On Tue 28. Oct - 12:22:13, Carlos E. R. wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1
Content-ID: <alpine.LSU.2.00.0810281218430.4842@nimrodel.valinor>
On Tuesday, 2008-10-28 at 00:57 -0300, Cristian Rodríguez wrote:
Vincent Untz escribió:
Le dimanche 26 octobre 2008, à 10:36 +0900, Magnus Boman a écrit :
Looking at the default for GNOME Power Manager AC settings, if a timeout is set, it will suspend. This is most likely an oversight and I'll pursue this to get it fixed.
This might not be an oversight -- you'd need to ask the person who implemented the Energy Star stuff.
I hope it is, forcing to hibernate by default, without asking looks plain wrong.
if this mis^W^Wbehaviuor is intented, must be documented in big letters how to disable it in the release notes.
Absolutely!
You (Novell) should remember that a system must be tested before been allowed to hibernate. And for compliance, certified, too: openSUSE can not be certified.
Default configuration should be to _suspend_ (the fast one), not to hibernate. And we have a whitelist for all working machines which are able to _suspend_. For desktops, I guess these are still quite a few.
Question: What will happen if the user has opened files on external USB media, he leaves for a long coffe, and on return the machine is hibernated?
I have a Bugzilla about that since ages: in this case the usb storage system crashes. The mount is there, but the disk is not accesible. Opened files woud be damaged.
Different problem, however a problem ;-)
Has Novell tested, solved, and certified that this works correctly now?
Do you have the bug id? Regards, Holger -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-factory+help@opensuse.org