y2logs provide valuable information on hibernate and sleep issues?

Hi, can the provision (providing and deciphering) y2logs results provide valuable information on sleep and hibernation issues a machine may/be or is experiencing?

On 2024-12-14 20:49, -pj wrote:
Hi, can the provision (providing and deciphering) y2logs results provide valuable information on sleep and hibernation issues a machine may/be or is experiencing?
It gets the same information you can collect yourself. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from openSUSE 15.5 (Laicolasse))

On 12-14-2024 05:24PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-14 20:49, -pj wrote:
Hi, can the provision (providing and deciphering) y2logs results provide valuable information on sleep and hibernation issues a machine may/be or is experiencing?
It gets the same information you can collect yourself.
Thanks Carlos E. R.

On 2024-12-15 03:29, -pj wrote:
On 12-14-2024 05:24PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-14 20:49, -pj wrote:
Hi, can the provision (providing and deciphering) y2logs results provide valuable information on sleep and hibernation issues a machine may/be or is experiencing?
It gets the same information you can collect yourself.
Thanks Carlos E. R.
Oh, I forgot to mention that you can open the resulting archive and find out what files it collects. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.5 x86_64 at Telcontar)

On 12-15-2024 02:16PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-15 03:29, -pj wrote:
On 12-14-2024 05:24PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-14 20:49, -pj wrote:
Hi, can the provision (providing and deciphering) y2logs results provide valuable information on sleep and hibernation issues a machine may/ be or is experiencing?
It gets the same information you can collect yourself.
Thanks Carlos E. R.
Oh, I forgot to mention that you can open the resulting archive and find out what files it collects.
Hi, is this very useful when a machine has a troublesome hibernation or suspend issue or even some *deep* hidden issues? I guess earlier you have said that using the 'journal' one can see this information displayed also. I would like to deeply inspect the y2log files gathered from a DX4850 Gateway at some point soon if possible. The log files can be (sifted) through possible more easily with an editor such as kate perhaps? Asking for your thoughts on the situation. -Regards

On 2024-12-16 02:45, -pj wrote:
On 12-15-2024 02:16PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-15 03:29, -pj wrote:
On 12-14-2024 05:24PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-14 20:49, -pj wrote:
Hi, can the provision (providing and deciphering) y2logs results provide valuable information on sleep and hibernation issues a machine may/ be or is experiencing?
It gets the same information you can collect yourself.
Thanks Carlos E. R.
Oh, I forgot to mention that you can open the resulting archive and find out what files it collects.
Hi, is this very useful when a machine has a troublesome hibernation or suspend issue or even some *deep* hidden issues? I guess earlier you have said that using the 'journal' one can see this information displayed also. I would like to deeply inspect the y2log files gathered from a DX4850 Gateway at some point soon if possible. The log files can be (sifted) through possible more easily with an editor such as kate perhaps? Asking for your thoughts on the situation.
There are more logs in the system than the journal or syslog. This utility gets all the logs needed to study an issue related to YaST workings. I don't know if this is absolutely all the logs. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.5 x86_64 at Telcontar)

On 12-16-2024 02:11PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-16 02:45, -pj wrote:
On 12-15-2024 02:16PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-15 03:29, -pj wrote:
On 12-14-2024 05:24PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-14 20:49, -pj wrote:
Hi, can the provision (providing and deciphering) y2logs results provide valuable information on sleep and hibernation issues a machine may/ be or is experiencing?
It gets the same information you can collect yourself.
Thanks Carlos E. R.
Oh, I forgot to mention that you can open the resulting archive and find out what files it collects.
Hi, is this very useful when a machine has a troublesome hibernation or suspend issue or even some *deep* hidden issues? I guess earlier you have said that using the 'journal' one can see this information displayed also. I would like to deeply inspect the y2log files gathered from a DX4850 Gateway at some point soon if possible. The log files can be (sifted) through possible more easily with an editor such as kate perhaps? Asking for your thoughts on the situation.
There are more logs in the system than the journal or syslog. This utility gets all the logs needed to study an issue related to YaST workings. I don't know if this is absolutely all the logs.
"YaST workings" will not help with the hibernation and suspend issue then will it? Installation went seamlessly. Now just fighting with a bios that doesn't support s3 is what I think is going on. -Thanks

On 2024-12-17 10:28, -pj wrote:
On 12-16-2024 02:11PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-16 02:45, -pj wrote:
On 12-15-2024 02:16PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-15 03:29, -pj wrote:
...
There are more logs in the system than the journal or syslog. This utility gets all the logs needed to study an issue related to YaST workings. I don't know if this is absolutely all the logs.
"YaST workings" will not help with the hibernation and suspend issue then will it? Installation went seamlessly. Now just fighting with a bios that doesn't support s3 is what I think is going on.
They may coincidentally contain the needed logs, but I am not fully 100% sure. What I know is that they contains also other logs that you do not need for this. Basically what you need is the journal of the last boot. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.5 x86_64 at Telcontar)

I have been able to install openSUSE Tumbleweed on the machine, acer DX4850) labelled Gateway. I had some issues yesterday and prior with suspend and hibernate *not* functional on the machine after installation of Tumbleweed. I reinstalled the Operating System with UEFI boot enabled instead of vfat with MBR, I think it is? I had been attempting to use the expert installer. When reinstalling I followed the guided partitioning setup (I unfortunately am not advanced enough to attempt the expert partitioning like I did initially). The machine Hibernates now without any seen issues🫥 (using 8GiB on swap partition). The suspend feature is functioning correctly also at this time. This is a major hardware upgrade for me as it will replace a HP-405g1 desktop with AMD A4 cpu (1500ghz 4 core), with Radeon 8330 integrated graphics. There are some minor journal entries that can be inspected further but nothing as severe as I first thought it may be. -Thanks On 12-17-2024 05:57AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-17 10:28, -pj wrote:
On 12-16-2024 02:11PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-16 02:45, -pj wrote:
On 12-15-2024 02:16PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2024-12-15 03:29, -pj wrote:
...
There are more logs in the system than the journal or syslog. This utility gets all the logs needed to study an issue related to YaST workings. I don't know if this is absolutely all the logs.
"YaST workings" will not help with the hibernation and suspend issue then will it? Installation went seamlessly. Now just fighting with a bios that doesn't support s3 is what I think is going on.
They may coincidentally contain the needed logs, but I am not fully 100% sure. What I know is that they contains also other logs that you do not need for this.
Basically what you need is the journal of the last boot.
participants (2)
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-pj
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Carlos E. R.