Thank you for responding. I tried to restart, but all I got was a
flashing cursor in the top left of my screen. So, in the end, I had to
reinstall Ubuntu from scratch. The same problem re-occurred again, and
forced me to re-install from scratch a third time. This last time, from
the very first boot after removing the installation media, I went to the
Nvidia app and switched from "On-demand" to "Intel only". This time it
rebooted in Wayland, while giving me also the option to boot into X.org
or Classic Gnome, and everything worked perfectly, both in Wayland and
in X.org. Finally, just to try once more to use my Nvidia card, prepared
as I was to re-install fresh one last time, I set Nvidia to "On-demand"
and booted into X.org (Wayland wasn't offered) without any problem
persisting at all. Therefore, I think the problem is something to do
with the Nvidia card not saving the relevant setting in on first boot
into "On-demand" mode, and you need to set it to another mode and then
switch for the settings to be saved correctly. Otherwise, I can't
explain it. I did nothing strange with any other settings, installs or
configurations. I believe, therefore, that it is the Nvidia card, with
the Nvidia proprietary driver, that is preventing the computer from
suspending, sleep, hibernating, starting, powering off (by command or
GUI - only button physical button works), or whatever. It seems that the
Nvidia card stays active, preventing the system from deactivating. Apart
from that it could possibly have something to do with the HDPI screen,
that requires fractional scaling to be usable, although I hadn't yet set
fractional scaling when I had the problems. Of course I can add the log
if you think it would help, but right now I have a perfectly functioning
system (apart from the apt get installed Firefox which glitches in the
menu and consumes excessive RAM - most likely unrelated - and is
resolved by uninstalling the apt install and installing the Firefox
Snap). Thanks!

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You received this bug notification because you are a member of Desktop
Packages, which is subscribed to gnome-power-manager in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1926006

Title:
  Suspend, restart and power off don't work, crashes the system and logs
  me out.

Status in gnome-power-manager package in Ubuntu:
  Incomplete

Bug description:
  Suspend, restart and power off simply don't work. The system crashes,
  logs me out and takes me back to the log-in screen. It possibly has
  something to do with the Nvidia driver (460), but is the same with the
  Nouveau driver enabled. I used system76-power previously to set Nvidia
  On-demand, but this does not work any more, and conflicts with nvidia-
  prime. However, uninstalling both makes no difference - possibly the
  configuration is badly set and not re-set. The hardware I'm using is
  possibly a bit niche. The laptop is Huawei Matebook Pro X. I had the
  problem yesterday on 20.10, and updated today to 21.04 to see if the
  problem would be resolved, but no luck.

  ProblemType: Bug
  DistroRelease: Ubuntu 21.04
  Package: gnome-power-manager 3.32.0-2
  ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 
5.11.0-7614.15~1618626693~20.10~ecb25cd~dev-generic 5.11.13
  Uname: Linux 5.11.0-7614-generic x86_64
  NonfreeKernelModules: nvidia_modeset nvidia
  ApportVersion: 2.20.11-0ubuntu65
  Architecture: amd64
  CasperMD5CheckResult: unknown
  CurrentDesktop: ubuntu:GNOME
  Date: Sat Apr 24 12:12:43 2021
  InstallationDate: Installed on 2020-11-12 (162 days ago)
  InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 20.10 "Groovy Gorilla" - Release amd64 (20201022)
  SourcePackage: gnome-power-manager
  UpgradeStatus: Upgraded to hirsute on 2021-04-24 (0 days ago)

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