HACKER Q&A
📣 gnicholas

How often do you restart your computer?


I'm old enough to remember the times when computers were restarted regularly, both out of necessity (many software installs required this) and for performance reasons.

For the last decade or so, the experts have said that we don't need to restart our computers. But I still find that my computer runs faster after a restart. I can see my CPU usage is much lower, and RAM is more available — even after I've reopened all of the applications I was using before shutdown.

I'm curious about how others approach this question. For the record, I have an M2 MBA.


  👤 LinuxBender Accepted Answer ✓
How often do you restart your computer?

Every day. I power off anything I am not using after clearing out temp files. I get less dust bunnies and less power usage. I only power on a computer if I want to use it and leave the computers I am not using off.


👤 fuzzfactor
>How often do you restart your computer?

Every single time.

Whenever I think there's a possibility that the need to reboot has not been overcome since the DOS days and W9x.

I find many more unexpected needs to restart in Windows NT6.

Unless your PC is miserably encumbered, it only takes a few seconds to reboot or cold start, so why hesitate.

Reboot early and often.

>I'm old enough to remember the times when computers were restarted regularly

During those same times I remember other operators who never wanted to turn off their computers for any reason, almost acting like they were mainframes and afraid they might not boot back up.

Looking at the answers, here's my anecdata: I usually only turn one on when I'm really working on it, and completely power down when finished.

Never hibernate or sleep, why bother?

OTOH the ones I had at work hooked up to scientific instruments never get turned off for years, except for power failures in excess of battery backup time. Once I got IT out of the lab it was possible to craft Windows XP for far more reliability than they had dreamed about, or achieved since on their office machines with NT6.


👤 ElCapitanMarkla
Maybe once a week... maybe once a month... depends if something bugs out.

My Macbook and Linux PC both hibernate after an hour or so idle time. And I only restart as its usually a quicker fix to turn it off and on than find out the process with the issue, etc.


👤 mindcrime
For my Linux laptop: once every couple of weeks or so. It wouldn't even be that often, but every once in a while I'll suspend it by closing the lid, and when I reopen it, it won't come out of suspend without a power cycle. Doesn't happen very often, and boots are super fast, and all my apps auto-restart, so I don't really worry about it.

👤 h2odragon
37 days uptime right now; since the last power blink. Reboots just to reboot; practically never. Config changes, maybe.

👤 MattGaiser
Months. I have noticed the performance gap and when I peak at task manager/activity monitor, it is usually because I have left something running in the background. It might be Docker, might be Nginx, might be an updater.

I hate restarting, as then I have to reopen all my tools and restart everything all over again.


👤 focusedone
Windows: once a week or as needed.

Linux, whenever I feel like it. 117 days on a home server right now. 42 days on a laptop.


👤 AstroJetson
Windows 28 days

Raspberry Pi 400 32 days

Pi Hole 11 months

I don't reboot unless something is complaining about it. Not a fan of the new software "new version every 11 hours, please install" (yes looking at you Chrome)


👤 johannesrexx
My Linux machines sleep when not in use and get a reboot when there's a kernel update, so about every one to two weeks.

My Mac Mini also sleeps when not in use and only gets a reboot when there's a macOS update, which are typically months apart.

My Raspberry Pi runs Pi-hole and it gets booted every few months.

Everything is on a UPS so there's never a reboot due to power failure.


👤 comprev
Out of habit I power down computers I don't use any more. Every workday my M2 MBAir work laptop is booted from cold and shut down after work. Personal MBAir 2017 is the same.

Even my TV and XboxSX get properly powered down when not in use.

Exception to the rule is my iPhone (7 Plus) and iPad Air (2019)


👤 voussoir
Desktop PC, my most recent reboot was a few days ago but the previous was 108 days before.

The worst part about rebooting is catching up on all the Chrome updates that I don't want -- most recently the one that removes the bottom downloads bar in favor of the upper right popout.


👤 kirkarg
Desktop computer: every 2 or 3 days. Sometimes weeks but it's odd. Work notebook: wednesday and friday. It might vary based on the things that I'm doing but I'm trying to close (and save) everything at the end of the day so I can turn it off.

👤 torblerone
> How often do you restart your computer?

Every day. Whenever I clock out in the afternoon, I turn it off. When I want to do private stuff, I turn it on again, and turn it off when I'm done. The only thing with uptime worth mentioning in the house is my Pi Zero running PiHole.


👤 CogitoCogito
I usually hibernate instead of fully rebooting (and since it’s Debian the machine really is off until I turn it back on). That I do multiple times a day. But unless I actually need to hibernate to keep some things open, I will always turn it off normally.

👤 Exuma
2 times a month on osx. I do t even need to I just do it when updating. OSX super stable

👤 Quinzel
I restart my computer once every day or so mainly because I broke the power cable so when it runs out of battery I have to recharge it.

For the record I just have a regular MBA if this is relevant to turning computers off and on again.


👤 reify
2 x laptops 2 x Rpi

laptop 1 daily driver minimal manjaro once a day, if I go out for extended periods and after updates

laptop 2 for my Rpi stuff laptop MXlinux rarely

Rpi weather station = occassionally Rpi TV streamer = occassionaly


👤 throwaway828
Laptop (Debian): At the end of the day. Also when travelling. It's fully encrypted with a boot password stronger than my user (sleep/resume) or root passwords.

👤 satvikpendem
In this order:

Whenever Windows wants to update; if I have some driver issue, especially for gaming; if I want to not have it heat my room staying on all night, especially in the summer.


👤 dehugger
I have a job that restarts my Windows PC every night at 4AM. I've found that it is much more performant and stable since I started doing that

👤 in9
Every week or so. I have a feeling stuff starts to run smoother. And I also tell macos to not recover the windows. I like a fresh start.

👤 runjake
Months. Usually when there's a new macOS update.

If it matters, I avoid installing third-party kernel extensions and any software that comes as a PKG.


👤 KomoD
Laptop? When I'm done using it.

Desktop? Not very often.

> up 8 weeks, 2 days, 18 hours, 9 minutes

I do put it into sleep sometimes.


👤 wiwoworld
Mine runs for weeks, sometimes even months before restarting. Linux user here :)

👤 Lestertucker
Are filesystem corruptions more likely to happen in long uptime without ECC?

👤 pmontra
When the battery won't keep my Linux laptop in standby for long enough.

👤 pranitbauva1997
At least every day. Sometimes in between if I have ran any updates.

👤 dave84
Only when I need Keynote to recognise a newly installed font.

👤 selectnull
$ uptime

21:08 up 30 days, 23:09

M2 Air. Restart only after OS finally nags me down into an upgrade.


👤 cpach
M2 MBP here. Not sure, I think I restart like once a month or so.

👤 HeyLaughingBoy
I reboot my TV far more often than I reboot my laptop.

👤 TowerTall
windows user. Very infrequent like every other month. With a few exception, I only reboot when Windows Update requires it

👤 stevage
MacBook Pro: every couple of weeks

Windows: every couple of days.


👤 brudgers
After patch Tuesday.

👤 laksdjf
desktop pc. shutdown every night