab file, checking for correct UUID will solve the matter but I have done with all this still the problem goes on.



I currently have one partition installed that is the entire disc (/dev/sda1). I did a clean install of ubuntu and erased the whole disc while installing.
My configuration is 3 GHz intel Pentium dual core CPU, 4 GB RAM, 1 TB HDD with no other os installed except Ubuntu 17.04 with latest updates.
I hope anyone could solve this problem for me. Thank you very much.



dmesg output










share|improve this question
























  • what does systemd-analyze blame say?

    – Sethos II
    May 29 '17 at 9:53











  • I went on a gui mode while bootup and found out there was a hold saying a sart job is running by dev mapper... and a start job is running by dev disc.. simultaneously, one for 1 min 30 sec and one for no limit. After 1 min 30 sec the boot process continued. I also chkecked the etc/fstab and saw there were swap partitions written but I actually don't have any seperate partitions for that so I removed them keeping only the partition ubuntu is using. I also ckecked UUID using lsblk -f and it was correct. Still the problem is going on.

    – Pronil Halder
    May 29 '17 at 13:56






  • 3





    Possible duplicate of Why Windows 8 is a lot faster than Ubuntu 13.10 on the same laptop?

    – Melebius
    May 29 '17 at 13:58






  • 1





    Please post your UPDATE as an answer to the question, instead of adding it to the question

    – Zanna
    May 31 '17 at 4:49






  • 1





    If you solved your problem yourself, please answer your own question and accept your answer. Don’t put the answer in your question or the comments! Send me a message in the comments if you want my up-vote. I'm taking the liberty to revert your edit. :-)

    – David Foerster
    May 31 '17 at 9:23













1












1








1


1






I just moved on from Windows 10 to Ubuntu 17.04 Zesty Zapus one day ago. Everything is fine except the boot up time. In my Windows 10 my pc would take probably less than 10 secs to boot up. But in Ubuntu it is taking 2-3 mins to take me to the log in screen. I have run dmesg and it seems that something is getting wrong after 7 seconds. I'm attaching the result below. I also ran the boot process in cui mode and found that there was a hold for 1 min and 30 secs saying 'A start job is running for dev disc'. In other answers it has been provided that editing fstab file, checking for correct UUID will solve the matter but I have done with all this still the problem goes on.



I currently have one partition installed that is the entire disc (/dev/sda1). I did a clean install of ubuntu and erased the whole disc while installing.
My configuration is 3 GHz intel Pentium dual core CPU, 4 GB RAM, 1 TB HDD with no other os installed except Ubuntu 17.04 with latest updates.
I hope anyone could solve this problem for me. Thank you very much.



dmesg output










share|improve this question
















I just moved on from Windows 10 to Ubuntu 17.04 Zesty Zapus one day ago. Everything is fine except the boot up time. In my Windows 10 my pc would take probably less than 10 secs to boot up. But in Ubuntu it is taking 2-3 mins to take me to the log in screen. I have run dmesg and it seems that something is getting wrong after 7 seconds. I'm attaching the result below. I also ran the boot process in cui mode and found that there was a hold for 1 min and 30 secs saying 'A start job is running for dev disc'. In other answers it has been provided that editing fstab file, checking for correct UUID will solve the matter but I have done with all this still the problem goes on.



I currently have one partition installed that is the entire disc (/dev/sda1). I did a clean install of ubuntu and erased the whole disc while installing.
My configuration is 3 GHz intel Pentium dual core CPU, 4 GB RAM, 1 TB HDD with no other os installed except Ubuntu 17.04 with latest updates.
I hope anyone could solve this problem for me. Thank you very much.



dmesg output







boot






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 31 '17 at 9:23









David Foerster

28.7k1367113




28.7k1367113










asked May 29 '17 at 8:23









Pronil HalderPronil Halder

4617




4617












  • what does systemd-analyze blame say?

    – Sethos II
    May 29 '17 at 9:53











  • I went on a gui mode while bootup and found out there was a hold saying a sart job is running by dev mapper... and a start job is running by dev disc.. simultaneously, one for 1 min 30 sec and one for no limit. After 1 min 30 sec the boot process continued. I also chkecked the etc/fstab and saw there were swap partitions written but I actually don't have any seperate partitions for that so I removed them keeping only the partition ubuntu is using. I also ckecked UUID using lsblk -f and it was correct. Still the problem is going on.

    – Pronil Halder
    May 29 '17 at 13:56






  • 3





    Possible duplicate of Why Windows 8 is a lot faster than Ubuntu 13.10 on the same laptop?

    – Melebius
    May 29 '17 at 13:58






  • 1





    Please post your UPDATE as an answer to the question, instead of adding it to the question

    – Zanna
    May 31 '17 at 4:49






  • 1





    If you solved your problem yourself, please answer your own question and accept your answer. Don’t put the answer in your question or the comments! Send me a message in the comments if you want my up-vote. I'm taking the liberty to revert your edit. :-)

    – David Foerster
    May 31 '17 at 9:23

















  • what does systemd-analyze blame say?

    – Sethos II
    May 29 '17 at 9:53











  • I went on a gui mode while bootup and found out there was a hold saying a sart job is running by dev mapper... and a start job is running by dev disc.. simultaneously, one for 1 min 30 sec and one for no limit. After 1 min 30 sec the boot process continued. I also chkecked the etc/fstab and saw there were swap partitions written but I actually don't have any seperate partitions for that so I removed them keeping only the partition ubuntu is using. I also ckecked UUID using lsblk -f and it was correct. Still the problem is going on.

    – Pronil Halder
    May 29 '17 at 13:56






  • 3





    Possible duplicate of Why Windows 8 is a lot faster than Ubuntu 13.10 on the same laptop?

    – Melebius
    May 29 '17 at 13:58






  • 1





    Please post your UPDATE as an answer to the question, instead of adding it to the question

    – Zanna
    May 31 '17 at 4:49






  • 1





    If you solved your problem yourself, please answer your own question and accept your answer. Don’t put the answer in your question or the comments! Send me a message in the comments if you want my up-vote. I'm taking the liberty to revert your edit. :-)

    – David Foerster
    May 31 '17 at 9:23
















what does systemd-analyze blame say?

– Sethos II
May 29 '17 at 9:53





what does systemd-analyze blame say?

– Sethos II
May 29 '17 at 9:53













I went on a gui mode while bootup and found out there was a hold saying a sart job is running by dev mapper... and a start job is running by dev disc.. simultaneously, one for 1 min 30 sec and one for no limit. After 1 min 30 sec the boot process continued. I also chkecked the etc/fstab and saw there were swap partitions written but I actually don't have any seperate partitions for that so I removed them keeping only the partition ubuntu is using. I also ckecked UUID using lsblk -f and it was correct. Still the problem is going on.

– Pronil Halder
May 29 '17 at 13:56





I went on a gui mode while bootup and found out there was a hold saying a sart job is running by dev mapper... and a start job is running by dev disc.. simultaneously, one for 1 min 30 sec and one for no limit. After 1 min 30 sec the boot process continued. I also chkecked the etc/fstab and saw there were swap partitions written but I actually don't have any seperate partitions for that so I removed them keeping only the partition ubuntu is using. I also ckecked UUID using lsblk -f and it was correct. Still the problem is going on.

– Pronil Halder
May 29 '17 at 13:56




3




3





Possible duplicate of Why Windows 8 is a lot faster than Ubuntu 13.10 on the same laptop?

– Melebius
May 29 '17 at 13:58





Possible duplicate of Why Windows 8 is a lot faster than Ubuntu 13.10 on the same laptop?

– Melebius
May 29 '17 at 13:58




1




1





Please post your UPDATE as an answer to the question, instead of adding it to the question

– Zanna
May 31 '17 at 4:49





Please post your UPDATE as an answer to the question, instead of adding it to the question

– Zanna
May 31 '17 at 4:49




1




1





If you solved your problem yourself, please answer your own question and accept your answer. Don’t put the answer in your question or the comments! Send me a message in the comments if you want my up-vote. I'm taking the liberty to revert your edit. :-)

– David Foerster
May 31 '17 at 9:23





If you solved your problem yourself, please answer your own question and accept your answer. Don’t put the answer in your question or the comments! Send me a message in the comments if you want my up-vote. I'm taking the liberty to revert your edit. :-)

– David Foerster
May 31 '17 at 9:23










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















4














I solved the problem of slow booting. When I saw the boot messages it showed me that a startup process is running my dev mapper. I checked the /etc/fstab and there was a swapfile indicating /swapfile but I checked using free -m that I didn't have a swap set up. So I set up a swap but still the problem remained unchanged. The actual problem was that there was an unexisting drive listed on the /etc/crypttab which was causing the issue. I commented out the line and now it boots fine.



So if you have starup job slow boot issue, please do check:



  1. Do you have a swap? Check it using sudo swapon -s

  2. Check whether the swap is listed in fstab properly. Also check whether there are any other unexisted device listed. If there is, comment it out by putting # and a space at the starting of the line.

  3. If step 1 and 2 fails or not relevant then check whether any unexisted device listed on /etc/crypttab. If there is, comment it out.





share|improve this answer
































    0














    I am looking for a solution to my slow boot times. After many years of using Windows I want to finally try Linux. I choose Kubuntu as love Plasma desktop. Anyway, PC ain't new, but with SSD Windows10 boots within 11-12 seconds. Kubuntu needs 4 minutes O_o



    dmseg shows that there are few errors during start and each kills run for 10 seconds. Honestly, I have almost none previous experience with Linux and hoping for your help. If you can have a look at this and guide me how to solve it...



    https://www.dropbox.com/s/e1a2076edbwjr93/Kubuntu%20start?dl=0






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    TMHD is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.




















      Your Answer








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      2 Answers
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      2 Answers
      2






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      4














      I solved the problem of slow booting. When I saw the boot messages it showed me that a startup process is running my dev mapper. I checked the /etc/fstab and there was a swapfile indicating /swapfile but I checked using free -m that I didn't have a swap set up. So I set up a swap but still the problem remained unchanged. The actual problem was that there was an unexisting drive listed on the /etc/crypttab which was causing the issue. I commented out the line and now it boots fine.



      So if you have starup job slow boot issue, please do check:



      1. Do you have a swap? Check it using sudo swapon -s

      2. Check whether the swap is listed in fstab properly. Also check whether there are any other unexisted device listed. If there is, comment it out by putting # and a space at the starting of the line.

      3. If step 1 and 2 fails or not relevant then check whether any unexisted device listed on /etc/crypttab. If there is, comment it out.





      share|improve this answer





























        4














        I solved the problem of slow booting. When I saw the boot messages it showed me that a startup process is running my dev mapper. I checked the /etc/fstab and there was a swapfile indicating /swapfile but I checked using free -m that I didn't have a swap set up. So I set up a swap but still the problem remained unchanged. The actual problem was that there was an unexisting drive listed on the /etc/crypttab which was causing the issue. I commented out the line and now it boots fine.



        So if you have starup job slow boot issue, please do check:



        1. Do you have a swap? Check it using sudo swapon -s

        2. Check whether the swap is listed in fstab properly. Also check whether there are any other unexisted device listed. If there is, comment it out by putting # and a space at the starting of the line.

        3. If step 1 and 2 fails or not relevant then check whether any unexisted device listed on /etc/crypttab. If there is, comment it out.





        share|improve this answer



























          4












          4








          4







          I solved the problem of slow booting. When I saw the boot messages it showed me that a startup process is running my dev mapper. I checked the /etc/fstab and there was a swapfile indicating /swapfile but I checked using free -m that I didn't have a swap set up. So I set up a swap but still the problem remained unchanged. The actual problem was that there was an unexisting drive listed on the /etc/crypttab which was causing the issue. I commented out the line and now it boots fine.



          So if you have starup job slow boot issue, please do check:



          1. Do you have a swap? Check it using sudo swapon -s

          2. Check whether the swap is listed in fstab properly. Also check whether there are any other unexisted device listed. If there is, comment it out by putting # and a space at the starting of the line.

          3. If step 1 and 2 fails or not relevant then check whether any unexisted device listed on /etc/crypttab. If there is, comment it out.





          share|improve this answer















          I solved the problem of slow booting. When I saw the boot messages it showed me that a startup process is running my dev mapper. I checked the /etc/fstab and there was a swapfile indicating /swapfile but I checked using free -m that I didn't have a swap set up. So I set up a swap but still the problem remained unchanged. The actual problem was that there was an unexisting drive listed on the /etc/crypttab which was causing the issue. I commented out the line and now it boots fine.



          So if you have starup job slow boot issue, please do check:



          1. Do you have a swap? Check it using sudo swapon -s

          2. Check whether the swap is listed in fstab properly. Also check whether there are any other unexisted device listed. If there is, comment it out by putting # and a space at the starting of the line.

          3. If step 1 and 2 fails or not relevant then check whether any unexisted device listed on /etc/crypttab. If there is, comment it out.






          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jun 2 '17 at 6:05









          Melebius

          5,09352041




          5,09352041










          answered Jun 1 '17 at 10:23









          Pronil HalderPronil Halder

          4617




          4617























              0














              I am looking for a solution to my slow boot times. After many years of using Windows I want to finally try Linux. I choose Kubuntu as love Plasma desktop. Anyway, PC ain't new, but with SSD Windows10 boots within 11-12 seconds. Kubuntu needs 4 minutes O_o



              dmseg shows that there are few errors during start and each kills run for 10 seconds. Honestly, I have almost none previous experience with Linux and hoping for your help. If you can have a look at this and guide me how to solve it...



              https://www.dropbox.com/s/e1a2076edbwjr93/Kubuntu%20start?dl=0






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              TMHD is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.
























                0














                I am looking for a solution to my slow boot times. After many years of using Windows I want to finally try Linux. I choose Kubuntu as love Plasma desktop. Anyway, PC ain't new, but with SSD Windows10 boots within 11-12 seconds. Kubuntu needs 4 minutes O_o



                dmseg shows that there are few errors during start and each kills run for 10 seconds. Honestly, I have almost none previous experience with Linux and hoping for your help. If you can have a look at this and guide me how to solve it...



                https://www.dropbox.com/s/e1a2076edbwjr93/Kubuntu%20start?dl=0






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                TMHD is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                  0












                  0








                  0







                  I am looking for a solution to my slow boot times. After many years of using Windows I want to finally try Linux. I choose Kubuntu as love Plasma desktop. Anyway, PC ain't new, but with SSD Windows10 boots within 11-12 seconds. Kubuntu needs 4 minutes O_o



                  dmseg shows that there are few errors during start and each kills run for 10 seconds. Honestly, I have almost none previous experience with Linux and hoping for your help. If you can have a look at this and guide me how to solve it...



                  https://www.dropbox.com/s/e1a2076edbwjr93/Kubuntu%20start?dl=0






                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  TMHD is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.










                  I am looking for a solution to my slow boot times. After many years of using Windows I want to finally try Linux. I choose Kubuntu as love Plasma desktop. Anyway, PC ain't new, but with SSD Windows10 boots within 11-12 seconds. Kubuntu needs 4 minutes O_o



                  dmseg shows that there are few errors during start and each kills run for 10 seconds. Honestly, I have almost none previous experience with Linux and hoping for your help. If you can have a look at this and guide me how to solve it...



                  https://www.dropbox.com/s/e1a2076edbwjr93/Kubuntu%20start?dl=0







                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  TMHD is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer






                  New contributor




                  TMHD is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  answered 13 mins ago









                  TMHDTMHD

                  1




                  1




                  New contributor




                  TMHD is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.





                  New contributor





                  TMHD is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






                  TMHD is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.



























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