On 03/20/2016 01:04 PM, Andrei Borzenkov wrote:
20.03.2016 22:59, John Andersen пишет:
On 03/20/2016 12:56 PM, Andrei Borzenkov wrote:
20.03.2016 22:40, Aaron Digulla пишет:
Am 20.03.2016 um 06:52 schrieb Andrei Borzenkov:
20.03.2016 01:20, Aaron Digulla пишет:
Am 17.03.2016 um 13:04 schrieb Anton Aylward: > regular readers will recall that I've mentioned before: > > I'm on 13.1 and few leading repositories, one of which is Kernel_Stable. I'm on 13.2 and updated 4.5.0-2.2 and I'm not so happy with it.
With 4.4 and 4.5, suspend is broken in some odd way. The machine will suspend once. When I suspend again, it will crash during resume. This might be because of a weird grub2 issue where grub will select the second entry (advanced options) and then the second entry in that menu.
Do you mean suspend to RAM (which is usually implied by using unqualified "suspend") or suspend to disk (which is normally called "hibernation" to disambiguate it)?
I'm hibernating.
In this case if grub2 picks the wrong kernel, this is a bug that at least needs investigating. Script that tries to detect which kernel to use is part of pm-utils I believe (in 13.2); consider opening bug report and posting number here.
Uninstall pm-utils. No longer needed.
Please explain what replaces it for the purpose discussed here.
Apparently handled all by systemd, via acpi, HOWEVER: systemd will attempt to use pm-utils scripts if it finds them, The maintainer of pm-utils posted his intent to stop maintiaing them back in 2013. He even stated pm-utils are flaky at best when systemd is in use. https://lists.opensuse.org/opensuse-factory/2013-11/msg00911.html There was a bug report requesting the removal of pm-utils scripts so that systemd would not find them and try to work with them: https://lists.opensuse.org/opensuse-bugs/2014-11/msg03640.html The Arch Wiki covers this in some detail - and seems to be accurate for 13.2 as well: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Power_management#Power_management_with_... Settings for overriding the systemd defaults appear in /etc/systemd/logind.conf but these are all commented out, because, (at least in the majority of cases) the defaults are good enough. -- After all is said and done, more is said than done. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org