qaz to [email protected]English • edit-29 months agoTIL You can use systemd-analyze plot > plot.svg to plot the service startup time to find bottleneckslemmy.worldimagemessage-square63fedilinkarrow-up1793arrow-down116file-text
arrow-up1777arrow-down1imageTIL You can use systemd-analyze plot > plot.svg to plot the service startup time to find bottleneckslemmy.worldqaz to [email protected]English • edit-29 months agomessage-square63fedilinkfile-text
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink14•9 months agothe only “bottleneck” i currently have is plymouth-quit-wait.service, which takes 3.9 seconds. i can live with that
minus-square@stifle867link11•9 months agoI know you put bottleneck is quotes but just to explain… apparently this service is simply the splash screen that waits on a ready environment. It doesn’t actually delay anything.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink7•9 months agoabrtd.service, 34 seconds… thanks fedora, very cool
the only “bottleneck” i currently have is plymouth-quit-wait.service, which takes 3.9 seconds. i can live with that
I know you put bottleneck is quotes but just to explain… apparently this service is simply the splash screen that waits on a ready environment. It doesn’t actually delay anything.
abrtd.service, 34 seconds…
thanks fedora, very cool