Dear Sheridan,
On Sunday, December 28, at 19:21, you wrote:
> I understand that this is desired behaviour, a feature rather than
> a bug so to speak. If the file was unmodified it would have been
> removed.
There must be a misunderstanding.
The file /etc/laptop-mode/laptop-mode.conf was rem
Francois Fleuret wrote:
> Okay, it seems that it is what happens, at least on my Thinkpad X61s.
> I removed acpi-support and laptop-mode-tools, put the computer to
> suspend with 'echo mem > /sys/power/state' and when the computer
> resumed the state was indeed 128 again.
Good, this seems a nice
Dear Sheridan,
On Sunday, December 28, at 18:31, you wrote:
> I think the reason that we have this issue is because the value
> that the power management value that is set is directly programmed
> to the hard drive. When the machine suspends or hibernates the
> drive is powered off and the v
I'll just clarify that the default value that is loaded is most likely
from within the hard drive firmware itself and that this will vary
according to each drive.
--
Regards,
Sheridan Hutchinson
sheri...@shezza.org
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
Francois Fleuret wrote:
> It seems to work.
>
> However, the situation seems more than fuzzy. Is there a clear reason
> why this fix is needed ? I could not even figure out what script
> puts the power management level to 128. The script /etc/init.d/hdparm
> does not and /etc/acpi/*/90-hdparm.sh
Dear Sheridan,
On Sunday, December 28, at 16:04, you wrote:
> I think this bug might be a side-effect of:
> http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=481766
>
> In the above bug report Bart has prepared a pm-utils hook that might
> help. Could you try integrating this script on your
Francois,
I think this bug might be a side-effect of:
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=481766
In the above bug report Bart has prepared a pm-utils hook that might
help. Could you try integrating this script on your system and giving
it a test drive?
Bart may then consider mergin
7 matches
Mail list logo