Login after suspend taking an increasingly long time - 18.10
I have a Thinkpad X1 Carbon (4th gen) that I recently updated to 18.10. Ever since the update, I've had issues with resume after suspend. The biggest is that it takes a long time for the login screen to appear, and the time seems to increase after each suspend-resume cycle.
I took a look at /var/log/syslog
and I'm seeing a bunch of entries like:
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:68
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:65
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 226:0
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:66
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:72
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:69
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:67
suspend thinkpad 18.10
add a comment |
I have a Thinkpad X1 Carbon (4th gen) that I recently updated to 18.10. Ever since the update, I've had issues with resume after suspend. The biggest is that it takes a long time for the login screen to appear, and the time seems to increase after each suspend-resume cycle.
I took a look at /var/log/syslog
and I'm seeing a bunch of entries like:
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:68
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:65
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 226:0
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:66
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:72
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:69
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:67
suspend thinkpad 18.10
add a comment |
I have a Thinkpad X1 Carbon (4th gen) that I recently updated to 18.10. Ever since the update, I've had issues with resume after suspend. The biggest is that it takes a long time for the login screen to appear, and the time seems to increase after each suspend-resume cycle.
I took a look at /var/log/syslog
and I'm seeing a bunch of entries like:
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:68
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:65
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 226:0
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:66
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:72
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:69
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:67
suspend thinkpad 18.10
I have a Thinkpad X1 Carbon (4th gen) that I recently updated to 18.10. Ever since the update, I've had issues with resume after suspend. The biggest is that it takes a long time for the login screen to appear, and the time seems to increase after each suspend-resume cycle.
I took a look at /var/log/syslog
and I'm seeing a bunch of entries like:
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:68
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:65
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 226:0
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:66
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:72
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:69
Nov 25 14:38:18 jeremy-thinkpad /usr/lib/gdm3/gdm-x-session[2867]: (II) systemd-logind: got pause for 13:67
suspend thinkpad 18.10
suspend thinkpad 18.10
asked Dec 3 '18 at 13:53
JeremyJeremy
183414
183414
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2 Answers
2
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oldest
votes
Try with sudo ln -s /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service /etc/systemd/system/display-manager.service --force
, this could fix it.
The file /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service doesn't exist (in fact, the wholesystem
directory doesn't exist
– Jeremy
Dec 3 '18 at 16:57
add a comment |
I've found that the intel_powerclamp
sometimes starts throttling the CPU to the point where it feels below sluggish on my HP Spectre x360. Once I manage to login I run sudo modprobe -r intel_powerclamp
let things catch up and then add it back with sudo modprobe intel_powerclamp
. That seems to make things work pretty well. I'm considering removing it on suspend, but haven't pulled the trigger on that.
Check top
to see if you have a bunch for kidle_inject
processes. If so, it might be the same issue.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Try with sudo ln -s /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service /etc/systemd/system/display-manager.service --force
, this could fix it.
The file /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service doesn't exist (in fact, the wholesystem
directory doesn't exist
– Jeremy
Dec 3 '18 at 16:57
add a comment |
Try with sudo ln -s /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service /etc/systemd/system/display-manager.service --force
, this could fix it.
The file /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service doesn't exist (in fact, the wholesystem
directory doesn't exist
– Jeremy
Dec 3 '18 at 16:57
add a comment |
Try with sudo ln -s /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service /etc/systemd/system/display-manager.service --force
, this could fix it.
Try with sudo ln -s /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service /etc/systemd/system/display-manager.service --force
, this could fix it.
answered Dec 3 '18 at 14:18
FedericoFederico
1
1
The file /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service doesn't exist (in fact, the wholesystem
directory doesn't exist
– Jeremy
Dec 3 '18 at 16:57
add a comment |
The file /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service doesn't exist (in fact, the wholesystem
directory doesn't exist
– Jeremy
Dec 3 '18 at 16:57
The file /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service doesn't exist (in fact, the whole
system
directory doesn't exist– Jeremy
Dec 3 '18 at 16:57
The file /usr/lib/systemd/system/gdm.service doesn't exist (in fact, the whole
system
directory doesn't exist– Jeremy
Dec 3 '18 at 16:57
add a comment |
I've found that the intel_powerclamp
sometimes starts throttling the CPU to the point where it feels below sluggish on my HP Spectre x360. Once I manage to login I run sudo modprobe -r intel_powerclamp
let things catch up and then add it back with sudo modprobe intel_powerclamp
. That seems to make things work pretty well. I'm considering removing it on suspend, but haven't pulled the trigger on that.
Check top
to see if you have a bunch for kidle_inject
processes. If so, it might be the same issue.
add a comment |
I've found that the intel_powerclamp
sometimes starts throttling the CPU to the point where it feels below sluggish on my HP Spectre x360. Once I manage to login I run sudo modprobe -r intel_powerclamp
let things catch up and then add it back with sudo modprobe intel_powerclamp
. That seems to make things work pretty well. I'm considering removing it on suspend, but haven't pulled the trigger on that.
Check top
to see if you have a bunch for kidle_inject
processes. If so, it might be the same issue.
add a comment |
I've found that the intel_powerclamp
sometimes starts throttling the CPU to the point where it feels below sluggish on my HP Spectre x360. Once I manage to login I run sudo modprobe -r intel_powerclamp
let things catch up and then add it back with sudo modprobe intel_powerclamp
. That seems to make things work pretty well. I'm considering removing it on suspend, but haven't pulled the trigger on that.
Check top
to see if you have a bunch for kidle_inject
processes. If so, it might be the same issue.
I've found that the intel_powerclamp
sometimes starts throttling the CPU to the point where it feels below sluggish on my HP Spectre x360. Once I manage to login I run sudo modprobe -r intel_powerclamp
let things catch up and then add it back with sudo modprobe intel_powerclamp
. That seems to make things work pretty well. I'm considering removing it on suspend, but haven't pulled the trigger on that.
Check top
to see if you have a bunch for kidle_inject
processes. If so, it might be the same issue.
answered Jan 23 at 16:09
opennomadopennomad
1147
1147
add a comment |
add a comment |
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