For the last week or two I have had slow responses from the system.
Icons are erratically slow to highlight when the cursor rolls over
Dolphin can be reluctant to change folders quickly
When I render video with Kdenlive I used to get core temps in the high
70's degrees celsius. Now it barely pushes 60.
Handbrake is slow to load files and it doesn't push the system either
I get a HD light hard on when booting. It comes on at the end of kernel messages - hot plug loading- and last for about 1 minute and a half at
the login screen.
The primary drive is SSD, The secondary is spinning rust with no
sounds of thrashing
I don't have a full partition lurking anywhere
~]$ df -Th
Filesystem Type Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
devtmpfs devtmpfs 16G 0 16G 0% /dev
tmpfs tmpfs 16G 0 16G 0% /dev/shm
tmpfs tmpfs 16G 1.3M 16G 1% /run
/dev/nvme0n1p8 ext4 26G 17G 8.4G 67% /
tmpfs tmpfs 16G 4.0K 16G 1% /tmp
/dev/nvme0n1p1 vfat 299M 168K 299M 1% /boot/EFI
/dev/sda1 ext4 5.5T 4.1T 1.2T 78% /video
tmpfs tmpfs 3.2G 112K 3.2G 1% /run/user/1000
This all a bit vague, I know. I have run out of inspiration
The box is definitely not as snappy as it used to be
The primary drive is SSD, The secondary is spinning rust with no
sounds of thrashing
This all a bit vague, I know. I have run out of inspiration
The box is definitely not as snappy as it used to be
On Thu, 19 May 2022 18:41:45 -0400, faeychild
<faeychild@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
The primary drive is SSD, The secondary is spinning rust with no
sounds of thrashing
This all a bit vague, I know. I have run out of inspiration
The box is definitely not as snappy as it used to be
Try running "fstrim -av" (as root). If that fixes it, then run
"systemctl enable fstrim.service" and "systemctl enable fstrim.timer".
Try running "fstrim -av" (as root). If that fixes it, then run
"systemctl enable fstrim.service" and "systemctl enable fstrim.timer".
On Thu, 19 May 2022 19:22:33 -0400, David W. Hodgins wrote:
<snip>
Try running "fstrim -av" (as root). If that fixes it, then run
"systemctl enable fstrim.service" and "systemctl enable fstrim.timer".
I tried those two commands, and was presented with error message
that mean nothing to me. What is "unit files" in this context?
What else should I know, but don't?
On Thu, 19 May 2022 18:41:45 -0400, faeychild
<faeychild@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
The primary drive is SSD, The secondary is spinning rust with no
sounds of thrashing
This all a bit vague, I know. I have run out of inspiration
The box is definitely not as snappy as it used to be
Try running "fstrim -av" (as root). If that fixes it, then run
"systemctl enable fstrim.service" and "systemctl enable fstrim.timer".
Regards, Dave Hodgins
Use top to see what is running and taking up time. User gkrellm to
follow how things are changing.
On 21/5/22 08:16, faeychild wrote:
smartctl doesn't find any errors
~]# smartctl -a /dev/sda
The nvme is the one that may or may not benefit from the fstrim command.
On Fri, 20 May 2022 10:06:14 -0400, Jim <jim.beard@verizon.net> wrote:
On Thu, 19 May 2022 19:22:33 -0400, David W. Hodgins wrote: <snip>
Try running "fstrim -av" (as root). If that fixes it, then run
"systemctl enable fstrim.service" and "systemctl enable fstrim.timer".
I tried those two commands, and was presented with error message that
mean nothing to me. What is "unit files" in this context? What else
should I know, but don't?
Only try getting it to run automatically if you've confirmed "fstrim
-av" fixes the issue.
On Fri, 20 May 2022 16:27:34 -0400, David W. Hodgins wrote:
On Fri, 20 May 2022 10:06:14 -0400, Jim <jim.beard@verizon.net>
wrote:
On Thu, 19 May 2022 19:22:33 -0400, David W. Hodgins wrote: <snip>
Try running "fstrim -av" (as root). If that fixes it, then run
"systemctl enable fstrim.service" and "systemctl enable
fstrim.timer".
I tried those two commands, and was presented with error message
that mean nothing to me. What is "unit files" in this context?
What else should I know, but don't?
Only try getting it to run automatically if you've confirmed "fstrim
-av" fixes the issue.
I did not have the problem, but was just thinking of trying out the automatic fstrim setup.
IIRC, the error messages I saw were insignificant, as things had
not been set up yet, so no problem there.
I will continue running fstrim now and then manually.
Thanks for your info.
On Fri, 20 May 2022 16:27:34 -0400, David W. Hodgins wrote:
On Fri, 20 May 2022 10:06:14 -0400, Jim <jim.beard@verizon.net> wrote:
On Thu, 19 May 2022 19:22:33 -0400, David W. Hodgins wrote: <snip>
Try running "fstrim -av" (as root). If that fixes it, then run
"systemctl enable fstrim.service" and "systemctl enable fstrim.timer".
I tried those two commands, and was presented with error message that
mean nothing to me. What is "unit files" in this context? What else
should I know, but don't?
Only try getting it to run automatically if you've confirmed "fstrim
-av" fixes the issue.
I did not have the problem, but was just thinking of trying out the
automatic fstrim setup.
IIRC, the error messages I saw were insignificant, as things had
not been set up yet, so no problem there.
I will continue running fstrim now and then manually.
Thanks for your info.
Cheers!
On 21/5/22 11:39, faeychild wrote:
I shall be doing nothing for while I have contracted Flu
The ackey breakey broken rib kind Hurts to breath in hurts to breath
out.
specially hurts to cough
I will be lurking and glaring :-)
Good luck with the respiratory infection.
Can be nasty.
Cheers!
jim b.
I wouldn't risk continuing to use that drive. It is also likely slowing
down
the rest of the system, depending on what it's being used for.
The nvme is the one that may or may not benefit from the fstrim command.
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