Hi all,

        I was wrong... with APM it works, very well indeed.. But with APM I 
lost 
some things, like the /proc/acpi. I would try swpsusp but it has been said 
that it is very buggy, and doesnt like XFS (my filesystem...).
        I would suggest that you try again. I only had to compile a kernel with 
APM 
support, apt-get install apmd, apt-get install lphdisk, create a suspend 
partition and it works. Now it's time to try with ACPI :-)

        

On Friday 16 August 2002 00:13, Andre Berger wrote:
> * Christian Lyra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 2002-08-15 23:00 -0400:
> > Hi all,
> >
> >     No more windows on this machine.... so anyone know how to do suspend to
> > disk on this machine? I did a new "suspend" partition with lphdisk, but
> > maybe missing something because I'm not getting suspend to work right. I
> > tried with a ACPI kernel and with a APM enabled kernel without success.
> > What's the trick?
>
> I've tried this on the 1220 too, it just doesn't work probably due to
> a buggy BIOS. I wasn't able to find a newer version on the net, so I
> finally gave up :( If you find one, please tell me so.
>
> If you're adventurous and using a journaling file system to prevent
> data loss, you can probably take the risk and suspend the by hand.
>
> -Andre

-- 
Christian Lyra
POP-PR - RNP

  Thus spake the master programmer: 
  ``You can demonstrate a program for a corporate executive, but you can't 
make him computer literate.'' 
                                                The Tao Of Programing

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