Thanks for your patience.
Sounds like confirmation that tlp is the "problem". (Un)fortunately tlp
is not a standard part of Ubuntu (yet). From what I remember, the
reasons are because it does cause bugs like this one.
** Package changed: ubuntu => tlp (Ubuntu)
** Summary changed:
- Bluetooth al
sudo systemctl status systemd-rfkill :
● systemd-rfkill.service - Load/Save RF Kill Switch Status
Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/systemd-rfkill.service; static; vendor
preset: enabled)
Active: inactive (dead) since Sun 2019-01-13 08:55:19 CET; 1min 20s ago
Docs: man:systemd-rfkill
At least briefly for testing, yes.
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Title:
Bluetooth always on when power on my laptop (Budgie Desktop)
To manage notifications about this bug g
I've read on some websites like ArchLinux Wiki and TecMint that the tlp
package is not crucial but it's important for power management. I'm
using Budgie on a laptop so battery life is meaningful for me. So do you
advise me to remove tlp anyway?
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Thanks John. That confirms you do indeed have TLP installed. So now the
steps to answer comment #15 are something like:
sudo apt purge tlp tlp-rdw
and then after it's been uninstalled, reboot and run:
sudo systemctl status systemd-rfkill
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Here it is
** Attachment added: "allpackages.txt"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+bug/1809783/+attachment/5228379/+files/allpackages.txt
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T
John, please run:
dpkg -l > allpackages.txt
and then send us the resulting file 'allpackages.txt'.
** Changed in: budgie-desktop (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Incomplete
** Package changed: budgie-desktop (Ubuntu) => ubuntu
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"If you purge the tlp package and check the status/start the systemd-rfkill
service and reboot what happens?"
I don't understand what you mean. I'm not an experienced user, I'm sorry.
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ht
sudo systemctl start systemd-rfkill:
Failed to start systemd-rfkill.service: Unit systemd-rfkill.service is
masked.
No folder has been created.
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Thanks - from my questions above ...
sudo systemctl start systemd-rfkill
Is the folder then created? Retained after reboot?
If you purge the tlp package and check the status/start the systemd-
rfkill service and reboot what happens?
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This is the output of "sudo systemctl status systemd-rfkill":
● systemd-rfkill.service
Loaded: masked (/dev/null; bad)
Active: inactive (dead)
As you can imagine the /var/lib/systemd/rfkill folder hasn't been
created after running the command
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John
what is the output of
sudo systemctl status systemd-rfkill
?
When I run
sudo systemctl start systemd-rfkill
I see the folder /var/lib/systemd/rfkill created
After a reboot is that folder still there?
If you rerun
sudo systemctl status systemd-rfkill
Does it say after t
Note also - a quick Google brought this up
https://major.io/2015/07/19/restoring-wireless-and-bluetooth-state-
after-reboot-in-fedora-22/
Just wondering if this is a TLP default config issue as per that article
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Daniel
gnome-settings-daemon I would suggest looking at the code.
Budgie Desktop itself wouldn't create that that systemd rfkill folder.
If Gsd isn't creating that folder is there another gnome package that
does? Maybe UB is missing a 0ackage that we can add to our seeds
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