I tried with "apm=off" but it still hung. I will change grub anyways to have "apm=off" since the machine is 2005 vintage and I believe that it used acpi in SUSE101. I think this is somehow connected to the networking. If I do not configure the Ethernet ports, the machine stays up for hours. Once there is heavy network traffic then the machine hangs. I tried the online update to see if this would fix teh problem; but the machine hung in the middle of the update which corrupted the system and the update process. I had to re-install fresh from the DVD with a re-format of the disk partition. Then booted in failsafe mode to do the online-update. The problem still exists but at least this the up-to date version. I will now try to boot with nomodeset option as I found a forum posting that refers to a VGA driver problem. - Bruce. On Wednesday 19 January 2011 01:04:35 Nick LeRoy wrote:
What type of information should I collect to find the problem? I would really like to fix this.
I'd look at the apm kernel options, most likely apm=off. Try booting the default kernel, but add "apm=off" to the command line (grub let's you add options to the kernel command line at boot time). If this solves the problem (as I suspect that it will), the modify /etc/grub/menu.lst and add "apm=off" to the kernel boot for the default kernel (probably under the Desktop or default sections).
Hope this helps.
-Nick
-- Bruce Samhaber Tel/Fax: 613-724-5987 112 Kenora St. Cell: 613-297-6961 Ottawa, Ontario K1Y 3L1 mailto: bruce.samhaber@samhaber.ca http://www.samhaber.ca -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org