On Saturday, 3 of May 2008, Jay Cliburn wrote: > On Sat, 3 May 2008 15:09:01 +0200 > "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Set your BIOS setting to "Auto" and boot the kernel with > > init=/bin/bash. You should get a root shell as a result of this. > > From this shell run: > > > > # mount /proc > > # mount /sys > > # echo 8 > /proc/sys/kernel/printk > > # eche mem > /sys/power/state > > > > and see if it suspends. If it does, try to wake it up and see what > > happens. > > The system suspends and does not spontaneously resume. That's an > improvement. > > Unfortunately I can't awaken it. It's a desktop system and pressing > keys, shaking the mouse, or momentarily pressing the power switch has no > effect, despite setting these things in BIOS. (There are some APM > settings in there that selectively enable waking on various events.) > > Ctrl-alt-del actually did cause a reboot, though. > > As an aside, I finally got wake-on-lan working, so the reason I came to > linux-pm in the first place has been satisfied. I don't *need* > suspend/resume to work on this system, however, if you think > the suspend issue I'm having is worth pursuing, I'm perfectly willing > to press on. Your call. Well, I'm afraid we'd end up debugging your ACPI tables, so it's probably better to give up if the feature is not really needed. Thanks, Rafael _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm