No luck with that here either, it would be very handy to have. But then I'm using an HDMI->VGA adapter and my monitor is ancient. I think the standard was that when horizontal and vertical sync pulses both go away the monitor's supposed to immediately switch off or after a delay period. An adapter shouldn't interfere with that. Never happens though.
I installed some extra stuff (maybe, it was 6 months or more ago): pi2# apropos dpms DPMSCapable (3) - returns the DPMS capability of the X server DPMSDisable (3) - disables DPMS on the specified display DPMSEnable (3) - enables DPMS on the specified display DPMSForceLevel (3) - forces a DPMS capable display into the specified power... DPMSGetTimeouts (3) - retrieves the timeout values used by the X server for ... DPMSGetVersion (3) - returns the version of the DPMS extension implemented ... DPMSInfo (3) - returns information about the current DPMS state DPMSQueryExtension (3) - queries the X server to determine the availability o... DPMSSetTimeouts (3) - permits applications to set the timeout values used by... pi2# Some of those look like functions to be called from C in a program. This is on a Pi 3B under Raspbian Jessie. Searching in the Pi forums for dpms gets a bunch of hits, but different people are looking for different things like how to keep the monitor always on. https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/ I wanted to turn it completely off, including the backlight. My guess is that it has to do with the GPU and how well X functions are/aren't implemented. If you're in Raspbian take a look at tvservice (no man page) which seems to be about the only thing that connects to the GPU. I just did tvservice --off and had to ssh in from another box, short of rebooting. Backlight was still on though. Unplugging the monitor's power cord and plugging back in did nothing so it didn't *really* turn the monitor off. tvservice is also unique in letting you change video modes on the fly, otherwise you need to put a change into /boot/config.txt and reboot. Straight Debian on a Pi, I've no idea. X needs to talk to the GPU better. On 1/8/17, Gene Heskett <ghesk...@shentel.net> wrote: > Greetings folks; > > Running LXDE. > > And xset dpms q returns: > DPMS (Energy Star): > Standby: 450 Suspend: 600 Off: 900 > DPMS is Enabled > Monitor is On > > At the end of its report, and the monitor was manually powered down when > I left the area around 6 pm last night, so it obviously has no knowledge > of the monitors real status. > > Is my install missing some utility X11 thing? > > Thanks. > > Cheers, Gene Heskett > -- > "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: > soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." > -Ed Howdershelt (Author) > Genes Web page <http://geneslinuxbox.net:6309/gene> > > -- Credit is the root of all evil. - AB1JX