Ubuntu 16.04 stuck on shutdown/reboot with “recovering journal” line The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InInstallation of Ubuntu 16.04 from a USB drive freezesStuck on reboot and shutdownACPI tables/DSDT tables not available in Ubuntu 14.04. How to restore?Few options in nvidia-settings and stuck on CPUX for Xs on shutdowncan't shut down or reboot ubuntu 16.04Ubuntu 16.04 wont shutdownUbuntu 16.04.1 doesn't shutdown/rebootUbuntu 16.10 won't shutdownShutdown/Reboot hangs Indefinitely - Ubuntu 16.04Reboot / shutdown safely with command lineUbuntu 17.10 (and 17.04) nvidia quiet splash hangs on restart or shutdown

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Ubuntu 16.04 stuck on shutdown/reboot with “recovering journal” line



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InInstallation of Ubuntu 16.04 from a USB drive freezesStuck on reboot and shutdownACPI tables/DSDT tables not available in Ubuntu 14.04. How to restore?Few options in nvidia-settings and stuck on CPUX for Xs on shutdowncan't shut down or reboot ubuntu 16.04Ubuntu 16.04 wont shutdownUbuntu 16.04.1 doesn't shutdown/rebootUbuntu 16.10 won't shutdownShutdown/Reboot hangs Indefinitely - Ubuntu 16.04Reboot / shutdown safely with command lineUbuntu 17.10 (and 17.04) nvidia quiet splash hangs on restart or shutdown



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








6















My Problem:



Ubuntu doesn't shutdown/reboot and is stuck on line like:



/dev/sda: clean, xxx/xxx files, xxx/xxx blocks



and sometimes with several similiar lines and sometimes with



recovering journal



at the top.



At first the problem was that it stucked with



CPU#X stucked for XXs



but I've managed it somehow from the list below :)



What's done:



  1. sudo update && upgrade && dist-upgrade` and loaded updates with ubuntu-software-center.


  2. sudo purge nvidia* and sudo apt-get install nvidia-361

  3. switched to Intel HD card in "Nvidia settings" (nvidia prime).

  4. fixed grub with GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi=force

  5. (tried apm=power_off and acpi=noirq too).(tried apm=power_off and acpi=noirq too).

  6. disabled usb 3.0 legacy mode.

  7. disabled swap partition with sudo swapoff /dev/sdaX and commented it's entry in fstab.

  8. smth in /etc/modules I've forgotten..

My hardware:



MSI GE62 6QD (Laptop);

i5 6300HQ (4 cores);

intel hd530 + Nvidia gtx 960;

16gb RAM DDR4;

Windows 10 UEFI on default 1TB HDD;

SSD Intel 540s via M.2 (UBUNTU UEFI);

Dualboot via bootmenu (F11) yet..



I just didn't update kernel manually, but I can try if you'll help me a little with right way of doing it.



Installation process didn't go easy too. It got stucked on first "preparing" screen with "Ubuntu" logo. Solved with nomodeset in boot params.
I've tried hackintosh OSX El Capitan on this M.2 SSD and it worked rather fine (of course not excellent).



I'm very sorry, cause I'm not a guru in kernels/terminal/bootargs/etc, so I tried almost every solution that helped somebody..



Hope for your help. I need my lovely OS working well on my new monster-laptop.










share|improve this question
















bumped to the homepage by Community 2 hours ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.





















    6















    My Problem:



    Ubuntu doesn't shutdown/reboot and is stuck on line like:



    /dev/sda: clean, xxx/xxx files, xxx/xxx blocks



    and sometimes with several similiar lines and sometimes with



    recovering journal



    at the top.



    At first the problem was that it stucked with



    CPU#X stucked for XXs



    but I've managed it somehow from the list below :)



    What's done:



    1. sudo update && upgrade && dist-upgrade` and loaded updates with ubuntu-software-center.


    2. sudo purge nvidia* and sudo apt-get install nvidia-361

    3. switched to Intel HD card in "Nvidia settings" (nvidia prime).

    4. fixed grub with GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi=force

    5. (tried apm=power_off and acpi=noirq too).(tried apm=power_off and acpi=noirq too).

    6. disabled usb 3.0 legacy mode.

    7. disabled swap partition with sudo swapoff /dev/sdaX and commented it's entry in fstab.

    8. smth in /etc/modules I've forgotten..

    My hardware:



    MSI GE62 6QD (Laptop);

    i5 6300HQ (4 cores);

    intel hd530 + Nvidia gtx 960;

    16gb RAM DDR4;

    Windows 10 UEFI on default 1TB HDD;

    SSD Intel 540s via M.2 (UBUNTU UEFI);

    Dualboot via bootmenu (F11) yet..



    I just didn't update kernel manually, but I can try if you'll help me a little with right way of doing it.



    Installation process didn't go easy too. It got stucked on first "preparing" screen with "Ubuntu" logo. Solved with nomodeset in boot params.
    I've tried hackintosh OSX El Capitan on this M.2 SSD and it worked rather fine (of course not excellent).



    I'm very sorry, cause I'm not a guru in kernels/terminal/bootargs/etc, so I tried almost every solution that helped somebody..



    Hope for your help. I need my lovely OS working well on my new monster-laptop.










    share|improve this question
















    bumped to the homepage by Community 2 hours ago


    This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.

















      6












      6








      6


      2






      My Problem:



      Ubuntu doesn't shutdown/reboot and is stuck on line like:



      /dev/sda: clean, xxx/xxx files, xxx/xxx blocks



      and sometimes with several similiar lines and sometimes with



      recovering journal



      at the top.



      At first the problem was that it stucked with



      CPU#X stucked for XXs



      but I've managed it somehow from the list below :)



      What's done:



      1. sudo update && upgrade && dist-upgrade` and loaded updates with ubuntu-software-center.


      2. sudo purge nvidia* and sudo apt-get install nvidia-361

      3. switched to Intel HD card in "Nvidia settings" (nvidia prime).

      4. fixed grub with GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi=force

      5. (tried apm=power_off and acpi=noirq too).(tried apm=power_off and acpi=noirq too).

      6. disabled usb 3.0 legacy mode.

      7. disabled swap partition with sudo swapoff /dev/sdaX and commented it's entry in fstab.

      8. smth in /etc/modules I've forgotten..

      My hardware:



      MSI GE62 6QD (Laptop);

      i5 6300HQ (4 cores);

      intel hd530 + Nvidia gtx 960;

      16gb RAM DDR4;

      Windows 10 UEFI on default 1TB HDD;

      SSD Intel 540s via M.2 (UBUNTU UEFI);

      Dualboot via bootmenu (F11) yet..



      I just didn't update kernel manually, but I can try if you'll help me a little with right way of doing it.



      Installation process didn't go easy too. It got stucked on first "preparing" screen with "Ubuntu" logo. Solved with nomodeset in boot params.
      I've tried hackintosh OSX El Capitan on this M.2 SSD and it worked rather fine (of course not excellent).



      I'm very sorry, cause I'm not a guru in kernels/terminal/bootargs/etc, so I tried almost every solution that helped somebody..



      Hope for your help. I need my lovely OS working well on my new monster-laptop.










      share|improve this question
















      My Problem:



      Ubuntu doesn't shutdown/reboot and is stuck on line like:



      /dev/sda: clean, xxx/xxx files, xxx/xxx blocks



      and sometimes with several similiar lines and sometimes with



      recovering journal



      at the top.



      At first the problem was that it stucked with



      CPU#X stucked for XXs



      but I've managed it somehow from the list below :)



      What's done:



      1. sudo update && upgrade && dist-upgrade` and loaded updates with ubuntu-software-center.


      2. sudo purge nvidia* and sudo apt-get install nvidia-361

      3. switched to Intel HD card in "Nvidia settings" (nvidia prime).

      4. fixed grub with GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi=force

      5. (tried apm=power_off and acpi=noirq too).(tried apm=power_off and acpi=noirq too).

      6. disabled usb 3.0 legacy mode.

      7. disabled swap partition with sudo swapoff /dev/sdaX and commented it's entry in fstab.

      8. smth in /etc/modules I've forgotten..

      My hardware:



      MSI GE62 6QD (Laptop);

      i5 6300HQ (4 cores);

      intel hd530 + Nvidia gtx 960;

      16gb RAM DDR4;

      Windows 10 UEFI on default 1TB HDD;

      SSD Intel 540s via M.2 (UBUNTU UEFI);

      Dualboot via bootmenu (F11) yet..



      I just didn't update kernel manually, but I can try if you'll help me a little with right way of doing it.



      Installation process didn't go easy too. It got stucked on first "preparing" screen with "Ubuntu" logo. Solved with nomodeset in boot params.
      I've tried hackintosh OSX El Capitan on this M.2 SSD and it worked rather fine (of course not excellent).



      I'm very sorry, cause I'm not a guru in kernels/terminal/bootargs/etc, so I tried almost every solution that helped somebody..



      Hope for your help. I need my lovely OS working well on my new monster-laptop.







      uefi shutdown ssd reboot






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Aug 14 '16 at 12:40









      rancho

      2,28321446




      2,28321446










      asked Aug 12 '16 at 21:05









      Paul RevivalPaul Revival

      31113




      31113





      bumped to the homepage by Community 2 hours ago


      This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







      bumped to the homepage by Community 2 hours ago


      This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          0














          I've managed with this issue, but still have some little problem.
          I edited /etc/default/grub added pci=nomsi param to bootparams line like that: GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash pci=nomsi" and laptop now reboots and loads fine, BUT only if 'Nvidia card' enabled in 'Nvidia settings'. If I switch it to 'IntelHD' (IntelHD530 in my case) laptop still stucks on shutdown and goes to login loop if I try to relogin. It doesn't rather disturb me but IntelHD provides more smooth interface performance and less battery consumption than Nvidia card does :( What have I do? Are the latest nvidia drivers provide smoothness or not? Or maybe there's more simple solution to make IntelHD working fine too?






          share|improve this answer


















          • 1





            Did you figure this out? Either way, you should post this as a separate question (linking back to this one)—if you figured it out, answer your own question; if not, other people will see it and might be able to answer it. Asking a question inside an answer won't get you the attention/help you are looking for.

            – Khashir
            Oct 31 '16 at 23:09


















          0














          I had a similar problem on a Dell XPS 15 2017 (GTX-1050 GPU).
          Eventually, the solution that fixed everything for me is the following (at least for my system configuration):



          • edit /etc/default/grub

          • add acpi_rev_override=1 to your GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT parameters

          (in my case the following line looks like this):




          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_rev_override=1"




          • run update-grub from the terminal

          after shutting down your machine one more time from the power button, the problem should have been fixed.
          then you can install the latest nvidia drivers (384 work fine for me) along with the default ones for the intel GPU.






          share|improve this answer






























            0














            My laptop is also GE62 with a 970m graphic cards. At first my problem was that the 'recovering journal' shows up during the shutdown process. After trying all possible solutions I can find online, such as the solution suggested above, the problem changed and my screen freezes after pressing restart or shutdown button.



            And the suggestion to install Nvidia in this thread, which is also one of your steps, solves my last problem: Installation of Ubuntu 16.04 from a USB drive freezes



            "



            The solution to both of these was to install nvidia. Type in terminal:




            sudo apt-get install nvidia




            Press tab twice and see which nvidia is the newest. For example, it will look like:




            sudo apt-get install nvidia-352




            Hopefully it will be the same for you.



            "



            And I believe this is not only the problem with GE62, other laptops which are equipped with Nvidia credit cards (especially gaming laptops) may have the similar issues during the installation or after installation.






            share|improve this answer























              Your Answer








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              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

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              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              0














              I've managed with this issue, but still have some little problem.
              I edited /etc/default/grub added pci=nomsi param to bootparams line like that: GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash pci=nomsi" and laptop now reboots and loads fine, BUT only if 'Nvidia card' enabled in 'Nvidia settings'. If I switch it to 'IntelHD' (IntelHD530 in my case) laptop still stucks on shutdown and goes to login loop if I try to relogin. It doesn't rather disturb me but IntelHD provides more smooth interface performance and less battery consumption than Nvidia card does :( What have I do? Are the latest nvidia drivers provide smoothness or not? Or maybe there's more simple solution to make IntelHD working fine too?






              share|improve this answer


















              • 1





                Did you figure this out? Either way, you should post this as a separate question (linking back to this one)—if you figured it out, answer your own question; if not, other people will see it and might be able to answer it. Asking a question inside an answer won't get you the attention/help you are looking for.

                – Khashir
                Oct 31 '16 at 23:09















              0














              I've managed with this issue, but still have some little problem.
              I edited /etc/default/grub added pci=nomsi param to bootparams line like that: GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash pci=nomsi" and laptop now reboots and loads fine, BUT only if 'Nvidia card' enabled in 'Nvidia settings'. If I switch it to 'IntelHD' (IntelHD530 in my case) laptop still stucks on shutdown and goes to login loop if I try to relogin. It doesn't rather disturb me but IntelHD provides more smooth interface performance and less battery consumption than Nvidia card does :( What have I do? Are the latest nvidia drivers provide smoothness or not? Or maybe there's more simple solution to make IntelHD working fine too?






              share|improve this answer


















              • 1





                Did you figure this out? Either way, you should post this as a separate question (linking back to this one)—if you figured it out, answer your own question; if not, other people will see it and might be able to answer it. Asking a question inside an answer won't get you the attention/help you are looking for.

                – Khashir
                Oct 31 '16 at 23:09













              0












              0








              0







              I've managed with this issue, but still have some little problem.
              I edited /etc/default/grub added pci=nomsi param to bootparams line like that: GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash pci=nomsi" and laptop now reboots and loads fine, BUT only if 'Nvidia card' enabled in 'Nvidia settings'. If I switch it to 'IntelHD' (IntelHD530 in my case) laptop still stucks on shutdown and goes to login loop if I try to relogin. It doesn't rather disturb me but IntelHD provides more smooth interface performance and less battery consumption than Nvidia card does :( What have I do? Are the latest nvidia drivers provide smoothness or not? Or maybe there's more simple solution to make IntelHD working fine too?






              share|improve this answer













              I've managed with this issue, but still have some little problem.
              I edited /etc/default/grub added pci=nomsi param to bootparams line like that: GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash pci=nomsi" and laptop now reboots and loads fine, BUT only if 'Nvidia card' enabled in 'Nvidia settings'. If I switch it to 'IntelHD' (IntelHD530 in my case) laptop still stucks on shutdown and goes to login loop if I try to relogin. It doesn't rather disturb me but IntelHD provides more smooth interface performance and less battery consumption than Nvidia card does :( What have I do? Are the latest nvidia drivers provide smoothness or not? Or maybe there's more simple solution to make IntelHD working fine too?







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Aug 15 '16 at 2:15









              Paul RevivalPaul Revival

              31113




              31113







              • 1





                Did you figure this out? Either way, you should post this as a separate question (linking back to this one)—if you figured it out, answer your own question; if not, other people will see it and might be able to answer it. Asking a question inside an answer won't get you the attention/help you are looking for.

                – Khashir
                Oct 31 '16 at 23:09












              • 1





                Did you figure this out? Either way, you should post this as a separate question (linking back to this one)—if you figured it out, answer your own question; if not, other people will see it and might be able to answer it. Asking a question inside an answer won't get you the attention/help you are looking for.

                – Khashir
                Oct 31 '16 at 23:09







              1




              1





              Did you figure this out? Either way, you should post this as a separate question (linking back to this one)—if you figured it out, answer your own question; if not, other people will see it and might be able to answer it. Asking a question inside an answer won't get you the attention/help you are looking for.

              – Khashir
              Oct 31 '16 at 23:09





              Did you figure this out? Either way, you should post this as a separate question (linking back to this one)—if you figured it out, answer your own question; if not, other people will see it and might be able to answer it. Asking a question inside an answer won't get you the attention/help you are looking for.

              – Khashir
              Oct 31 '16 at 23:09













              0














              I had a similar problem on a Dell XPS 15 2017 (GTX-1050 GPU).
              Eventually, the solution that fixed everything for me is the following (at least for my system configuration):



              • edit /etc/default/grub

              • add acpi_rev_override=1 to your GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT parameters

              (in my case the following line looks like this):




              GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_rev_override=1"




              • run update-grub from the terminal

              after shutting down your machine one more time from the power button, the problem should have been fixed.
              then you can install the latest nvidia drivers (384 work fine for me) along with the default ones for the intel GPU.






              share|improve this answer



























                0














                I had a similar problem on a Dell XPS 15 2017 (GTX-1050 GPU).
                Eventually, the solution that fixed everything for me is the following (at least for my system configuration):



                • edit /etc/default/grub

                • add acpi_rev_override=1 to your GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT parameters

                (in my case the following line looks like this):




                GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_rev_override=1"




                • run update-grub from the terminal

                after shutting down your machine one more time from the power button, the problem should have been fixed.
                then you can install the latest nvidia drivers (384 work fine for me) along with the default ones for the intel GPU.






                share|improve this answer

























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  I had a similar problem on a Dell XPS 15 2017 (GTX-1050 GPU).
                  Eventually, the solution that fixed everything for me is the following (at least for my system configuration):



                  • edit /etc/default/grub

                  • add acpi_rev_override=1 to your GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT parameters

                  (in my case the following line looks like this):




                  GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_rev_override=1"




                  • run update-grub from the terminal

                  after shutting down your machine one more time from the power button, the problem should have been fixed.
                  then you can install the latest nvidia drivers (384 work fine for me) along with the default ones for the intel GPU.






                  share|improve this answer













                  I had a similar problem on a Dell XPS 15 2017 (GTX-1050 GPU).
                  Eventually, the solution that fixed everything for me is the following (at least for my system configuration):



                  • edit /etc/default/grub

                  • add acpi_rev_override=1 to your GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT parameters

                  (in my case the following line looks like this):




                  GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_rev_override=1"




                  • run update-grub from the terminal

                  after shutting down your machine one more time from the power button, the problem should have been fixed.
                  then you can install the latest nvidia drivers (384 work fine for me) along with the default ones for the intel GPU.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Sep 5 '17 at 11:11









                  tony.cretetony.crete

                  8617




                  8617





















                      0














                      My laptop is also GE62 with a 970m graphic cards. At first my problem was that the 'recovering journal' shows up during the shutdown process. After trying all possible solutions I can find online, such as the solution suggested above, the problem changed and my screen freezes after pressing restart or shutdown button.



                      And the suggestion to install Nvidia in this thread, which is also one of your steps, solves my last problem: Installation of Ubuntu 16.04 from a USB drive freezes



                      "



                      The solution to both of these was to install nvidia. Type in terminal:




                      sudo apt-get install nvidia




                      Press tab twice and see which nvidia is the newest. For example, it will look like:




                      sudo apt-get install nvidia-352




                      Hopefully it will be the same for you.



                      "



                      And I believe this is not only the problem with GE62, other laptops which are equipped with Nvidia credit cards (especially gaming laptops) may have the similar issues during the installation or after installation.






                      share|improve this answer



























                        0














                        My laptop is also GE62 with a 970m graphic cards. At first my problem was that the 'recovering journal' shows up during the shutdown process. After trying all possible solutions I can find online, such as the solution suggested above, the problem changed and my screen freezes after pressing restart or shutdown button.



                        And the suggestion to install Nvidia in this thread, which is also one of your steps, solves my last problem: Installation of Ubuntu 16.04 from a USB drive freezes



                        "



                        The solution to both of these was to install nvidia. Type in terminal:




                        sudo apt-get install nvidia




                        Press tab twice and see which nvidia is the newest. For example, it will look like:




                        sudo apt-get install nvidia-352




                        Hopefully it will be the same for you.



                        "



                        And I believe this is not only the problem with GE62, other laptops which are equipped with Nvidia credit cards (especially gaming laptops) may have the similar issues during the installation or after installation.






                        share|improve this answer

























                          0












                          0








                          0







                          My laptop is also GE62 with a 970m graphic cards. At first my problem was that the 'recovering journal' shows up during the shutdown process. After trying all possible solutions I can find online, such as the solution suggested above, the problem changed and my screen freezes after pressing restart or shutdown button.



                          And the suggestion to install Nvidia in this thread, which is also one of your steps, solves my last problem: Installation of Ubuntu 16.04 from a USB drive freezes



                          "



                          The solution to both of these was to install nvidia. Type in terminal:




                          sudo apt-get install nvidia




                          Press tab twice and see which nvidia is the newest. For example, it will look like:




                          sudo apt-get install nvidia-352




                          Hopefully it will be the same for you.



                          "



                          And I believe this is not only the problem with GE62, other laptops which are equipped with Nvidia credit cards (especially gaming laptops) may have the similar issues during the installation or after installation.






                          share|improve this answer













                          My laptop is also GE62 with a 970m graphic cards. At first my problem was that the 'recovering journal' shows up during the shutdown process. After trying all possible solutions I can find online, such as the solution suggested above, the problem changed and my screen freezes after pressing restart or shutdown button.



                          And the suggestion to install Nvidia in this thread, which is also one of your steps, solves my last problem: Installation of Ubuntu 16.04 from a USB drive freezes



                          "



                          The solution to both of these was to install nvidia. Type in terminal:




                          sudo apt-get install nvidia




                          Press tab twice and see which nvidia is the newest. For example, it will look like:




                          sudo apt-get install nvidia-352




                          Hopefully it will be the same for you.



                          "



                          And I believe this is not only the problem with GE62, other laptops which are equipped with Nvidia credit cards (especially gaming laptops) may have the similar issues during the installation or after installation.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Nov 17 '17 at 22:34









                          Victor TangVictor Tang

                          1




                          1



























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