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Other / Re: My laptop often frezes
« Last post by Thanh Tùng ??ng on Today at 10:17:17 PM »Code: [Select]
Welcome to Linux Lite 6.6 tungdt
Thứ sáu 19 Tháng 4 2024, 09:09:40
Memory Usage: 711/3305MB (21.51%)
Disk Usage: 22/219GB (11%)
Support - https://www.linuxliteos.com/forums/ (Right click, Open Link)
tungdt ~ journalctl -b -1 --since 09:06
-- No entries --
tungdt ~ journalctl -b -1 --since 09:05
-- No entries --
tungdt ~ 1 journalctl -b -1 --since 09:04
-- No entries --
tungdt ~ journalctl -b -1 --since 09:03
-- No entries --
tungdt ~ journalctl -b -1 --since 09:02
-- No entries --
I tried your solution when my laptop froze, but it didn't work. I waited for the same problem to happen again, and today it finally did so I can send you the error report.
Thank you for the response.
It may be useful to check if anything got logged around the time of the freeze.
Even if nothing was logged that adds a bit of information about your problem
Operate the system as normal until it freezes.
Make a note of the freeze time, then power off and on.
When the system has booted, open a terminal by pressing 'Ctrl' 'Alt' and 'T' together.
In the window that opens enter the command below followed by enter.
Replace the HH:MM after '--since' with a time value.
If your system froze at 07:10, using a value of 07:05 will show the logged events for 5 minutes before the freeze.
You may need to adjust the time period you use.Code: [Select]journalctl -b -1 --since HH:MM
The output should be a list of time stamped events recorded for the previous boot with an indicator of where you are in the listing.
Press space bar to scroll down the list a page at at time.
Use up and down arrows to move a line at a time.
Once you are at the end of the list you will see something like 'lines 390-410/410 (END)'
Pressing 'Q' will exit from the listing.
Post back with anything that looks suspicious