apport information

** Tags added: apport-collected

** Description changed:

  I have a Dell Latitude D-420 notebook which has behaved miserably since
  sometime after I upgraded to Kubuntu 12.10.
  
  I would be the first to admit that it's an older machine, however,  the
  drop in performance was far to great and too rapid to make sense.  I
  went so far as to take the machine apart thinking it was full of dust,
  as it started running hot enough to run the fan at top speed.  It was
  almost dust free.
  
  It is configured with an Intel dual core U2550, 1.2GHz processor, 2GB of
  ram, and a 1.8" 4200RPM PATA ZIF HDD.  I wondered if the weak link was
  the hard drive.  I borrowed a 128GB SSD and there was almost no
  improvement.
  
  Activity as minimal as opening Google Chrome with two or three simple
  tabs and leaving it to sit with Akonadi and Nepomuk,  to run in the back
  ground was enough to make it impossible to watch a full screen MP4
  video.  This is a far cry from a few months ago when I could have a
  dozen Chrome windows open, Kontact running,  watching a full screen MP4
  with no loss in quality, all while downloading at a speed which
  saturated my DSL connection.
  
  What was even stranger was it was only moderately swapping out.
  
  From there, I decided to investigate.  The load average was regularly
  around 3.  User load was only responsible for roughly 20% of an almost
  constant 100% CPU load.  Combining this with the fact that swap used
  wasn't all that high, I started to dig a little deeper.
  
  Interestingly, both regular memory usage AND buffer allocation were
  constantly high, with buffer allocation around 300MB.  Disk cache
  hovered around a paltey 100MB.  The cache didn't change by increasing
  vm.swappiness to 100, either.  On top of it all, the Intel iwl3945
  wireless adapter was loosing packets and constantly having to
  renegotiate WPA.
  
  I ran vmstat for a while.  Context switching was occurring roughly 1500
  per second along with about 3000 software interrupts per second.  From
  here, I looked into IOSCHED.  As it turns out,  linux-
  image-3.5.0-26-generic is configured to use the deadline scheduler, by
  default, as shown in /boot/config-3.5.0-26-generic:
  
  CONFIG_IOSCHED_NOOP=y
  CONFIG_IOSCHED_DEADLINE=y
  CONFIG_IOSCHED_CFQ=y
  CONFIG_CFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED=y
  CONFIG_DEFAULT_DEADLINE=y
  # CONFIG_DEFAULT_CFQ is not set
  # CONFIG_DEFAULT_NOOP is not set
  CONFIG_DEFAULT_IOSCHED="deadline"
  
  Switching to CFQ improved the situation immensely, however, I was still
  getting far more kernel time using up the CPU, and the context switching
  was far too high.
  
  I happened to come across documentation on the transparent hugepage
  system while I was reading up on IOSCHED and it hit me.  For some reason
  the kernel was probably bogged down in memory fragmentation and huge
  page tables due to the 4k page side and the pressures of deadline
  scheduling with a rather slow hard drive.  The hugepage system seems to
  do a wonderful job.  I have it set to use a 2M page size.  The system,
  itself, uses almost know resources, with khugepaged clocking in an
  insignificant 5:00m of CPU time in roughly six hours.
  
  My poor old computer is now running as fast or faster then before this
  issue occurred.  Switching between intensive applications such as having
  tens of Javascript heavy tabs like Facebook open in Chrome, bittorrent
  maxed out at about 500kB/s while using only encrypted connections, and
  watching a full screen MP4 flawlessly, rarely saturates CPU usage.  The
  CPU is no longer mostly all kernel and wait time, either.  Context
  switching has settled to a reasonable 500 to 700 switches per second.
  Buffer allocations are rarely higher than 25MB. As a bonus, the memory
  allocated for page tables has dropped from around 80MB to 20MB.  Best of
  all, my fan is now back on low, and I can use the notebook without the
  risk of burns!
  
  I realize that an aggressive scheduling approach is probably the way to
  go with new and resource rich hardware. however, with lightly
  provisioned systems it seems to create the perfect storm.  After all,
  this notebook is still quite a bit more powerful than a recent tablet.
  If there is a wish to see Ubuntu running on hardware such as that,
  something will have to be done.
  
  It could be as easy as a small script to assess resources, perhaps with
  each kernel update. and configure a more suitable default for these
  lighter systems.
  
  Cheers,
  Jonathan Skanes
+ --- 
+ ApportVersion: 2.6.1-0ubuntu10
+ Architecture: i386
+ AudioDevicesInUse:
+  USER        PID ACCESS COMMAND
+  /dev/snd/controlC0:  jon        2267 F.... pulseaudio
+ DistroRelease: Ubuntu 12.10
+ EcryptfsInUse: Yes
+ HibernationDevice: RESUME=UUID=d1980c70-8ee4-4f44-a4d3-fa1e12b2b123
+ InstallationDate: Installed on 2009-12-28 (1181 days ago)
+ InstallationMedia: Kubuntu 9.10 "Karmic Koala" - Release i386 (20091028.5)
+ MachineType: Dell Inc. Latitude D420
+ MarkForUpload: True
+ Package: linux (not installed)
+ PccardctlIdent:
+  Socket 0:
+    no product info available
+ PccardctlStatus:
+  Socket 0:
+    no card
+ ProcEnviron:
+  LANGUAGE=en_CA
+  TERM=xterm
+  PATH=(custom, no user)
+  LANG=en_CA.UTF-8
+  SHELL=/bin/bash
+ ProcFB: 0 inteldrmfb
+ ProcKernelCmdLine: BOOT_IMAGE=/boot/vmlinuz-3.5.0-26-generic 
root=UUID=60cdd746-3be0-4d48-a03f-45ba7381db4f ro elevator=cfq 
transparent_hugepage=always quiet
+ ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 3.5.0-26.42-generic 3.5.7.6
+ RelatedPackageVersions:
+  linux-restricted-modules-3.5.0-26-generic N/A
+  linux-backports-modules-3.5.0-26-generic  N/A
+  linux-firmware                            1.95
+ Tags:  quantal
+ Uname: Linux 3.5.0-26-generic i686
+ UpgradeStatus: Upgraded to quantal on 2012-10-29 (145 days ago)
+ UserGroups: adm admin cdrom dialout kismet lp lpadmin plugdev pulse-rt sage 
sambashare tilp vboxusers wireshark
+ dmi.bios.date: 02/02/2008
+ dmi.bios.vendor: Dell Inc.
+ dmi.bios.version: A06
+ dmi.board.vendor: Dell Inc.
+ dmi.chassis.type: 8
+ dmi.chassis.vendor: Dell Inc.
+ dmi.modalias: 
dmi:bvnDellInc.:bvrA06:bd02/02/2008:svnDellInc.:pnLatitudeD420:pvr:rvnDellInc.:rn:rvr:cvnDellInc.:ct8:cvr:
+ dmi.product.name: Latitude D420
+ dmi.sys.vendor: Dell Inc.

** Attachment added: "AlsaInfo.txt"
   
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1159258/+attachment/3592926/+files/AlsaInfo.txt

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1159258

Title:
  The IOSCHED default of deadline combined with 4k page size causes poor
  performance in lightly configured systems.

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