Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 21st Oct 2010 22:14 UTC, submitted by diegocg
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Member since:
2005-11-02
It's even worse than that since udev came along. This will only give you an idea of how fast Linux initializes hardware and will not give you a system you can really use. Combined with a benchmark of your real boot it will give you an idea which parts are due to Linux and which are your init system and services (just subtract).
Another useful technique: install a minimal system, such as debian-netinst, and uninstall all daemons that are not actually essential. This still involves some benchmarking of init and so forth but will give you a usable system (albeit with nothing much running).