also sprach Noah L. Meyerhans <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002.12.13.2030 +0100]: > The ACPI implementation in Linux 2.4 is really not very useful. I'm not > sure that you can actually put your laptop to sleep with it.
echo 1 >| /proc/acpi/sleep will make my Dell's LED flash, the fan slowly decrease in speed, the mouse freeze, but it doesn't turn off the display. pressing the power buttong turns the display off but makes the system come back to normal otherwise. i then have to switch to tty1 to activate the display, then back to X. wonder if this is the kernel or just another problem with my Dell. Fuck Dell. Excuse my French! > ACPI is being completely re-written in 2.5. There has been talk of > backporting the new ACPI drivers to 2.4, but the 2.4 maintainer doesn't > like the idea since it's so big a change. I think I'll give the 2.5 series a shot... > > How Do I suspend my laptop to RAM from within Linux? > > I think you'll probably have to use APM. Then I am back at the old problem of losing keystrokes. If APM is in the kernel, X loses every 14th keystroke (or more). I just recently had it configured so that it allowed sleep mode but apparently didn't have APM. I think without any power management in the kernel. If 2.5 doesn't help, I'll go back to that. -- Please do not CC me! Get a proper mailer instead: www.mutt.org .''`. martin f. krafft <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : :' : proud Debian developer, admin, and user `. `'` `- Debian - when you have better things to do than fixing a system NOTE: The public PGP keyservers are broken! Get my key here: http://people.debian.org/~madduck/gpg/330c4a75.asc
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