On 2014-12-08 21:21, Aaron Digulla wrote:
All I want to know is how I can disable this check; I don't care who else is logged into my computer (I might even have a remote login from the server in the basement), I want it to hibernate without question when I'm telling it to - I don't want to climb into the basement in the middle of the night just to be able to suspend.
I hibernate using "pm-hibernate" command in a terminal opened as root, so I bypass those checks, I believe. (I had some other problem when trying to hibernate as plain user in xfce, so I use that trick routinely). A year ago the session would refuse to hibernate if a local user had a session, but not a remote user. I pointed this out. Now they detect both situations, instead of none, as I asked. The situation can be specially dramatic on a laptop with low battery. By the way: an ssh session can survive hibernation: depends how long it stays dormant. At worst, you could get a question asked what to do. Or pop a warning to remote users about what is going to happen. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 13.1 x86_64 "Bottle" at Telcontar)