Score:2

What is a reasonable time frame for whoopsie-upload-all and systemd-journald to process? Ubuntu 21.04

cn flag

I recently upgraded to 21.04 and after rebooting and installing upgrades, I've been finding one of my four cpu cores is generally at 100% constantly, with the whoopsie-upload-all command. It's been that way for about an hour so far.

I don't have a problem with uploading error and crash reports but the amount of CPU is now affecting my ability to work!

EDIT: The whoopsie process did finish, it just took longer than expected. Now I've got systemd-logind and systemd-journald taking up a bunch of CPU. I wonder if this is just part of the process after upgrading between Ubuntu versions?

I'm letting it run, but I've also tried the updated solution here:

systemd[1]: apport-autoreport.service: Failed with result 'start-limit-hit'

FURTHER UPDATE

the daemon-reload command didn't work, and journald continued to consistently chew up my CPU, so I eventually powered off the machine and rebooted.

There were a few error reports that came up after the reboot, and I sent them in, but no systemd or journald high-cpu usage anymore. I'm not sure if this was a loop or if the solution I tried above actually worked!

us flag
This may **not** be a duplicate of https://askubuntu.com/q/135540/124466. The answers to that may not be applicable anymore.
Jason Mehmel avatar
cn flag
Yeah, I saw that. I don't mind sending error reporting, I'm just not sure how long this should take. If it's been a few hours, and the crash logs aren't that big... even having a progress bar for this would help give me a sense of if this is an error or problem, or just a correctly working program I should just let finish!
user535733 avatar
cn flag
It's generally safe to kill a whoopsie process. After a while, it will try to upload again. One assumes your network is working properly. Are you on a network that requires a proxy to reach daisy.ubuntu.com? Can you ping and/or traceroute that server successfully?
Jason Mehmel avatar
cn flag
I haven't tried that!
Jason Mehmel avatar
cn flag
The whoopsie process did finish, it just took longer than expected. Now I've got systemd-logind and systemd-journald taking up a bunch of CPU. I wonder if this is just part of the process after upgrading between Ubuntu versions.
us flag
Edit your question to put all these information.
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