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Deepin Linux Boot Screen

Deepin Linux Boot Screen

L
Lavakatten
Junior Member
1
11-15-2020, 03:28 AM
#1
Hello, I set up Deepin Linux on my old laptop yesterday. During startup, I see a message indicating: [ 0.004000] do_IRQ: 1.55 No irq handler for vector [ 0.004000] do_IRQ: 2.55 No irq handler for vector [ 0.004000] do_IRQ: 3.55 No irq handler for vector [ 7.293625] Couldn't get size: 0x800000000000000e I searched online but couldn't find a solution. I'm still getting familiar with Linux and might not be very confident fixing this issue. My main concern is the slow OS boot, though everything else seems normal. Sorry for the English—I'm not my native language, but I hope you understand.
L
Lavakatten
11-15-2020, 03:28 AM #1

Hello, I set up Deepin Linux on my old laptop yesterday. During startup, I see a message indicating: [ 0.004000] do_IRQ: 1.55 No irq handler for vector [ 0.004000] do_IRQ: 2.55 No irq handler for vector [ 0.004000] do_IRQ: 3.55 No irq handler for vector [ 7.293625] Couldn't get size: 0x800000000000000e I searched online but couldn't find a solution. I'm still getting familiar with Linux and might not be very confident fixing this issue. My main concern is the slow OS boot, though everything else seems normal. Sorry for the English—I'm not my native language, but I hope you understand.

B
beschteLars
Member
221
11-17-2020, 09:15 PM
#2
The "no irq handler" issue appears to be hardware-related, while "couldn't get size" relates to kernel configuration. Check Deepin Linux documentation for kernel updates and apply them. This might not change boot times, but the terminal could be missing logs temporarily.
B
beschteLars
11-17-2020, 09:15 PM #2

The "no irq handler" issue appears to be hardware-related, while "couldn't get size" relates to kernel configuration. Check Deepin Linux documentation for kernel updates and apply them. This might not change boot times, but the terminal could be missing logs temporarily.

L
Lordyouyou
Member
167
11-21-2020, 09:44 PM
#3
I just attempted that. I added the program named 'Ukuu Kernel Update Utility'. When I tried to install a newer kernel version, it reported an error. I thought I needed to run it as super user. I opened it through terminal with the command: gksudo Ukuu Kernel Update Utility. It prompted for a password, and after entering it, I received this message in the terminal: (gksudo:8511): Gtk-WARNING **: 04:06:42.136: Unable to locate theme engine in module_path: "adwaita", (gksudo:8511): Gtk-WARNING **: 04:06:42.137: Unable to locate theme engine in module_path: "adwaita".
L
Lordyouyou
11-21-2020, 09:44 PM #3

I just attempted that. I added the program named 'Ukuu Kernel Update Utility'. When I tried to install a newer kernel version, it reported an error. I thought I needed to run it as super user. I opened it through terminal with the command: gksudo Ukuu Kernel Update Utility. It prompted for a password, and after entering it, I received this message in the terminal: (gksudo:8511): Gtk-WARNING **: 04:06:42.136: Unable to locate theme engine in module_path: "adwaita", (gksudo:8511): Gtk-WARNING **: 04:06:42.137: Unable to locate theme engine in module_path: "adwaita".

J
JopperMan
Member
121
11-22-2020, 04:37 AM
#4
It's not an error, it's just a verbose message ACPI related, totally normal and harmful in Linux systems like that I got this in my XPS too. If you don't want them to appear you can just add the "quiet" kernel parameter
J
JopperMan
11-22-2020, 04:37 AM #4

It's not an error, it's just a verbose message ACPI related, totally normal and harmful in Linux systems like that I got this in my XPS too. If you don't want them to appear you can just add the "quiet" kernel parameter