• @Dumhuvud@programming.dev
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    141 day ago

    That’s not normal. Unless you’re using an HDD, but then Windows wouldn’t boot that fast.

    Check the output of systemd-analyze blame.

    • N.E.P.T.R
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      1 day ago

      I have tried. Nothing worked. I also experience the same slow booting on every machine+systemd, with the same resulting slow boot up. Even friends have mentioned to me the slow boot times compared to Windows.

      • TimLovesTech (AuDHD)(he/him)
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        41 day ago

        I boot to login in probably under 5 seconds, so 30+ seconds seems like something is not configured correctly. And every Windows machine I’ve ever interacted with boots slow and updates even slower.

        • N.E.P.T.R
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          1 day ago

          Idk what is wrong but every fresh install on any Systemd distro (Arch, Fedora, Debian, openSUSE) has the same slow boot on every device I have tried. I have never seen a 5 second boot on anything else but dinit.

          Oh, and my disk is a modern M.2 SSD for my workstation.

          • N.E.P.T.R
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            21 day ago

            I did a fresh install of fedora in a VM given 4 cores, 16gb ram, and storage on an NVME SSD. Finally I am getting a reasonable boot time of 6.5 seconds. But on bare metal I can’t get anywhere close to that. Firmware alone takes 15 seconds. Either way, now I know that it isn’t a “Systemd problem”, just that only Systemd gives me this problem.

            • TimLovesTech (AuDHD)(he/him)
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              13 hours ago

              If you actually want to fuss with it you could always try some of the stuff from the Holy Wiki and see if it makes a difference. Sometimes it’s just “gremlins” though.

              I ironically had a similar issue with moving to Wayland from X. I did everything I saw documented to make it work and it just either flat out didn’t, or performance was ass. Then I think when I had read about Gnome’s future plans to drop X I figured I needed to give it another go. In the end I’m not sure what made the difference (update/config/etc.), but I’m using Wayland now and performance seems the same/better and all is good. My install is also probably close to a decade old (or more - I have moved it between at least 3 disks) at this point so I also have cruft out the ass lol.

              Edit - Got curious and decided to look and this install is dated 2013-02-24, so longer than I thought.