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just wondering if anybody else noticed significant slower boot times with newer kernels
Normally my boot is like this (very fast):
5.811s systemd-rfkill.service
2.157s systemd-journald.service
1.789s upower.service
905ms dev-nvme0n1p2.device
903ms systemd-binfmt.service
335ms systemd-udev-trigger.service
325ms NetworkManager.service
302ms systemd-udev-load-credentials.service
283ms systemd-remount-fs.service
261ms systemd-modules-load.service
250ms systemd-tmpfiles-setup-dev-early.service
200ms modprobe@loop.service
But with newer kernels I get this:
21.175s upower.service
920ms systemd-binfmt.service
879ms systemd-timesyncd.service
275ms NetworkManager.service
226ms dev-nvme0n1p2.device
117ms home.mount
110ms systemd-udev-trigger.service
105ms user@1000.service
So something definitely fishy with the upower.service, but there are no errors in logs...
Blame is very similar for both cases, it also doesn't matter if KDE, GNOME, so it's obvious something in the kernel:
Startup finished in 13.129s (firmware) + 2.156s (loader) + 4.457s (kernel) + 8.884s (userspace) = 28.628s
graphical.target reached after 3.725s in userspace.
There are no errors in logs, right now I'm using the LTS kernel, because rest has atrocious boot times and I have quite high end desktop
7800X3D, 32GBs, 7800XT, everything on NVMEs
Arch installation is quite new, so not a problem there either, as I said LTS kernel is fast, but that's 6.6
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