Hi Alexander,
Thank you for your reply.
I'm right using "Save Machine State" in VirtualBox. And the 7.0.20 install
pack
was downloaded just from its official website so I have no idea why it could
be
a unstable version instead of a stable one.
Actually, I just want to use hibernate instead of save-machine-state to
shorten
restoring time. So if there's no solution, just let it go.
And if there's any one interested about this issue, you could just sand
e-mail
to VirtualBox.
Thanks again for your kind and helpful reply.
Best Regards,
Richard
------------------ Origin ------------------
FROM:
"Alexander V. Makartsev"
<[email protected]>;
Time: 2024,9,26(Thu) 11:45pm
To: "debian-user"<[email protected]>;
Subject: Re: Re?? Is there any way to STD in Debian?
On 26.09.2024 19:36, YOYO wrote:
Hi Alexander, Eben, and everyone in list,
Thank you for your replies.
The Debian 12 is running in VirtulBox 7.0.20. And I only
assigned 2048 MB RAM to it.
I'm pretty sure that I have setup a big enough SWAP of
around 8 GB when installing Debian 12.
When I click "Sleep" button in Windows running in VirtualBox
6.x,
the virtual machine will light the screen up again once the screen
is off. However, in this case, Debian 12 doesn't light the screen
up
nor power-off the virtual machine. So the virtual machine goes into
a state that OS is not running, power is still on. And I have no
way
to wake the OS up. All I can do is to fouce power-off and re-start
it,
just to found all running tasks gone.
I don't use VirtualBox and I think this is VirtualBox issue not
Debian issue.
VirtualBox is not even in Stable repos:
$ rmadison virtualbox
virtualbox | 7.0.20-dfsg-1 | unstable-debug/contrib | source
virtualbox | 7.0.20-dfsg-1 | unstable/contrib
| source, amd64
Maybe it is better to use a "save machine state" feature of the
VirtualBox instead?
https://www.virtualbox.org/manual/topics/Introduction.html#intro-save-machine-state
--
With kindest regards, Alexander. Debian - The universal
operating system https://www.debian.org