-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Monday, 2008-12-22 at 02:12 -0000, Rob OpenSuSE wrote:
2008/12/22 Michael S. Dunsavage
: On Mon, 2008-12-22 at 02:34 +0100, Carlos E. R. wrote:
Not yet... I suppose that reinstalling grub would work, but the best thing would be to know what hibernate changes and undo it.
You can prevent 'resume' simply by altering the resume device and writing 'noresume' there.
_if_ menu.lst is read, and I think it isn't.
The thing is a red herring though. There's a feature in GRUB that lets you tell it which option to boot up, it's saved to a disk block, similarly GRUB can change it's default to the last booted kernel.
Ah. This looks like it. Do you know the name of this feature, so that I can search for it in the documentation?
That's what GRUB will be reading, and instant booting from. Resume occurs later in kernel boot, and (unfortunately) you can screw things up royally by booting into a different OS inbetween.
Ha! I know: I've been bitten by that one. Twice. Or having several grub menus and starting the wrong one... and remember that usually the same swap partition is shared by different linuxes. Ouch, it hurts. Booting to a totally different OS can be "safe", though.
Perhaps that was changed, conflating the two features in end user mind, but if you are shutting the machine down to power off, stuff is not saved to resume space.
I've both done s2disk (works) and halt (works). But when I boot next, it always boot to the default kernel (I think it is the default kernel, too fast to read). There is a file, "/boot/grub/default", that contains +++ 16384 ++- But it is dated today. - -- Cheers, Carlos E. R. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAklPA/wACgkQtTMYHG2NR9WWQACfQh2nqITPCRdawblqda/AXjdh pZQAoJihdi3mwH8HPSQf0z7ApbfgsR+0 =/mTD -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org