Ubuntu QA:
BlogBrainstormPackage status
Log in
Ubuntu QA
The Ubuntu community has contributed 22700 ideas, 138270 comments, 2629576 votes
Idea sandbox Idea sandbox
Popular ideas Popular ideas
Ideas in development Ideas in development
Implemented ideas Implemented ideas

Contributor CHRI5

Speed Up Ubuntu-Gnome boot time  
No information about this blueprint
Information is updated every 5 minutes.
Please wait till the next update.
spec
forum
Written by Arioch the 28 Feb 08 at 15:26. Global category: System. Implemented
I guess everybody has experienced the rather long boot up times in Ubuntu (particularly with laptops). I know they are already working on it, but the change from feisty to gutsy was a pain in the ass in terms of boot up speed.
A default WinXP installation beats Ubuntu's boot up time by far!! That shouldn't be allowed fellas!!
6231
votes
implemented
Selected solution (#1): Boot DevelopmentTeam
Written by Arioch the 28 Feb 08 at 15:26.
I propose to the development team (both Ubuntu and by extension Gnome) to work on the improvement of boot up times in Ubuntu systems.
61
votes
implemented
Selected solution (#2): Allow users to streamline the boot simply.
Written by tchalvakspam the 23 Jan 09 at 21:53.
In addition to speeding up the processes involved, which is key, make it simple for the user to streamline their own bootup. Installing different software can -always- slow down a bootup, no matter how fast it was initially.

Thus, to -keep- boot time short for the many different ways that people use ubuntu, provide the ubuntu user with a simple default tool to remove, delay the start of, or uninstall software that take the most time during startup. The combination of a default boot-time analysis tool and the current session startup manager would provide allow easy boot streamlining, and to a lesser extent so would showing on-screen indicators of what things are being started up over the course of the normal ubuntu boot load.
Allowing user analysis is the key feature missing to make streamlining available to the individual in addition to the developer.
-20
votes
implemented
Selected solution (#3): Defer loading unnecessary programs
Written by aadityabhatia the 29 Jan 09 at 04:57.
Some programs take too long and are not required immediately upon boot. For example, sendmail takes forever to start and a regular desktop user usually wants to see a login screen asap, so sendmail can wait. Such programs could be identified and their initiation can be delayed while rest of the system continues booting up.
40
votes
implemented
Selected solution (#4): Profiler to log boot program times
Written by aadityabhatia the 29 Jan 09 at 05:04.
There is a contrast in the comments: some machines take more time before login screen, some do after. In many cases it's the compiz and in some it's dbus or a part of gnome.

The idea is to have a profiler start at the beginning of boot process, on demand, and measure the time taken by each program at startup, writing it to a log file. This will help users figure out what part takes the most time, and will simplify profiling the boot process.

Not sure how much effort is involved, but sounds possible. Any takers?
57
votes
implemented
Selected solution (#5): Prefech gnome programs while the user type his password
Written by Id2ndR the 15 Feb 09 at 16:10.
The programs that are loaded just after the login are always the same : gnome-session, gnome-daemons etc.

What take time to load the session is to read them from the hard drive. So as we are sure they will be loaded, we can prefetch them.

This can be extended to user's programs just after he give his name to gdm (so while he is entering his password).
139
votes
implemented
Selected solution (#6): Speed up GDM
Written by kleytonn the 2 Mar 08 at 12:40.
Turn fast and light the Gnome enviroment with a fast boot. Today, a login in GDM cost 10 or 20 seconds to load a user desktop in one fast computer.
KDE 4.0.1 is new but is visible more light than Gnome.

1
votes
implemented
Selected solution (#7): make gnome as fast as xfce by working with them
Written by slsolaris the 23 Mar 09 at 17:11.
gnome is too slow, it need a lot of implrovements, like when u see icons overlap any other, gnome panel bar is not real transparent, and i bring this things in mind just because i can not understand how xfce that does have this features is faster and and lighter...

i mean gnome should work in hand with them and give them things that they already do not have and they could give us some very important help to improve things

See the 107 comments or propose a solution (latest comment the 23 Apr 11 at 16:44) >>

Password strength  
Written by fordplay the 25 Mar 08 at 12:38. Related project: Gnome. New
Warn users if they try to use a weak password. In the style of google account creation.

I originally thought that this would be good for the users login password. However, possibly this could be implemented for all passwords system wide.

Developer comments
With our automatic installation of wordlists through language-support this is actually feasible with cracklib. In the installer environment we don't have localized wordlists, but even with just the English one, cracklib is pretty useful and it does some statistical tests (independent from wordlists), too.

Also, the existing checks in PAM could probably do with an overhaul (IIRC they complain if you use a password with less than 6 characters or so, but they do not do any entropy testing, like usage of special chars, etc.)
359
votes
up equal down
Solution #1: Auto-generated solution of idea #5682
Written by fordplay the 25 Mar 08 at 12:38.
Ubuntu Brainstorm was updated in January 2009. Since the idea #5682 was submitted before this update, its rationale and solution are not separated. Please vote accordingly, and if you have the necessary rights, please separate the rationale from the solution. Thanks!

See the 8 comments or propose a solution (latest comment the 23 Oct 09 at 08:13) >>

Ubuntu should ignore all negative votes to my ideas  
Written by vexorian the 28 Mar 08 at 05:49. Related project: brainstorm.ubuntu.com. Not an idea
The reason I am being downvoted is definitely related to people not deciding the vote correctly, because they focus on aspects of my suggestions that are not the priority. This is the reason Ubuntu ought to ignore all the negative votes I am getting since it is obvious that people are downvoting me for the wrong reason.
-110
votes
closed
Solution #1: Auto-generated solution of idea #5901
Written by vexorian the 28 Mar 08 at 05:49.
Ubuntu Brainstorm was updated in January 2009. Since the idea #5901 was submitted before this update, its rationale and solution are not separated. Please vote accordingly, and if you have the necessary rights, please separate the rationale from the solution. Thanks!

See the 6 comments or propose a solution (latest comment the 30 Nov 08 at 06:23) >>

no toolbar!!  
Written by leonaibaho the 28 Mar 08 at 09:38. Global category: Look and Feel. Not an idea
there is no more need to keep the toolbar..
Each application should have their own unique toolbar instead.
Like xmms, other apps like nautilus, open office, nautilus, rhytmbox should have their own theme.
-58
votes
closed
Solution #1: Auto-generated solution of idea #5909
Written by leonaibaho the 28 Mar 08 at 09:38.
Ubuntu Brainstorm was updated in January 2009. Since the idea #5909 was submitted before this update, its rationale and solution are not separated. Please vote accordingly, and if you have the necessary rights, please separate the rationale from the solution. Thanks!

See the 5 comments or propose a solution (latest comment the 12 May 08 at 08:54) >>