Bjoern Voigt schreef op 28-04-2016 13:28:
Then we have a good "real life" use case. Swapoff seems to delay the shutdown (and maybe the restart) process. This would explain my observations. Sometimes shutdown is fast, sometimes slow and sometimes I think, it will never finish and I do a hard power-off. I should write down the memory situation (output of "free") and the shutdown times.
Like Carlos says, if indeed there is no swap left when all processes have quit, then no it does not follow that it is a good "real life" use case. Ideally you would be able to produce a form of profiling map with a simple switch that would display results for the various stages of (say) shutdown and how much time was spent in what. I do not know if this exists for Linux. The way you can run a profiler on an application and see where it spends its time. There should be a switch you can use to profile the boot and shutdown and see what happens when and why. Anyway, regards. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org