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02-21-2002 11:35 AM
02-21-2002 11:35 AM
If not, how do I speed up my reboots and startups?
..Joe
Solved! Go to Solution.
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02-21-2002 11:41 AM
02-21-2002 11:41 AM
Solution- Mark as New
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02-21-2002 11:42 AM
02-21-2002 11:42 AM
Re: Decrease reboot time
You can set the "FASTBOOT" option to "ON" on the Boot console menu. But it is not advisable to do so, as you will not able to see any boot warnings and error messages.
See this thread for some information:
http://us-support.external.hp.com/cki/bin/doc.pl/sid=28e4c7151c8101d61d/screen=ckiDisplayDocument?docId=200000047257291
HTH,
Shiju
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02-21-2002 11:42 AM
02-21-2002 11:42 AM
Re: Decrease reboot time
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02-21-2002 11:43 AM
02-21-2002 11:43 AM
Re: Decrease reboot time
Other than that, there is not much that can be done to speed up the boot process. Yes, it can be damned slow at times, when you want it to hurry up, but that's just the way it is.
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02-21-2002 11:49 AM
02-21-2002 11:49 AM
Re: Decrease reboot time
live free or die
harry
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02-21-2002 11:49 AM
02-21-2002 11:49 AM
Re: Decrease reboot time
Here's a link (and HP's position on the issue - mine as well...):
http://us-support3.external.hp.com/cki/bin/doc.pl/sid=8e6d2ddd1d002ad2e9/screen=ckiDisplayDocument?docId=200000047257291
I recommend leaving FASTBOOT=OFF unless you are installing patches, or need to reboot multiple times in a row for maintenance. The few minutes (maybe) saved are not (imo) worth the grief if flaky memory or hardware is undetected and crashes the box.
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02-21-2002 11:58 AM
02-21-2002 11:58 AM
Re: Decrease reboot time
I expect if you were really brave you could go into your S and K files and pull out stuff that doesn't need to be there. No point in killing SNMP if you never start it in the first place.
Just my two cents.
Ron
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02-21-2002 12:00 PM
02-21-2002 12:00 PM
Re: Decrease reboot time
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02-21-2002 12:00 PM
02-21-2002 12:00 PM
Re: Decrease reboot time
You can do that by enabling "FASTBOOT" on the system. You can do with going to PDC and then disabling FASTBOOT. Do remember that if you do this, it will disable the memory test.
Hope this helps.
Regds
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02-22-2002 06:22 AM
02-22-2002 06:22 AM
Re: Decrease reboot time
If a 700 class machine turn off the memory checking as has been reported before.
Also you may not need to start up all the things that are started in the bootup such as the audio server, NIS, NFS, etc. Check in the /etc/rc.config.d/stuff to see if you can disable any stuff.
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02-25-2002 04:45 AM
02-25-2002 04:45 AM
Re: Decrease reboot time
If you DO decide to cut down the number of processes that get started at boot time, I prefer to do it by changing the upper-case "S" to a lower-case "s" on the startup links.
(I leave the K scripts untouched.)
This prevents them from starting but it is very easy to reverse if necessary and also provides its own record of the changes.
Paul
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02-25-2002 06:22 AM
02-25-2002 06:22 AM
Re: Decrease reboot time
FASTBOOT refers only to the extended memory test and does not affect basic RAM tests or any hardware tests. It is recommended to leave FASTBOOT=off for production machines. However, with new machines that support speedyboot, even if you disable some hardware tests and set FASTBOOT=on, the processor firware will reset these back to normal if a hardware error (an HPMC crash) is detected.
When you are changing a server's kernel or doing a lot of patching or upgrading, you can speed up the process significantly by simply removing extra RAM. Leave about 256 to 512 megs of RAM as that is all you'll need to run SAM and swinstall. The effect of physically removing RAM is much more dramatic than FASTBOOT as standard memory tests are always run, so less RAM = faster reboots.
Bill Hassell, sysadmin