Ubuntu 18.10 slow boot












0















My laptop is very slow to boot. Im very new to Ubuntu, i've only installed two weeks ago. Something i've noticed is that the splash screen takes a lot to show up.



EDIT: I have disabled plymouth completely and now systemd-analyze shows 50s to boot. but 1 manually timed the boot and got 1 minute and 40 seconds from purple screen to login screen.



Here is what systemd-analyze blame throws.



30.953s plymouth-quit-wait.service
17.755s dev-sda3.device
16.487s udisks2.service
15.090s snapd.service
13.693s ModemManager.service
13.330s networkd-dispatcher.service
12.431s keyboard-setup.service
10.931s grub-common.service
9.981s apport.service
9.902s accounts-daemon.service
9.884s networking.service
8.476s plymouth-start.service
8.165s NetworkManager.service
7.896s avahi-daemon.service
7.859s iio-sensor-proxy.service
7.849s lm-sensors.service
7.694s alsa-restore.service
7.353s thermald.service
7.350s wpa_supplicant.service
7.337s systemd-logind.service
7.003s rsyslog.service
6.993s gpu-manager.service
5.309s apparmor.service
5.268s systemd-journal-flush.service


And here is systemd-analyze critical-chain



graphical.target @1min 11.916s
└─multi-user.target @1min 11.915s
└─snapd.seeded.service @46.467s +66ms
└─snapd.service @31.374s +15.090s
└─basic.target @30.524s
└─sockets.target @30.523s
└─snapd.socket @30.506s +16ms
└─sysinit.target @30.447s
└─apparmor.service @25.137s +5.309s
└─local-fs.target @25.030s
└─boot-efi.mount @24.843s +187ms
└─systemd-fsck@dev-disk-byx2duuid-D004x2dD4FC.service @24.487s +322ms
└─dev-disk-byx2duuid-D004x2dD4FC.device @24.472s


Any help? Thanks in advance










share|improve this question

























  • Hello and welcome! :) When this happened to me (hp laptop) it was the boot order in the bios, might be worth trying, making sure it's the HD/SSD that's booting first.

    – Rabbit
    Jan 16 at 15:54











  • Thank you! :) mine is an HP too, but boot order is correct. Maybe is the HD dying?

    – EmiZanotti
    Jan 16 at 16:45
















0















My laptop is very slow to boot. Im very new to Ubuntu, i've only installed two weeks ago. Something i've noticed is that the splash screen takes a lot to show up.



EDIT: I have disabled plymouth completely and now systemd-analyze shows 50s to boot. but 1 manually timed the boot and got 1 minute and 40 seconds from purple screen to login screen.



Here is what systemd-analyze blame throws.



30.953s plymouth-quit-wait.service
17.755s dev-sda3.device
16.487s udisks2.service
15.090s snapd.service
13.693s ModemManager.service
13.330s networkd-dispatcher.service
12.431s keyboard-setup.service
10.931s grub-common.service
9.981s apport.service
9.902s accounts-daemon.service
9.884s networking.service
8.476s plymouth-start.service
8.165s NetworkManager.service
7.896s avahi-daemon.service
7.859s iio-sensor-proxy.service
7.849s lm-sensors.service
7.694s alsa-restore.service
7.353s thermald.service
7.350s wpa_supplicant.service
7.337s systemd-logind.service
7.003s rsyslog.service
6.993s gpu-manager.service
5.309s apparmor.service
5.268s systemd-journal-flush.service


And here is systemd-analyze critical-chain



graphical.target @1min 11.916s
└─multi-user.target @1min 11.915s
└─snapd.seeded.service @46.467s +66ms
└─snapd.service @31.374s +15.090s
└─basic.target @30.524s
└─sockets.target @30.523s
└─snapd.socket @30.506s +16ms
└─sysinit.target @30.447s
└─apparmor.service @25.137s +5.309s
└─local-fs.target @25.030s
└─boot-efi.mount @24.843s +187ms
└─systemd-fsck@dev-disk-byx2duuid-D004x2dD4FC.service @24.487s +322ms
└─dev-disk-byx2duuid-D004x2dD4FC.device @24.472s


Any help? Thanks in advance










share|improve this question

























  • Hello and welcome! :) When this happened to me (hp laptop) it was the boot order in the bios, might be worth trying, making sure it's the HD/SSD that's booting first.

    – Rabbit
    Jan 16 at 15:54











  • Thank you! :) mine is an HP too, but boot order is correct. Maybe is the HD dying?

    – EmiZanotti
    Jan 16 at 16:45














0












0








0








My laptop is very slow to boot. Im very new to Ubuntu, i've only installed two weeks ago. Something i've noticed is that the splash screen takes a lot to show up.



EDIT: I have disabled plymouth completely and now systemd-analyze shows 50s to boot. but 1 manually timed the boot and got 1 minute and 40 seconds from purple screen to login screen.



Here is what systemd-analyze blame throws.



30.953s plymouth-quit-wait.service
17.755s dev-sda3.device
16.487s udisks2.service
15.090s snapd.service
13.693s ModemManager.service
13.330s networkd-dispatcher.service
12.431s keyboard-setup.service
10.931s grub-common.service
9.981s apport.service
9.902s accounts-daemon.service
9.884s networking.service
8.476s plymouth-start.service
8.165s NetworkManager.service
7.896s avahi-daemon.service
7.859s iio-sensor-proxy.service
7.849s lm-sensors.service
7.694s alsa-restore.service
7.353s thermald.service
7.350s wpa_supplicant.service
7.337s systemd-logind.service
7.003s rsyslog.service
6.993s gpu-manager.service
5.309s apparmor.service
5.268s systemd-journal-flush.service


And here is systemd-analyze critical-chain



graphical.target @1min 11.916s
└─multi-user.target @1min 11.915s
└─snapd.seeded.service @46.467s +66ms
└─snapd.service @31.374s +15.090s
└─basic.target @30.524s
└─sockets.target @30.523s
└─snapd.socket @30.506s +16ms
└─sysinit.target @30.447s
└─apparmor.service @25.137s +5.309s
└─local-fs.target @25.030s
└─boot-efi.mount @24.843s +187ms
└─systemd-fsck@dev-disk-byx2duuid-D004x2dD4FC.service @24.487s +322ms
└─dev-disk-byx2duuid-D004x2dD4FC.device @24.472s


Any help? Thanks in advance










share|improve this question
















My laptop is very slow to boot. Im very new to Ubuntu, i've only installed two weeks ago. Something i've noticed is that the splash screen takes a lot to show up.



EDIT: I have disabled plymouth completely and now systemd-analyze shows 50s to boot. but 1 manually timed the boot and got 1 minute and 40 seconds from purple screen to login screen.



Here is what systemd-analyze blame throws.



30.953s plymouth-quit-wait.service
17.755s dev-sda3.device
16.487s udisks2.service
15.090s snapd.service
13.693s ModemManager.service
13.330s networkd-dispatcher.service
12.431s keyboard-setup.service
10.931s grub-common.service
9.981s apport.service
9.902s accounts-daemon.service
9.884s networking.service
8.476s plymouth-start.service
8.165s NetworkManager.service
7.896s avahi-daemon.service
7.859s iio-sensor-proxy.service
7.849s lm-sensors.service
7.694s alsa-restore.service
7.353s thermald.service
7.350s wpa_supplicant.service
7.337s systemd-logind.service
7.003s rsyslog.service
6.993s gpu-manager.service
5.309s apparmor.service
5.268s systemd-journal-flush.service


And here is systemd-analyze critical-chain



graphical.target @1min 11.916s
└─multi-user.target @1min 11.915s
└─snapd.seeded.service @46.467s +66ms
└─snapd.service @31.374s +15.090s
└─basic.target @30.524s
└─sockets.target @30.523s
└─snapd.socket @30.506s +16ms
└─sysinit.target @30.447s
└─apparmor.service @25.137s +5.309s
└─local-fs.target @25.030s
└─boot-efi.mount @24.843s +187ms
└─systemd-fsck@dev-disk-byx2duuid-D004x2dD4FC.service @24.487s +322ms
└─dev-disk-byx2duuid-D004x2dD4FC.device @24.472s


Any help? Thanks in advance







boot






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 16 at 19:56







EmiZanotti

















asked Jan 16 at 15:36









EmiZanottiEmiZanotti

12




12













  • Hello and welcome! :) When this happened to me (hp laptop) it was the boot order in the bios, might be worth trying, making sure it's the HD/SSD that's booting first.

    – Rabbit
    Jan 16 at 15:54











  • Thank you! :) mine is an HP too, but boot order is correct. Maybe is the HD dying?

    – EmiZanotti
    Jan 16 at 16:45



















  • Hello and welcome! :) When this happened to me (hp laptop) it was the boot order in the bios, might be worth trying, making sure it's the HD/SSD that's booting first.

    – Rabbit
    Jan 16 at 15:54











  • Thank you! :) mine is an HP too, but boot order is correct. Maybe is the HD dying?

    – EmiZanotti
    Jan 16 at 16:45

















Hello and welcome! :) When this happened to me (hp laptop) it was the boot order in the bios, might be worth trying, making sure it's the HD/SSD that's booting first.

– Rabbit
Jan 16 at 15:54





Hello and welcome! :) When this happened to me (hp laptop) it was the boot order in the bios, might be worth trying, making sure it's the HD/SSD that's booting first.

– Rabbit
Jan 16 at 15:54













Thank you! :) mine is an HP too, but boot order is correct. Maybe is the HD dying?

– EmiZanotti
Jan 16 at 16:45





Thank you! :) mine is an HP too, but boot order is correct. Maybe is the HD dying?

– EmiZanotti
Jan 16 at 16:45










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