-
Extremely Slow Booting
When I insert the CD into a CD drive and boot, it boots extremely slow. I moved the disc to another computer and it boots fine. I've tried enabling DMA, failsafe, tried setting the home directory to a different drive. I KNOW its not the CD because I have the same problem with ANY version of linux I try to install on this computer. The DVD-rom drive is brand new. The primary master drive is NOT brand new....could it be possible, that even though I denote a different drive to be home, that this drive could be the reason it takes forever to boot up?
-
Administrator
Site Admin-
Re: Extremely Slow Booting
Originally Posted by
swg1cor14
I KNOW its not the CD because I have the same problem with ANY version of linux I try to install on this computer.
My first question is what speed did you burn the CD at? No matter what you think you know, we have seen many many cases of the CD booting slow or not at all when the CD is burnt too fast. If the CD was burnt at a slow speed then it could be a drive issue, the age of the drive is not proof that it is not, but it could also be a media quality issue (my first step after a slow burn before trying a different drive would be to burn slowly on different media, a 700 meg CDRW would be a good choice for several reasons). It would also help if you would define slow. See the above link for some real world examples, and how much more useful a conversation can be when moved from the abstract to quanitive measurement.
-
And YES I read your posts before I posted this out about booting slow. Ok....so let me be more specific....burnt at 4x. Tried different media, even put the CD drive that it boots fine in...into this computer and it boots slowly still.
-
Administrator
Site Admin-
Originally Posted by
swg1cor14
it boots slowly still.
Define slowly. Time from pressing enter at the boot prompt until the Knoquror window is up and ready to use at the least, other times might also help so that we can see where the difference is. And, of course, it would help a lot to know what your system specs are. Knoppix will boot (and run) very slowly on an old Pentium 90 with 64 megs of memory, for example.
---
Verifying of md5 checksum and burning a CD at slow speed are important.
-
System Specs
First off....its a P4 2.53GHZ 1GB Ram. 1.2 TB disk space. Matrox Dual Head Video card. I think its more than adequate enough. As far as how slow....after loading kernel...it takes 5 minutes. Then after autodetect its takes 4 minutes 33 seconds. When X starts, the screen goes blank just before the logo is SUPPOSED to come up. I've waited over 20 minutes and nothing. Yet its not frozen. I haven't yet seen this computer boot into knoppix.
-
Administrator
Site Admin-
OK, now we are starting to communicate. Yea, that machine should squak by on the Knoppix requirements. I don't think I would just say it boots slowly, I would discribe it as booting slowly and never finsihing. Here are some things to try:
Cheat codes noscsi and/or acpi=off, as in knoppix noscsi, knoppix acpi=off or even knoppix noscsi acpi=off.
You say that you tried enabling DMA. Once again there is a key piece of information that I can't find in your posts: Which version of Knoppix is this? It matters because some versions have had DMA off by default bit some had DMA on by default and it needed to be disabled on some systems and some optical drives. I'll assume that you are talking about 4.0.2, in which case trying to enable DMA is the proper thing to do. But if it is an older version such as 3.7 then try the dma=off or nodma code. And try the DMA settings again with this different drive if you have not already done so.
It does not seem likely to be a CD issues at this point, but you might want to use the testcd cheat code anyway, just to see what this might tell you and to further rule out CD reading issues. And you might want to boot the CD and type in memtest (not knoppix memtest) to run a memory test, just to be on the safe side.
-
memtest all passed. Zero Errors. CD is ok. Tried your recommended cheats. Nothing improved. Oh and for the record...yes I do have 4.0.2.
-
I'm still waiting on an answer....It still takes forever to boot.
-
Try http://www.alpha.co.jp/ac-knoppix/index_en.html
maybe that helps speed up things a bit?
cheers,
Godo
-
Even with Accelerated Knoppix....it has taken over 5 minutes from INIT: version 2.78-knoppix booting to AGP bridge deteced and its still just sitting there. Any more ideas?
Similar Threads
-
By mbgb14 in forum General Support
Replies: 6
Last Post: 05-12-2006, 04:43 PM
-
By Josh83 in forum Networking
Replies: 4
Last Post: 10-15-2005, 08:59 PM
-
By johnsmith01 in forum Hdd Install / Debian / Apt
Replies: 3
Last Post: 06-11-2005, 08:04 AM
-
By Shing in forum MS Windows & New to Linux
Replies: 4
Last Post: 03-31-2005, 08:03 AM
-
By ultimalrage in forum Networking
Replies: 6
Last Post: 10-13-2004, 05:19 PM
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
Supermicro 4U 36 Bay Storage Server 2.4Ghz 8-C 128GB 1x1280W Rails TrueNAS ZFS
$712.98
Dell Poweredge R640 Server | 2x Xeon Gold 6132 | 128GB | H730P | 8x HDD Trays
$1849.00
HP ProLiant DL360 G9 Server | 2 x E5-2660V3 2.6Ghz | 64GB | 2 x 900GB SAS HDD
$339.00
Dell PowerEdge R7525 Server 24X2.5(8XNVME)+H745 2xEPYC 7302 CPU 128G RAM 2x2400W
$3350.00
Dell PowerEdge R620 Server 2x E5-2660 v1 2.2GHz 16 Cores 256GB RAM 2x 300GB HDD
$89.99
Dell PowerEdge R730XD 28 Core Server 2X Xeon E5-2680 V4 H730 128GB RAM No HDD
$389.99
Dell PowerEdge R720 Server - 2x8c CPU,256Gb RAM, 128Gb SSD/3x900Gb SAS, Proxmox
$340.00
HP Proliant DL360 Gen9 28 Core SFF Server 2X E5-2680 V4 16GB RAM P440ar No HDD
$196.95
DELL PowerEdge R730 Server 2x E5-2680v4 2.4GHz =28 Cores 32GB H730 4xRJ45
$284.00
PowerEdge R710 Rackmount Server 80GB RAM 2x XEON E5520 CPU 4.75TB
$200.00