Hi! > > > > ...but there's enough -- or at least it was enough to fit previous > > > > versions. 32-bit machine, so it has highmem. > > > > > > > > System is in console mode, very lightly loaded. > > > > > > > > Mem: 2054716k total, 736548k used, 1318168k free, 15368k buffers > > > > Swap: 779148k total, 2360k used, 776788k free, 546388k cached > > > > > > Well, the swap is rather in short supply. Below the 50% of RAM recommendation. > > > > Well, but the biggest image we can write is not 50% of RAM, but 50% of > > lowmem... > > No, it is not. It's been 50% of RAM for a couple of years now. :-) > > > > PM: thaw of devices complete after 539.577 msecs > > > > PM: writing image. > > > > PM: Free swap pages: 194166 > > > > PM: Not enough free swap > > > > Restarting tasks ... > > > > > > > > Aha, and it is the new default /sys/power/image_size .. setting it to > > > > 0 lets machine hibernate. I guess the new default is very wrong for > > > > highmem machine... > > > > > > The old default did the wrong thing for everyone with sufficient swap (it made > > > the OOM code trigger every time while preparing to create an image), so I think > > > the new one it's better overall. > > > > OOM? No... image_size of 0 should have written "as small image as > > possible"; slow, but should not OOM. > > This is not how it works now. We preallocate memory to create memory pressure, > so if image_size is 0, we need to preallocate until we run out of pages that > can be freed, which means OOM. That's bad, right? Instead of killing Anyway, it does not work at all. root@amd:~# echo 300000000 > /sys/power/image_size root@amd:~# echo disk > /sys/power/state -su: echo: write error: No space left on device (And dmesg full of failed allocations). I can write 400M there, and it fails, too. Pavel -- (english) http://www.livejournal.com/~pavelmachek (cesky, pictures) http://atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~pavel/picture/horses/blog.html _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm