13.10 still uses kernel 3.11
The upstream comment says they believe it's fixed in kernel 3.12-rc2, so can
some of you try the latest kernel by using the
instructions in comment #27 from Christopher.
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The issue has been confirmed as not fixed, even in 3.12-rc2. See the linked
entry on the kernel bug tracker.
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04
Siddu: Hmm your description on there seems to be different; my
understanding of the bug reported here was that it happened every/most
times during boot, your comment on the upstream bug talks about
occasional infinite loops - are we talking about the same bug here?
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We are. The infinite loop only happens occassionally with the new 3.12-rc2
kernel, as opposed to almost every time with the previous kernels.
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issue persist even in Ubuntu 13.10 !
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From 3.2.0.29-3.8.0.19)
[Lenovo IdeaPad Z580]
To
For clarity this is on a non DSDT modified machine running 13.04 and
installed from the Mainline PPA.
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min
3.12-rc2 64-bit didn't work for me. It was fine the first 5 reboots but
the 6th got stuck.
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay
Lv Zheng from Intel reported on the Kernel Bug Tracker that a fix may be
available. I've tested using the 3.12-rc2 kernel from the Ubuntu
mainline PPA with good results, but additional testing is needed before
I can report back that it fixes the problem. See his comment reproduced
below:
quote
I have the same problem. If I start my Lenovo Z580 (Intel i5 and NVIDIA
GeForce GT 640M) with battery in it, its a gamble if it starts in a few
seconds or it takes about 10 minutes. Without battery it boots
immediately. I handle the problem so, if I notice that the boot try is
going to take
Any new on this bug? I am thinking to buy this laptop --- just to know if the
glitch is fixed or if there is some working workaround.
Thanks.
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I would not advocate buying this laptop if you plan to install Ubuntu.
On my system I am running 3.10.0-031000rc5-generic. I find the 20
minute boot problem only happens about 50% of the time rather than 95%
of the time, as it did with earlier kernal versions, but still not 0% of
the time as I
Thanks. Have you tested too with the acpi command line options in the boot
parameters? I have a little Asus which need the acpi_os_name=Linux to work
reliably...
Nevertheless, thank for advising. Each new laptop is a PITA when you want to
run Linux...
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Recently brought Lenevo z580 and installed Ubuntu 12.04 LTS.
Boot issue exists . Tried the workaround as mentioned in the comment #63. But
nothing worked.
Its very strange but I will try to explain here
For the first time when i boot it takes 20 mins to boot ,but if I shutdown
after booting
Lenovo Z580 352526 user. Workaround worked very well. I'm using
3.8.0-27-generic kernel in x64 system. Also to open, I unplugged battery
and it boot up in normal time to change dsdt file and grub config.
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Reported upstream: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60542
** Bug watch added: Linux Kernel Bug Tracker #60542
http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60542
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** Also affects: linux via
http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=60542
Importance: Unknown
Status: Unknown
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Title:
Ubuntu
The 3.10rc5 kernal worked for me without hanging most of the time from
about a week after Siddu's first post untill today or so. Apparently
the new-kernal magic seems to have worn off again and I am back to a 20
min boot most of the time.
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back to triaged (based on #128)
** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
Status: Fix Released = Triaged
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min
I just experienced a hang on 3.10-rc5, the latest available upstream
kernel. This bug is likely _not_ fixed, even upstream. This probably has
to be re-opened or a new bug report created.
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If you use the latest kernel it does
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From 3.2.0.29-3.8.0.19)
[Lenovo IdeaPad Z580]
To
This bug is not fixed. Well... it is fixed, but not in Ubuntu. We cannot
presume BFU will install new mainstream kernels, the update from
canonical have to come. And because this is an Ubuntu bug, it should be
Fix commited ... until we recieve the proper fix (kernel upgrade).
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Does this work with Ubuntu 13.04 64-Bit?
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From 3.2.0.29-3.8.0.19)
[Lenovo IdeaPad Z580]
Matthew,
This blog post details the steps quite well:
http://www.askmeaboutlinux.com/?p=2336
Though the final step of editing grub.cfg was slightly different for me.
I added the 'acpi=' as per #112 here.
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Running upstream/mainline 3.10rc5 on 12.04 LTS and issue seems resolved;
rebooted many times with no problems.
On Sun, Jun 9, 2013 at 3:15 AM, jdean...@gmail.com jdean...@gmail.comwrote:
Matthew,
This blog post details the steps quite well:
http://www.askmeaboutlinux.com/?p=2336
Though
So I guess it's correct to set it to fix released? if not please put it
back but 3 people have said there aren't any problem anymore.
** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
Status: In Progress = Fix Released
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Kernel 3.8.0-25 seems promising. I've tried rebooting several times and
only experienced a delay of up to 10 secs before the boot screen shows.
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I'm using 3.8.0-23 and I also didn't experience any problems
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From 3.2.0.29-3.8.0.19)
That change was unintentional, I would appreciate it if someone could
change it back. Sorry!
** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
Status: Triaged = In Progress
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I seem to not know enough after researching how to decompile/compile. I
think I'm entering all of the commands properly and I have a general
idea of how it works.
Could someone post a step by step process from beginning to end
including terminal commands for Comment #63.
I seem to be so close
I have been following this bug since December 2012. I am having the
same issues with ubuntu 12.04, 12.10, and 13.04 as well as Linux Mint
15.
Linux Mint 15 64-bit
Lenovo z580
Intel HD 4000
8GB Ram
750 HD
This is the bottom of my grub.cfg file
menuentry 'Linux Mint 15 Cinnamon 64-bit,
Matthew, here are some ideas.
First, remove the battery so you can reboot over and over without long
waits. If it does not boot faster now maybe it is a different problem.
Now the next thing is to prove the grub acpi command is working.
Restart and catch bootup at the grub menu. Then enter
The recompiled DSDT is working for me on Ubuntu 12.04. I've upgraded the
kernel to 3.5.0-32 and booting nicely.
I just inserted the acpi line in grub.cfg here:
acpi /boot/DSDT.aml
linux /boot/vmlinuz-3.5.0-32-generic
root=UUID=ad28a027-ec44-4c73-b42c-2fdc6e90b6dd ro quiet splash $vt_handoff
Tom,
I removed the battery and did as you said to test the acpi. Everything
worked. I did get an error for badname.aml and it correctly loaded the
DSDT.aml
I did dmesg | grep DSDT and got the date you said that I should NOT
have.
dmesg | grep DSDT
[0.00] ACPI: DSDT daff1000
Also, I will confirm that my BIOS is the same as yours and that my UEFI
settings are turned off...Set to legacy mode, and Other OS
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Title:
I think that I have found the culprit code change that is causing the
slow boot issue. I have been comparing changes across the 3.2, 3.5, and
3.8 kernels and paying attention to the changes that remained the same
across the 3.5 and 3.8 sources.
All calls to exit_idle() and irq_enter() were
[ 0.00] ACPI: DSDT daff1000 0AD57 (v02 LENOVO IVB-CPT
INTL 20061109)
The AD57 is the hex length of the DSDT, or 44375 decimal . 44375 is
size of original DSDT. In the modified one it should be AD5B (44379
decimal). See what the size of /boot/DSDT.aml is. If it is 44375
I realized I built the kernel with ACPI debugging enabled, rebuilt the
kernel and now it doesn't work. So I guess don't waste your time
testing the fix I proposed.
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I started to apply Tom's workaround in #63 and got the 3 warnings when
recompiling DSDT (as reported in #75):
DSDT.dsl 11561: Name (_VPC, Zero)
Warning 1099 - ^ Unknown reserved name (_VPC)
DSDT.dsl 11585: Method (_CFG, 0, NotSerialized)
Warning 1099 - Unknown reserved name ^ (_CFG)
DSDT.dsl
A few reserved name warnings when compiling the DSDT is normal.
Tom
On 5/31/2013 4:54 AM, jdean...@gmail.com wrote:
I started to apply Tom's workaround in #63 and got the 3 warnings when
recompiling DSDT (as reported in #75):
DSDT.dsl 11561: Name (_VPC, Zero)
Warning 1099 - ^ Unknown
** Tags added: latest-bios-5fcn34ww
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From 3.2.0.29-3.8.0.19)
[Lenovo IdeaPad Z580]
To
Jon,
Could you please outline what steps I would need to take to duplicate how
you have the current kernal booting on your computer?
Currently it sounds like you are running a recompiled DSDT and getting
it to load with grub, but I am not 100% clear. Thanks for any
suggestions you can
I'm curious too :)
It sounds like Jon has found a solution that doesn't involve patching
DSDT (unless I've misunderstood)? I've been running 12.04 with the old
kernel but keen to upgrade now.
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I am not sure if it fixed my computer or not. I seem to have better
luck booting than a lot of people for some reason. Because the issue
has occurred after a kernel update, I am just suggesting that maybe
altering the DSDT is not the best solution to this problem(especially
since Windows 8 is
Any progress?
I really want to switch back to using Ubuntu!
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From 3.2.0.29-3.8.0.19)
I found that there is also a Linux option you can try too. It looks
like there is a list of OS names in the DSDT and if Ubuntu isn't
supplying one of those names, a lot of things don't get initialized
properly. After saying that the Windows 2012 option was working, it
immediately stopped
Because triaged mean it has also been verified by a supervisor.
Anyway, Im switching back to windows 7 on my z580, this bug is way to annoying
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After a lot of digging, I found that the DSDT for my Windows 8 and
Ubuntu are nearly identical. There is no delay in the WAEC method that
Windows 8 is using. In method _OSC of the decompiled DSDT, there is a
test against the OS name reported to the ACPI. In my case, I am dual
booting with
This issue is also affecting my Lenovo Z580 with Intel Ivybridge. Some
boots get lucky, the unlucky boots force me to painfully hold down the
power button untill the computer hard resets.
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** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
Status: Triaged = Confirmed
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From 3.2.0.29-3.8.0.19)
Don't put it back in confirmed
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From 3.2.0.29-3.8.0.19)
[Lenovo IdeaPad Z580]
To manage
** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
Status: Confirmed = Triaged
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From 3.2.0.29-3.8.0.19)
Why not?
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From 3.2.0.29-3.8.0.19)
[Lenovo IdeaPad Z580]
To manage notifications about
Hey,
I did all the steps but still have 1 problem: DSDT.aml is in the boot
folder but when I try to run acpi /boot/DSDT.aml it says it's missing.
Regards Vince
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If I remember correctly the BIOS admin password has to be setup in order
to see all of the BIOS legacy options.
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04
When I toggle Boot Mode to Legacy Sup, a new field named Boot
Priority is created under it. This is different than the Boot
Priority Order further down the display. I have to toggle this new
field Boot Priority to Legacy Fir.
I did not have to set an admin password.
On 4/21/2013 10:43 PM,
Also it looks like setting a password to access the bios doesn't change
anything.
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From
Jacob
It looks like there are different BIOS versions. A relative just
stopped by and they also have a Z580 (but no linux on it). We went into
the BIOS on it and it looks like yours on the boot page. On mine, the
main page shows bios version 5FCN89WW. On his it is 5FCN91WW and the
KBC
It looks like maybe the new DSDT is not loading.
dmsg line below:
[0.00] ACPI: DSDT caff1000 0AD3E (v02 LENOVO IVB-CPT
INTL 20061109)
Is there a trick to get it to load?
I haven't tried changing UEFI to Legacy yet.
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It will load after you change to legacy.
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot delay (From 3.2.0.29-3.8.0.19)
[Lenovo IdeaPad Z580]
The downside to setting legacy is that Windows cannot be loaded from the
grub menu. The upside is that the little nuvo button next to the main
power button on the Z580 makes it easy to get into the bios without
having to hit DEL or F2 or something before a timeout. So to switch
back to booting
I successfully applied this fix to 12.10. Did you put add the acpi
command to the grub.cfg file?
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot
Forgot to mention that I installed 12.10 in UEFI mode and am dual
booting Windows8 from grub.
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Title:
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10/13.04 10-20min boot
Yes I did, but I wanted the grub menu to still have the option to boot
without using the patched DSDT.
I put the patched DSDT in /boot/mydsdt.aml and changed
/etc/grub.d/10_linux per the diff/patch below. This was to 12.04 so
10_linux may be a little different in 12.10. I also have to watch
I am always booting in UEFI mode. I put the patched DSDT in the same
location, but I edited /boot/grub/grub.cfg to include acpi
/boot/DSDT.aml just before the linux and initrd load commands. This
works for me on every boot. I am not at my computer right now, so if any
of the info seems wrong I
Thats good and really the way you have it is all you need. I think you
might need to re-edit grub.cfg whenever the kernel or grub tools get
updated but that is not a big deal.
Tom
On 4/21/2013 3:11 PM, Jon Baca wrote:
I am always booting in UEFI mode. I put the patched DSDT in the same
Thanks for the help so far everyone. I have a few questions:
Jon Baca: Could you please explain exactly where on grub.cfg you added
the command, there seem to be a bunch of places where linux and initrd
get referred to.
nozyczek: I seem to be having some trouble setting UEFI to legacy. I can
Jacob, regarding setting UEFI to legacy ... When you toggle UEFI to
disabled it creates another field in the form right below it. I cannot
remember what it is called not what its default value is, but when you
toggle it, it displays legacy.
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Hah, got it by editing grub.cfg as Jon and Tom suggested.
Specifically I added the acpi /boot/DSDT.aml command right before the line that
says
echo 'Loading Linux 3.2.0-40-generic ...'
And if I boot into the 3.2.0.40 kernal my computer starts right up.
Thanks everyone.
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Things stopped working for me.
It turned out that I pasted that fix into the wrong section of grub.cfg and
actually the computer was just working by magic (or whatever makes it sometimes
start up right away). Anyhow after playing around with some settings
(installing and removing bumblebee and
Tom. Thanks for the pointer, but I'm not seeing that option.
Right now I see at the top Phoenix SecureCore Tiano Setup
Below that some tabs, I have boot selected
By UEFI Boot I selected disables. Nothing on the page changed other than
that line.
Am I in the wrong place?
-Jacob
On Sun, Apr 21,
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