I guess it was without rc scripts and init, just time needed by bios+kernel to boot... I'm interested in the same subject, but have no idea of what to do for reducing both. I noticed that the majority of time is taken by IDE hardware to be probed. I know that I can force BIOS settings not to probe for it every time, just setting the correct parameters in CMOS for disks instead of making BIOS guess what the values are every time. Is it possible to do the same with linux kernel as well? Another solution for reducing boot times would be skipping completely BIOS initializations, since linux kernel doesn't rely on them and performs them again when it starts. This could be done by replacing BIOS firmware with a simpler one that only loads kernel in ram and starts it... kinda of LILO on ROM, if you got what I mean. Does something like that exist? Thank you in advance for attention, Fede.
----- Original Message ----- From: "ron minnich" rminnich@lanl.gov To: "John Usher (Maptek)" John.Usher@perth.maptek.com.au Cc: linuxbios@clustermatic.org Sent: Friday, April 02, 2004 6:08 AM Subject: Re: Linux Startup Times [PMX:#]
On Fri, 2 Apr 2004, John Usher (Maptek) wrote:
Linux startup times? Linux on our systems is taking more than 10 seconds to start, and I guess its due to it searching for devices and the like.
with/without the rc scripts?
ron
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