On Tue, Apr 29, 2014 at 7:47 PM, Daniel Micay <danielmicay@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 29/04/14 07:34 PM, Toyam Cox wrote: > > On Tue, Apr 29, 2014 at 7:20 PM, Simon Brand > > <simon.brand@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>wrote: > > > >> > >> > >> Am 30.04.2014 00:06, schrieb Toyam Cox: > >>> NetworkManager.service is running for 12 seconds > >> > >> Can you use static ip address in your network? > >> The dhcp client did eat a lot of time here, too. > >> 9 sec boot here without cryptsetup and static ip. > >> Server needs 20 sec without ssd, 15 sec for dhcpcd, mysql and php-fpm > >> > >> > > I do not believe that would help, because often I start up in areas > without > > a network. Perhaps there is a way to get Network Manager to start after > the > > boot is completed, or at least not be a boot dependency? > > NetworkManager works fine with roaming and can be configured to use a > static IP on some networks but not others. I don't see what you have to > gain by removing it from the regular boot process... just make sure > you're not letting stuff block on it. > > This is with NetworkManager enabled on a wireless network with a Samsung > 840 EVO (it varies from ~2-3s for kernel + userspace): > > Startup finished in 3.070s (firmware) + 60ms (loader) + 1.655s (kernel) > + 676ms (userspace) > > 160ms NetworkManager.service > > AFAIK it doesn't count the time needed to connect over DHCP... it's > often not connected by the time I have a browser and a few terminals > open in i3 since it takes 10 seconds. > > Not that boot time should matter to anyone, since kernel upgrades aren't > every day and there's not much reason to reboot otherwise :P. > > So something seems to be wrong here. Startup finished in 4.637s (firmware) + 131ms (loader) + 2.790s (kernel) + 20.066s (userspace) = 27.626s >12s NetworkManager.service What sort of things should I check for? Is there an /etc config file I can play with? -- - Toyam