Package: base Severity: important Dear Maintainer, *** Please consider answering these questions, where appropriate ***
* What led up to the situation? New Debian 7 install yesterday, Dell lattitude E5420 laptop, serial number 19640672489. No nonstandard hardware. This is a very common/generic laptop, one of the standard models used at Sheffield University. Running fine all day, then unplugged power to go to a 2 hour meeting on battery. Just got back from meeting and plugged in again, battery level is 59pc. * What exactly did you do (or not do) that was effective (or ineffective)? When I plug the power cord back in (so the computer goes to charging) the desktop becomes unusably sluggish, the mouse and keyboard take about a second to respond to each input. Unplugging the cord makes everything work again (but then the battery will run down!) * What was the outcome of this action? As well as sluggishness I can see several kworkers hogging the CPU in top. The sluggishness makes the computer completly unusable when it is plugged back in. (I think it vanishes once the battery has fully recharged though) * What outcome did you expect instead? Thought Wheezy would have fixed this -- it's been a known issue in Ubunu for several years now and was a major reason for moving to Deibian, https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/998204 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/887793 http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1921292 I have been trying the suggested fix from the Ubuntu forums for two years with no success. Some posters have said that the bug involves ACPI power management but I'm not sure if this is actually where it comes from. (Sorry for sending via gmail, I did this report in reportbug but our uni seems to have disabled SMTP since it switched us to corporate gmail.) -- Dr Charles Fox www.5m.org.uk Researcher, Department of Computer Science University of Sheffield, UK