I have been facing this issue since yesterday, but basically at some point the system becomes insanely slow, and the restart and shutdown options disappear from the menu, tty3-7 dont work, it freezes at the shutdown -now
command(at which point I just manually cut the power(bad Idea I know)),
but today I stuck around as my system got insanely borked, eventually freezing up and giving me the screen above. the problem shows up after I wake it up from suspend but not always: My system specs:
OS: Fedora Linux 41 (Workstation Edition) x86_64
Host: TECRA R940 PT439V-03U02WAR
Kernel: 6.11.10-300.fc41.x86_64
Uptime: 23 mins
Packages: 2282 (rpm), 43 (flatpak)
Shell: bash 5.2.32
Resolution: 1600x900
DE: GNOME 47.1
WM: Mutter
WM Theme: Adwaita
Theme: Adwaita [GTK2/3]
Icons: Adwaita [GTK2/3]
Terminal: gnome-terminal
CPU: Intel i7-3540M (4) @ 3.700GHz
GPU: AMD ATI Radeon HD 7550M/7570M/7650M
Memory: 1845MiB / 7879MiB
here are the journalctl entries that I think are relevant
entries for events 40 min before that.
and this is from when it happened earlier in the day
What about dmesg? if it’s a hardware problem (and it looks like, but I may wrong) dmesg will print some usefull data
sudo dmesg -Tw
-T form human redeable timestamp and -w to follow (like tail -f)
Also, about that hard reset that you did, Linux magic keys are your friends if your are not facing a kernel panic, I have this key combo engraved in my head like a rune: Press and hold Alt + PrtSc (not Alt+Gr) and then press only one time each (and while holding Alt + PrtSc) S + E + I + U + B PrtSc maybe be SysRq in your keyboard depends on the manufacturer or how old it is. Also wait one or two seconds when pressing SEIUB.
I tried sysrq then, now i know why it didn’t work
sysrq: This sysrq operation is disabled.
nothing useful in dmesg, at least to me
Looks like SysRq keys are not enable in your distro by default, don’t know the reason but Fedora kernel devs would known better than me.
Just for curious, did you installed some gnome extension recently? try this
grep -i gnome-shell /var/log/syslog* | grep -i exten