On Monday 15 January 2007 06:33, Karasyov, Konstantin A wrote: > The fan device FAN1 defines object FN01 as its power resource. _STA > method of FN01 always return 0x01, i.e. resource is on. So the fan > driver is unable to turn the fan on, because it thinks that it is > already in that state. The code looks like this: int acpi_bus_set_power(acpi_handle handle, int state) { ... if (!device->flags.force_power_state) { if (device->power.state == ACPI_STATE_UNKNOWN) acpi_bus_get_power(device->handle, &device->power.state) if (state == device->power.state) { return 0; /* already at desired state */ } ... acpi_power_transition(device, state); Why do we bother with the "acpi_bus_get_power" at all? The problem Matthew is seeing wouldn't happen at all if we just deleted everything in the force_power_state block. Then we could execute _ON, _PS0, etc for a device that is already on. Does that cause bad things to happen? I assume the fan probably works as desired under Windows, so they probably do something like this. Bjorn - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html