Note: These tricks apply to any Linux based OS. But I have tested them only on Fedora, so can’t say whether they’ll work on other Linux(s).
My current Fedora installation is now almost one and a half years old. Yes. I am still using Fedora 7 ๐ I have Fedora 10 on my other machine. Coming to the agenda, my Fedora installation has grown beyond control and I have services from named, squid, drbl, privoxy, vsftpd, vbox*, smb and what not on a personal desktop. These services really force my system startup to slow down to more than two minutes. While shutting down, its very easy to just cut the power supply but while booting up I can’t help and it frustrates me. And what frustrates me further that I have 4GB DDR2 RAM and AMD64 X2 5600+ (2.8GHz x 2) and booting time is still more than two minutes.
Agenda
- Boot Fedora faster using whatever techniques possible.
Remove the services from normal order and delay their execution to a later stage. So, services like network, squid, privoxy, named, vsftpd, smb etc. doesn’t make sense unless I am not logged in and using them. Let us start them after we have login screen.
Turn off all the services by using the command
[root@bordeaux ~]# chkconfig service_name off |
where service_name is the service you want to turn off.
Now create a file /etc/startup.sh. Enter a line like this
[root@bordeaux ~]# service service_name start |
for every service that you have turned off in the Step 1.1 and you want it to be running after your machine starts up. Now, your startup.sh file should look like this
service network start & service sshd start & modprobe it87 & modprobe k8temp & /usr/bin/iptraf -s eth0 -B & /usr/bin/iptraf -s lo -B & service squid start & service privoxy start & service httpd start & service mysqld start & service named start & service smb start & service vboxdrv start & service vboxnet start & service vsftpd start & |
Add the following line to /etc/rc.local file
/bin/bash /etc/startup.sh & |
Done!!! Notice the &s in both files. They are for execution in background so that a process can block boot process. You’ll observe a drop of 10-20 seconds in system startup time.
Problem with Hack #1 : The execution is not really parallel. It executes like a process in the background. So we can’t get the real advantage of parallel execution.
Hack #2 solves this problem. Now we don’t put processes in background. We use daemon forking to fork a separate daemon process which will start all the services for us in parallel. Here we’ll get the real advantage and startup time will decrease further.
This step is totally similar to Step 1.1. So skipping it.
This step is also similar to Step 1.2. The /etc/startup.sh file should look like this.
service network start service xinetd start service crond start service anacron start service atd start service sshd start service rpcbind start service rpcgssd start service rpcimapd start modprobe it87 modprobe k8temp /usr/bin/iptraf -s eth0 -B /usr/bin/iptraf -s lo -B service nasd start service squid start service privoxy start service httpd start service iptables start service lm_sensors start service mysqld start service named start service nfs start service nfslock start service smb start service vboxdrv start service vboxnet start service vsftpd start service autofs start service smartd start |
Notice the absence of &s in the file.
Download the attached startup.py file attached at the end of this post or copy paste the following code to /etc/startup.py file.
#!/usr/bin/env python # (C) Copyright 2008 Kulbir Saini # License : GPL import os import sys def fork_daemon(f): """This function forks a daemon.""" # Perform double fork r = '' if os.fork(): # Parent # Wait for the child so that it doesn't defunct os.wait() # Return a function return lambda *x, **kw: r # Otherwise, we are the child # Perform second fork os.setsid() os.umask(077) os.chdir('/') if os.fork(): os._exit(0) def wrapper(*args, **kwargs): """Wrapper function to be returned from generator. Executes the function bound to the generator and then exits the process""" f(*args, **kwargs) os._exit(0) return wrapper def start_services(startup_file): command = '/bin/bash ' + startup_file + ' > /dev/null 2> /dev/null ' os.system(command) return if __name__ == '__main__': forkd = fork_daemon(start_services) forkd(sys.argv[1]) print 'Executing ', sys.argv[1], '[ OK ]' |
Add the following line to your /etc/rc.local file.
/usr/bin/python /etc/startup.py /etc/startup.sh |
Thats it. Done!!! Now you’ll experience a boost of about 25-30 seconds of decrease in boot time.
Stats of my machine
With all services started in normal order : 2minutes.
With Hack #1 : 1minute 42 seconds.
With Hack #2 : 1minute.
Warning : These hacks may break your system and can make it unusable. Use at your own risk.
hey nice tips dude ๐
Among other things, starting services and routing output to /dev/null isn’t a good idea.
@Adliazaddin, Bogomil
Enjoy ๐
@Michael
Well, it would be nice if you can suggest where else to route the output?
might I suggest getting a solid state drive – expensive but fast ๐
and what is with the extensive validation preventing me from submitting this form. its making it so painful to comment
You M$ guyz, always think tangentially ๐ Thanks for suggestion but right now I am not really in a situation to invest in hardware. And sorry for the captcha thing, but if I remove it, I get hundreds of spam comments everyday and its painful to remove those ๐
[…] Spending all my time on videocache, intelligentmirror, blogging. More than 25 downloads per day of videocache are pushing me to work on it And in this crucial time, all I care about is how fast my Fedora boots […]
Thanks a lot. I am searching for such info for 3 weeks ๐
I know this post is old. I just wanted to say thanks it seems to work for Fedora 11 still.
I did however get an error that I wonder if you could help me solve. In my /var/log/boot.log it says:
Executing /etc/startup.sh [ OK ]
sh: gt: command not found
sh: /dev/null: Permission denied
sh: gt: command not found
sh: /dev/null: Permission denied
Any clue??
I am sorry the code sections were messed up and symbols were converted to html equivalents. Try copying the code now.
It was the HTML autoformatting for the “>” character. Can you try and fix that in your startup.py example above?
Thanks for an awesome script by the way.
Elias,
I already did ๐ Thanks for reporting!
It was the HTML autoformatting for the “>” character. Can you try and fix that in your startup.py example above?
Thanks for an awesome script by the way.
Hmmmm! I don’t know why, but when I copied and pasted your script above it copied “>” instead of >. Oh well it works now.
Thanks again.
It was wrong. I fixed it and our comments are out of sync ๐