Slow boot time, 38-second difference between network.target and systemd-user-sessions.service
Slow boot time, 38-second difference between network.target and systemd-user-sessions.service
It takes my PC (which should be fast enough; Ryzen 9, NVME) running OpenSUSE TW 42 seconds to boot, more than 30 seconds longer than before. Does anyone know what could cause the 38-second discrepancy between network.target
and systemd-user-sessions.service
? Is there a way to gather more information about what steps happen in between?
Posted image as text:
graphical.target @1min 42.681s └─display-manager.service @1min 42.084s +597ms └─systemd-user-sessions.service @1min 42.059s +22ms └─network.target @4.014s └─NetworkManager.service @2.546s +1.466s └─network-pre.target @2.546s └─wpa_supplicant.service @4.012s +33ms └─dbus.service @2.054s +42ms └─basic.target @2.049s └─sockets.target @2.049s └─cockpit.socket @2.036s +12ms └─sysinit.target @2.003s └─systemd-update-utmp.service @1.966s +36ms └─auditd.service @1.939s +26ms └─systemd-tmpfiles-setup.service @1.750s +162ms └─systemd-journal-flush.service @1.008s +691ms └─var.mount @999ms +6ms └─local-fs-pre.target @992ms └─systemd-tmpfiles-setup-dev.service @829ms +79ms └─kmod-static-nodes.service @399ms +209ms └─systemd-journald.socket └─system.slice └─-.slice
EDIT: It was waiting for a network mount with a device that wasn't online anymore.
Services waiting for the year of the Linux desktop.