NMI watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#2 stuck for 23s! [plymouthd:305]











up vote
17
down vote

favorite
7












I get this error message



NMI watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#2 stuck for 23s! [plymouthd:305] 


on the startup of my system (even with live-cd).



My PC is a dell inspiron 7559 with intel graphic and nvidia.



UPDATE - this issue also happens when attempting to install ubuntu 18.10 using LiveUSB










share|improve this question
























  • Did you install Nvidia drivers?
    – Pilot6
    Jan 23 '17 at 8:50










  • Same message. ubuntuforums.org/… "replace power supply" was the solution.
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 23 '17 at 10:54










  • Bug report: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405 Also: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405/comments/… "upgraded hardware". So it seems to be a hardware problem
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 23 '17 at 10:56










  • I don't think power supply is the problem. The laptop works well with windows, but not with Ubuntu.
    – Vasantha Ganesh K
    Feb 1 '17 at 11:19















up vote
17
down vote

favorite
7












I get this error message



NMI watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#2 stuck for 23s! [plymouthd:305] 


on the startup of my system (even with live-cd).



My PC is a dell inspiron 7559 with intel graphic and nvidia.



UPDATE - this issue also happens when attempting to install ubuntu 18.10 using LiveUSB










share|improve this question
























  • Did you install Nvidia drivers?
    – Pilot6
    Jan 23 '17 at 8:50










  • Same message. ubuntuforums.org/… "replace power supply" was the solution.
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 23 '17 at 10:54










  • Bug report: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405 Also: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405/comments/… "upgraded hardware". So it seems to be a hardware problem
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 23 '17 at 10:56










  • I don't think power supply is the problem. The laptop works well with windows, but not with Ubuntu.
    – Vasantha Ganesh K
    Feb 1 '17 at 11:19













up vote
17
down vote

favorite
7









up vote
17
down vote

favorite
7






7





I get this error message



NMI watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#2 stuck for 23s! [plymouthd:305] 


on the startup of my system (even with live-cd).



My PC is a dell inspiron 7559 with intel graphic and nvidia.



UPDATE - this issue also happens when attempting to install ubuntu 18.10 using LiveUSB










share|improve this question















I get this error message



NMI watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#2 stuck for 23s! [plymouthd:305] 


on the startup of my system (even with live-cd).



My PC is a dell inspiron 7559 with intel graphic and nvidia.



UPDATE - this issue also happens when attempting to install ubuntu 18.10 using LiveUSB







system-installation kernel






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 5 at 1:48









Scott Stensland

4,60042240




4,60042240










asked Jan 23 '17 at 8:44









TheUnderground95

88114




88114












  • Did you install Nvidia drivers?
    – Pilot6
    Jan 23 '17 at 8:50










  • Same message. ubuntuforums.org/… "replace power supply" was the solution.
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 23 '17 at 10:54










  • Bug report: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405 Also: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405/comments/… "upgraded hardware". So it seems to be a hardware problem
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 23 '17 at 10:56










  • I don't think power supply is the problem. The laptop works well with windows, but not with Ubuntu.
    – Vasantha Ganesh K
    Feb 1 '17 at 11:19


















  • Did you install Nvidia drivers?
    – Pilot6
    Jan 23 '17 at 8:50










  • Same message. ubuntuforums.org/… "replace power supply" was the solution.
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 23 '17 at 10:54










  • Bug report: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405 Also: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405/comments/… "upgraded hardware". So it seems to be a hardware problem
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 23 '17 at 10:56










  • I don't think power supply is the problem. The laptop works well with windows, but not with Ubuntu.
    – Vasantha Ganesh K
    Feb 1 '17 at 11:19
















Did you install Nvidia drivers?
– Pilot6
Jan 23 '17 at 8:50




Did you install Nvidia drivers?
– Pilot6
Jan 23 '17 at 8:50












Same message. ubuntuforums.org/… "replace power supply" was the solution.
– Rinzwind
Jan 23 '17 at 10:54




Same message. ubuntuforums.org/… "replace power supply" was the solution.
– Rinzwind
Jan 23 '17 at 10:54












Bug report: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405 Also: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405/comments/… "upgraded hardware". So it seems to be a hardware problem
– Rinzwind
Jan 23 '17 at 10:56




Bug report: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405 Also: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1530405/comments/… "upgraded hardware". So it seems to be a hardware problem
– Rinzwind
Jan 23 '17 at 10:56












I don't think power supply is the problem. The laptop works well with windows, but not with Ubuntu.
– Vasantha Ganesh K
Feb 1 '17 at 11:19




I don't think power supply is the problem. The laptop works well with windows, but not with Ubuntu.
– Vasantha Ganesh K
Feb 1 '17 at 11:19










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
25
down vote



accepted










I also have the same laptop: Dell Inspiron 7559. I managed to boot by adding nouveau.modeset=0 to GRUB's linux line.



When you are in the GRUB menu, press E to enter the GRUB editor. Add nouveau.modeset=0 to the end of the line that starts with linux. After you've added it, press F10 to boot. Your system should start. After that, go to System Settings > Software & Updates > Additional Drivers and then select the NVIDIA driver. Right now I'm using NVIDIA binary driver- version 367.57 from nvidia-367 (proprietary, tested).



However I also have problems. Firstly, the NVIDIA card consumes a lot of power. My battery life is 2 hours with Linux (because it only uses NVIDIA GTX 960). With Windows I get 6 hours if I use it mildly. If I do prime-select intel, and try to log off, it gets stuck and I have to reboot it multiple times to make it boot. Sometimes it never boots back so I have to boot in recovery and switch back to NVIDIA by prime-select nvidia. I have installed all the Dell graphics card drivers and nothing changed - still doesn't boot with Intel selected. However once I managed to boot with Intel and it gave me 6:30 hours of battery life. Something is weird.






share|improve this answer























  • Also I managed to solve my problems! Now I have like 6:30h battery life. link check this guide out. Make sure that you follow the instructions.
    – Kaan Goksal
    Feb 10 '17 at 15:15










  • Thanks for the solution, adding "nouveau.modeset=0" in /etc/default/grub solved my boot issue with Ubuntu 17.04 an kernel 4.10.0-28, too. I have a DELL XPS 9560.
    – minni
    Jul 19 '17 at 19:46










  • omg this fixed my laptop, thank you!!
    – pipo17171
    Jan 21 at 15:54










  • I'm using Mint and had the same problem with my Dell laptop. Replacing 'quiet splash' with 'nomodeset' on the grub linux line as described in the Mint release notes works for me. Just adding this here in case other Mint users arrive here.
    – Neutrino
    Mar 2 at 12:31










  • This worked for Ubuntu 18.10 on Dell XPS. This allowed me to ctrl-alt-f4 to a console and install the Nvidia proprietary driver. apt-get install nvidia-driver-390. Machine locked up after 12 seconds without this
    – Kingsley
    Oct 19 at 20:57


















up vote
2
down vote













On MSI GP72 6QF Leopard Pro, I have installed Ubuntu 16.04. I installed the latest MSI BIOS firmware update as of 12/2016. Also, I have secure boot disabled and C-step disabled. Since fresh install, the Ubuntu shutdown was halting with the error:



NMI watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#5 stuck for 22s! [plymouthd:9203]


I'd get different CPU number with each shutdown.



Enabling Nvidia proprietary driver resolved the error and shutdown is successful. To enable NVIDIA driver:



In System Settings, go to Additional Drivers > Nvidia Corp > Enable Using Nvidia binary driver - version 367.57 from Nvidia...(proprietary..)



Enjoy.






share|improve this answer























  • the problem is that i can't finish to boot the system cause systemd is blocked by this error.you had this problem on the shutdown, I have it on the startup
    – TheUnderground95
    Feb 6 '17 at 10:35










  • Well darn. I have an MSI dual booting to Ubuntu and it has the same soft lockup shutdown error. This seemed promising so I found the "Additional Driver" setting and, sure enough, it wasn't using NVIDIA's. Unfortunately, changing it didn't seem to help. Still need hard reset to shutdown Ubuntu.
    – M T
    Nov 22 '17 at 17:24


















up vote
1
down vote













If your computer has an NVIDIA GPU add nouveau.modeset=0 kernel option to /etc/default/grub . Open the terminal and open /etc/default/grub for editing with nano text editor.



sudo nano /etc/default/grub


Append nouveau.modeset=0 inside the quotes of the line GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="..."



Then update your grub settings with sudo update-grub .



Nano editor keyboard shortcuts
Use the keyboard combination Ctrl + O and after that press Enter to save the file to its current location.
Use the keyboard combination Ctrl + X to exit nano.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    0
    down vote













    I ran into this error booting a gparted live USB and was able to resolve it by choosing the safe graphics options.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 2




      Can you add some details on how that is done to this answer?
      – fakedad
      Nov 9 '17 at 3:02


















    up vote
    0
    down vote













    At the GRUB menu, select Advanced options for Ubuntu and choose a kernel with recovery mode.



    In recovery mode, select the option to <Resume normal login> (or similar).



    After logging in go to Software & Updates > Additional Drivers and switch to the Nvidia proprietary driver.






    share|improve this answer























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      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes








      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      25
      down vote



      accepted










      I also have the same laptop: Dell Inspiron 7559. I managed to boot by adding nouveau.modeset=0 to GRUB's linux line.



      When you are in the GRUB menu, press E to enter the GRUB editor. Add nouveau.modeset=0 to the end of the line that starts with linux. After you've added it, press F10 to boot. Your system should start. After that, go to System Settings > Software & Updates > Additional Drivers and then select the NVIDIA driver. Right now I'm using NVIDIA binary driver- version 367.57 from nvidia-367 (proprietary, tested).



      However I also have problems. Firstly, the NVIDIA card consumes a lot of power. My battery life is 2 hours with Linux (because it only uses NVIDIA GTX 960). With Windows I get 6 hours if I use it mildly. If I do prime-select intel, and try to log off, it gets stuck and I have to reboot it multiple times to make it boot. Sometimes it never boots back so I have to boot in recovery and switch back to NVIDIA by prime-select nvidia. I have installed all the Dell graphics card drivers and nothing changed - still doesn't boot with Intel selected. However once I managed to boot with Intel and it gave me 6:30 hours of battery life. Something is weird.






      share|improve this answer























      • Also I managed to solve my problems! Now I have like 6:30h battery life. link check this guide out. Make sure that you follow the instructions.
        – Kaan Goksal
        Feb 10 '17 at 15:15










      • Thanks for the solution, adding "nouveau.modeset=0" in /etc/default/grub solved my boot issue with Ubuntu 17.04 an kernel 4.10.0-28, too. I have a DELL XPS 9560.
        – minni
        Jul 19 '17 at 19:46










      • omg this fixed my laptop, thank you!!
        – pipo17171
        Jan 21 at 15:54










      • I'm using Mint and had the same problem with my Dell laptop. Replacing 'quiet splash' with 'nomodeset' on the grub linux line as described in the Mint release notes works for me. Just adding this here in case other Mint users arrive here.
        – Neutrino
        Mar 2 at 12:31










      • This worked for Ubuntu 18.10 on Dell XPS. This allowed me to ctrl-alt-f4 to a console and install the Nvidia proprietary driver. apt-get install nvidia-driver-390. Machine locked up after 12 seconds without this
        – Kingsley
        Oct 19 at 20:57















      up vote
      25
      down vote



      accepted










      I also have the same laptop: Dell Inspiron 7559. I managed to boot by adding nouveau.modeset=0 to GRUB's linux line.



      When you are in the GRUB menu, press E to enter the GRUB editor. Add nouveau.modeset=0 to the end of the line that starts with linux. After you've added it, press F10 to boot. Your system should start. After that, go to System Settings > Software & Updates > Additional Drivers and then select the NVIDIA driver. Right now I'm using NVIDIA binary driver- version 367.57 from nvidia-367 (proprietary, tested).



      However I also have problems. Firstly, the NVIDIA card consumes a lot of power. My battery life is 2 hours with Linux (because it only uses NVIDIA GTX 960). With Windows I get 6 hours if I use it mildly. If I do prime-select intel, and try to log off, it gets stuck and I have to reboot it multiple times to make it boot. Sometimes it never boots back so I have to boot in recovery and switch back to NVIDIA by prime-select nvidia. I have installed all the Dell graphics card drivers and nothing changed - still doesn't boot with Intel selected. However once I managed to boot with Intel and it gave me 6:30 hours of battery life. Something is weird.






      share|improve this answer























      • Also I managed to solve my problems! Now I have like 6:30h battery life. link check this guide out. Make sure that you follow the instructions.
        – Kaan Goksal
        Feb 10 '17 at 15:15










      • Thanks for the solution, adding "nouveau.modeset=0" in /etc/default/grub solved my boot issue with Ubuntu 17.04 an kernel 4.10.0-28, too. I have a DELL XPS 9560.
        – minni
        Jul 19 '17 at 19:46










      • omg this fixed my laptop, thank you!!
        – pipo17171
        Jan 21 at 15:54










      • I'm using Mint and had the same problem with my Dell laptop. Replacing 'quiet splash' with 'nomodeset' on the grub linux line as described in the Mint release notes works for me. Just adding this here in case other Mint users arrive here.
        – Neutrino
        Mar 2 at 12:31










      • This worked for Ubuntu 18.10 on Dell XPS. This allowed me to ctrl-alt-f4 to a console and install the Nvidia proprietary driver. apt-get install nvidia-driver-390. Machine locked up after 12 seconds without this
        – Kingsley
        Oct 19 at 20:57













      up vote
      25
      down vote



      accepted







      up vote
      25
      down vote



      accepted






      I also have the same laptop: Dell Inspiron 7559. I managed to boot by adding nouveau.modeset=0 to GRUB's linux line.



      When you are in the GRUB menu, press E to enter the GRUB editor. Add nouveau.modeset=0 to the end of the line that starts with linux. After you've added it, press F10 to boot. Your system should start. After that, go to System Settings > Software & Updates > Additional Drivers and then select the NVIDIA driver. Right now I'm using NVIDIA binary driver- version 367.57 from nvidia-367 (proprietary, tested).



      However I also have problems. Firstly, the NVIDIA card consumes a lot of power. My battery life is 2 hours with Linux (because it only uses NVIDIA GTX 960). With Windows I get 6 hours if I use it mildly. If I do prime-select intel, and try to log off, it gets stuck and I have to reboot it multiple times to make it boot. Sometimes it never boots back so I have to boot in recovery and switch back to NVIDIA by prime-select nvidia. I have installed all the Dell graphics card drivers and nothing changed - still doesn't boot with Intel selected. However once I managed to boot with Intel and it gave me 6:30 hours of battery life. Something is weird.






      share|improve this answer














      I also have the same laptop: Dell Inspiron 7559. I managed to boot by adding nouveau.modeset=0 to GRUB's linux line.



      When you are in the GRUB menu, press E to enter the GRUB editor. Add nouveau.modeset=0 to the end of the line that starts with linux. After you've added it, press F10 to boot. Your system should start. After that, go to System Settings > Software & Updates > Additional Drivers and then select the NVIDIA driver. Right now I'm using NVIDIA binary driver- version 367.57 from nvidia-367 (proprietary, tested).



      However I also have problems. Firstly, the NVIDIA card consumes a lot of power. My battery life is 2 hours with Linux (because it only uses NVIDIA GTX 960). With Windows I get 6 hours if I use it mildly. If I do prime-select intel, and try to log off, it gets stuck and I have to reboot it multiple times to make it boot. Sometimes it never boots back so I have to boot in recovery and switch back to NVIDIA by prime-select nvidia. I have installed all the Dell graphics card drivers and nothing changed - still doesn't boot with Intel selected. However once I managed to boot with Intel and it gave me 6:30 hours of battery life. Something is weird.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Nov 8 at 17:30









      Zanna

      49.4k13128236




      49.4k13128236










      answered Feb 7 '17 at 20:09









      Kaan Goksal

      38922




      38922












      • Also I managed to solve my problems! Now I have like 6:30h battery life. link check this guide out. Make sure that you follow the instructions.
        – Kaan Goksal
        Feb 10 '17 at 15:15










      • Thanks for the solution, adding "nouveau.modeset=0" in /etc/default/grub solved my boot issue with Ubuntu 17.04 an kernel 4.10.0-28, too. I have a DELL XPS 9560.
        – minni
        Jul 19 '17 at 19:46










      • omg this fixed my laptop, thank you!!
        – pipo17171
        Jan 21 at 15:54










      • I'm using Mint and had the same problem with my Dell laptop. Replacing 'quiet splash' with 'nomodeset' on the grub linux line as described in the Mint release notes works for me. Just adding this here in case other Mint users arrive here.
        – Neutrino
        Mar 2 at 12:31










      • This worked for Ubuntu 18.10 on Dell XPS. This allowed me to ctrl-alt-f4 to a console and install the Nvidia proprietary driver. apt-get install nvidia-driver-390. Machine locked up after 12 seconds without this
        – Kingsley
        Oct 19 at 20:57


















      • Also I managed to solve my problems! Now I have like 6:30h battery life. link check this guide out. Make sure that you follow the instructions.
        – Kaan Goksal
        Feb 10 '17 at 15:15










      • Thanks for the solution, adding "nouveau.modeset=0" in /etc/default/grub solved my boot issue with Ubuntu 17.04 an kernel 4.10.0-28, too. I have a DELL XPS 9560.
        – minni
        Jul 19 '17 at 19:46










      • omg this fixed my laptop, thank you!!
        – pipo17171
        Jan 21 at 15:54










      • I'm using Mint and had the same problem with my Dell laptop. Replacing 'quiet splash' with 'nomodeset' on the grub linux line as described in the Mint release notes works for me. Just adding this here in case other Mint users arrive here.
        – Neutrino
        Mar 2 at 12:31










      • This worked for Ubuntu 18.10 on Dell XPS. This allowed me to ctrl-alt-f4 to a console and install the Nvidia proprietary driver. apt-get install nvidia-driver-390. Machine locked up after 12 seconds without this
        – Kingsley
        Oct 19 at 20:57
















      Also I managed to solve my problems! Now I have like 6:30h battery life. link check this guide out. Make sure that you follow the instructions.
      – Kaan Goksal
      Feb 10 '17 at 15:15




      Also I managed to solve my problems! Now I have like 6:30h battery life. link check this guide out. Make sure that you follow the instructions.
      – Kaan Goksal
      Feb 10 '17 at 15:15












      Thanks for the solution, adding "nouveau.modeset=0" in /etc/default/grub solved my boot issue with Ubuntu 17.04 an kernel 4.10.0-28, too. I have a DELL XPS 9560.
      – minni
      Jul 19 '17 at 19:46




      Thanks for the solution, adding "nouveau.modeset=0" in /etc/default/grub solved my boot issue with Ubuntu 17.04 an kernel 4.10.0-28, too. I have a DELL XPS 9560.
      – minni
      Jul 19 '17 at 19:46












      omg this fixed my laptop, thank you!!
      – pipo17171
      Jan 21 at 15:54




      omg this fixed my laptop, thank you!!
      – pipo17171
      Jan 21 at 15:54












      I'm using Mint and had the same problem with my Dell laptop. Replacing 'quiet splash' with 'nomodeset' on the grub linux line as described in the Mint release notes works for me. Just adding this here in case other Mint users arrive here.
      – Neutrino
      Mar 2 at 12:31




      I'm using Mint and had the same problem with my Dell laptop. Replacing 'quiet splash' with 'nomodeset' on the grub linux line as described in the Mint release notes works for me. Just adding this here in case other Mint users arrive here.
      – Neutrino
      Mar 2 at 12:31












      This worked for Ubuntu 18.10 on Dell XPS. This allowed me to ctrl-alt-f4 to a console and install the Nvidia proprietary driver. apt-get install nvidia-driver-390. Machine locked up after 12 seconds without this
      – Kingsley
      Oct 19 at 20:57




      This worked for Ubuntu 18.10 on Dell XPS. This allowed me to ctrl-alt-f4 to a console and install the Nvidia proprietary driver. apt-get install nvidia-driver-390. Machine locked up after 12 seconds without this
      – Kingsley
      Oct 19 at 20:57












      up vote
      2
      down vote













      On MSI GP72 6QF Leopard Pro, I have installed Ubuntu 16.04. I installed the latest MSI BIOS firmware update as of 12/2016. Also, I have secure boot disabled and C-step disabled. Since fresh install, the Ubuntu shutdown was halting with the error:



      NMI watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#5 stuck for 22s! [plymouthd:9203]


      I'd get different CPU number with each shutdown.



      Enabling Nvidia proprietary driver resolved the error and shutdown is successful. To enable NVIDIA driver:



      In System Settings, go to Additional Drivers > Nvidia Corp > Enable Using Nvidia binary driver - version 367.57 from Nvidia...(proprietary..)



      Enjoy.






      share|improve this answer























      • the problem is that i can't finish to boot the system cause systemd is blocked by this error.you had this problem on the shutdown, I have it on the startup
        – TheUnderground95
        Feb 6 '17 at 10:35










      • Well darn. I have an MSI dual booting to Ubuntu and it has the same soft lockup shutdown error. This seemed promising so I found the "Additional Driver" setting and, sure enough, it wasn't using NVIDIA's. Unfortunately, changing it didn't seem to help. Still need hard reset to shutdown Ubuntu.
        – M T
        Nov 22 '17 at 17:24















      up vote
      2
      down vote













      On MSI GP72 6QF Leopard Pro, I have installed Ubuntu 16.04. I installed the latest MSI BIOS firmware update as of 12/2016. Also, I have secure boot disabled and C-step disabled. Since fresh install, the Ubuntu shutdown was halting with the error:



      NMI watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#5 stuck for 22s! [plymouthd:9203]


      I'd get different CPU number with each shutdown.



      Enabling Nvidia proprietary driver resolved the error and shutdown is successful. To enable NVIDIA driver:



      In System Settings, go to Additional Drivers > Nvidia Corp > Enable Using Nvidia binary driver - version 367.57 from Nvidia...(proprietary..)



      Enjoy.






      share|improve this answer























      • the problem is that i can't finish to boot the system cause systemd is blocked by this error.you had this problem on the shutdown, I have it on the startup
        – TheUnderground95
        Feb 6 '17 at 10:35










      • Well darn. I have an MSI dual booting to Ubuntu and it has the same soft lockup shutdown error. This seemed promising so I found the "Additional Driver" setting and, sure enough, it wasn't using NVIDIA's. Unfortunately, changing it didn't seem to help. Still need hard reset to shutdown Ubuntu.
        – M T
        Nov 22 '17 at 17:24













      up vote
      2
      down vote










      up vote
      2
      down vote









      On MSI GP72 6QF Leopard Pro, I have installed Ubuntu 16.04. I installed the latest MSI BIOS firmware update as of 12/2016. Also, I have secure boot disabled and C-step disabled. Since fresh install, the Ubuntu shutdown was halting with the error:



      NMI watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#5 stuck for 22s! [plymouthd:9203]


      I'd get different CPU number with each shutdown.



      Enabling Nvidia proprietary driver resolved the error and shutdown is successful. To enable NVIDIA driver:



      In System Settings, go to Additional Drivers > Nvidia Corp > Enable Using Nvidia binary driver - version 367.57 from Nvidia...(proprietary..)



      Enjoy.






      share|improve this answer














      On MSI GP72 6QF Leopard Pro, I have installed Ubuntu 16.04. I installed the latest MSI BIOS firmware update as of 12/2016. Also, I have secure boot disabled and C-step disabled. Since fresh install, the Ubuntu shutdown was halting with the error:



      NMI watchdog: BUG: soft lockup - CPU#5 stuck for 22s! [plymouthd:9203]


      I'd get different CPU number with each shutdown.



      Enabling Nvidia proprietary driver resolved the error and shutdown is successful. To enable NVIDIA driver:



      In System Settings, go to Additional Drivers > Nvidia Corp > Enable Using Nvidia binary driver - version 367.57 from Nvidia...(proprietary..)



      Enjoy.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Nov 8 at 17:31









      Zanna

      49.4k13128236




      49.4k13128236










      answered Feb 4 '17 at 17:12









      Knight

      211




      211












      • the problem is that i can't finish to boot the system cause systemd is blocked by this error.you had this problem on the shutdown, I have it on the startup
        – TheUnderground95
        Feb 6 '17 at 10:35










      • Well darn. I have an MSI dual booting to Ubuntu and it has the same soft lockup shutdown error. This seemed promising so I found the "Additional Driver" setting and, sure enough, it wasn't using NVIDIA's. Unfortunately, changing it didn't seem to help. Still need hard reset to shutdown Ubuntu.
        – M T
        Nov 22 '17 at 17:24


















      • the problem is that i can't finish to boot the system cause systemd is blocked by this error.you had this problem on the shutdown, I have it on the startup
        – TheUnderground95
        Feb 6 '17 at 10:35










      • Well darn. I have an MSI dual booting to Ubuntu and it has the same soft lockup shutdown error. This seemed promising so I found the "Additional Driver" setting and, sure enough, it wasn't using NVIDIA's. Unfortunately, changing it didn't seem to help. Still need hard reset to shutdown Ubuntu.
        – M T
        Nov 22 '17 at 17:24
















      the problem is that i can't finish to boot the system cause systemd is blocked by this error.you had this problem on the shutdown, I have it on the startup
      – TheUnderground95
      Feb 6 '17 at 10:35




      the problem is that i can't finish to boot the system cause systemd is blocked by this error.you had this problem on the shutdown, I have it on the startup
      – TheUnderground95
      Feb 6 '17 at 10:35












      Well darn. I have an MSI dual booting to Ubuntu and it has the same soft lockup shutdown error. This seemed promising so I found the "Additional Driver" setting and, sure enough, it wasn't using NVIDIA's. Unfortunately, changing it didn't seem to help. Still need hard reset to shutdown Ubuntu.
      – M T
      Nov 22 '17 at 17:24




      Well darn. I have an MSI dual booting to Ubuntu and it has the same soft lockup shutdown error. This seemed promising so I found the "Additional Driver" setting and, sure enough, it wasn't using NVIDIA's. Unfortunately, changing it didn't seem to help. Still need hard reset to shutdown Ubuntu.
      – M T
      Nov 22 '17 at 17:24










      up vote
      1
      down vote













      If your computer has an NVIDIA GPU add nouveau.modeset=0 kernel option to /etc/default/grub . Open the terminal and open /etc/default/grub for editing with nano text editor.



      sudo nano /etc/default/grub


      Append nouveau.modeset=0 inside the quotes of the line GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="..."



      Then update your grub settings with sudo update-grub .



      Nano editor keyboard shortcuts
      Use the keyboard combination Ctrl + O and after that press Enter to save the file to its current location.
      Use the keyboard combination Ctrl + X to exit nano.






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        1
        down vote













        If your computer has an NVIDIA GPU add nouveau.modeset=0 kernel option to /etc/default/grub . Open the terminal and open /etc/default/grub for editing with nano text editor.



        sudo nano /etc/default/grub


        Append nouveau.modeset=0 inside the quotes of the line GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="..."



        Then update your grub settings with sudo update-grub .



        Nano editor keyboard shortcuts
        Use the keyboard combination Ctrl + O and after that press Enter to save the file to its current location.
        Use the keyboard combination Ctrl + X to exit nano.






        share|improve this answer























          up vote
          1
          down vote










          up vote
          1
          down vote









          If your computer has an NVIDIA GPU add nouveau.modeset=0 kernel option to /etc/default/grub . Open the terminal and open /etc/default/grub for editing with nano text editor.



          sudo nano /etc/default/grub


          Append nouveau.modeset=0 inside the quotes of the line GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="..."



          Then update your grub settings with sudo update-grub .



          Nano editor keyboard shortcuts
          Use the keyboard combination Ctrl + O and after that press Enter to save the file to its current location.
          Use the keyboard combination Ctrl + X to exit nano.






          share|improve this answer












          If your computer has an NVIDIA GPU add nouveau.modeset=0 kernel option to /etc/default/grub . Open the terminal and open /etc/default/grub for editing with nano text editor.



          sudo nano /etc/default/grub


          Append nouveau.modeset=0 inside the quotes of the line GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="..."



          Then update your grub settings with sudo update-grub .



          Nano editor keyboard shortcuts
          Use the keyboard combination Ctrl + O and after that press Enter to save the file to its current location.
          Use the keyboard combination Ctrl + X to exit nano.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 8 at 2:58









          karel

          56.1k11124142




          56.1k11124142






















              up vote
              0
              down vote













              I ran into this error booting a gparted live USB and was able to resolve it by choosing the safe graphics options.






              share|improve this answer

















              • 2




                Can you add some details on how that is done to this answer?
                – fakedad
                Nov 9 '17 at 3:02















              up vote
              0
              down vote













              I ran into this error booting a gparted live USB and was able to resolve it by choosing the safe graphics options.






              share|improve this answer

















              • 2




                Can you add some details on how that is done to this answer?
                – fakedad
                Nov 9 '17 at 3:02













              up vote
              0
              down vote










              up vote
              0
              down vote









              I ran into this error booting a gparted live USB and was able to resolve it by choosing the safe graphics options.






              share|improve this answer












              I ran into this error booting a gparted live USB and was able to resolve it by choosing the safe graphics options.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Nov 9 '17 at 1:19









              chrowe

              1011




              1011








              • 2




                Can you add some details on how that is done to this answer?
                – fakedad
                Nov 9 '17 at 3:02














              • 2




                Can you add some details on how that is done to this answer?
                – fakedad
                Nov 9 '17 at 3:02








              2




              2




              Can you add some details on how that is done to this answer?
              – fakedad
              Nov 9 '17 at 3:02




              Can you add some details on how that is done to this answer?
              – fakedad
              Nov 9 '17 at 3:02










              up vote
              0
              down vote













              At the GRUB menu, select Advanced options for Ubuntu and choose a kernel with recovery mode.



              In recovery mode, select the option to <Resume normal login> (or similar).



              After logging in go to Software & Updates > Additional Drivers and switch to the Nvidia proprietary driver.






              share|improve this answer



























                up vote
                0
                down vote













                At the GRUB menu, select Advanced options for Ubuntu and choose a kernel with recovery mode.



                In recovery mode, select the option to <Resume normal login> (or similar).



                After logging in go to Software & Updates > Additional Drivers and switch to the Nvidia proprietary driver.






                share|improve this answer

























                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote









                  At the GRUB menu, select Advanced options for Ubuntu and choose a kernel with recovery mode.



                  In recovery mode, select the option to <Resume normal login> (or similar).



                  After logging in go to Software & Updates > Additional Drivers and switch to the Nvidia proprietary driver.






                  share|improve this answer














                  At the GRUB menu, select Advanced options for Ubuntu and choose a kernel with recovery mode.



                  In recovery mode, select the option to <Resume normal login> (or similar).



                  After logging in go to Software & Updates > Additional Drivers and switch to the Nvidia proprietary driver.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Nov 8 at 17:34









                  Zanna

                  49.4k13128236




                  49.4k13128236










                  answered Jul 11 at 19:05









                  Hemanth Gowda

                  113




                  113






























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