On Mon, Jul 07, 2008 at 08:24:28AM -0400, Brandon Thomas wrote: > So last night I hibernated my laptop and when I came in today it booted > pretty close to instantly. I very seldomly hibernate my laptop because > I frankly just don't see the same performance as after I boot cleanly > from a full shutdown. But I got to thinking... If you can get a reproducable test to show that its slower after resume from hibernate then file a BZ so this can be fixed. The possible cause is that after resume some of your apps/their data are still on swap so the first time you access them will be slower as they're paged in. > What if some/all services were able to be configured to "hibernate" > during shutdown, then at single program or service called by rhgb > brought these programs back to life? I think it would be helpful to > reduce the number of services that start during boot for my laptop > (httpd, mysqld, vsftpd, etc.). Is such a feat possible? Could there > even be a decrease in boot time? This is just re-inventing hibernate again with even more work which is not a good use of developer time as compared to fixing any bugs which actaully exist in hibernate/resume. Daniel. -- |: Red Hat, Engineering, London -o- http://people.redhat.com/berrange/ :| |: http://libvirt.org -o- http://virt-manager.org -o- http://ovirt.org :| |: http://autobuild.org -o- http://search.cpan.org/~danberr/ :| |: GnuPG: 7D3B9505 -o- F3C9 553F A1DA 4AC2 5648 23C1 B3DF F742 7D3B 9505 :| -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list