On 08/17/12 21:17, Polytropon wrote: > On Fri, 17 Aug 2012 20:44:10 -0600, Gary Aitken wrote: >> On 08/17/12 19:05, Polytropon wrote: >>>> 2. When my machine hung (could not rlogin or ping), I powered >>>> off and rebooted. >>> >>> Does the machine have a "soft power button" and it is configured >>> to issue a "shutdown -p now" (which is quite common)? When you >>> have access to the machine, try that. Even if the machine does >>> not accept network logins, this mechanism might still work. >> >> Hmmm. It has a "soft" power button; have to hold it down 5 sec >> or so to power off. > > That's the "override time" for a "hard power off". If you only > press it once, it should issue "shutdown -p now", but of course > this only works if the system is still responding. Even if the > keyboard input and screen output, as well as networking services > stopped to work, this _might_ still be effective.
>> Those things can be configured to issue a command that will actually >> get executed without a login? > > Sure, it has been working for many years. Check the BIOS setup, > some machines can be configured to what the button does. The > default setup of FreeBSD should perform the correct action via > ACPI. > > In the past, it also worked with APM. In that case, /etc/apmd.conf > would contain the command executed when the button was pressed. > On APM-capable machines, the PSU would be switched off, just like > today's ACPI-based systems. Of course that only works with ATX > power supplies, the AT ones usually had a mechanical switch. Ah, I see. The driver raises a signal the system can respond to. >> I assume you're talking about a bios option? How does that work? > > I've seen BIOS setups allowing different actions for the button, > from "go to sleep" to "soft power off" or "hard power off". That > action (hard power off) is taken when pressing the button for > about 5 seconds. The OS can NOT deal with that case. > >> sounds like magic of some sort... Or is this a whole login >> sequence with the shutdown at the end? > > No, it's a system action using ACPI. No magic involved. :-) I'll look at it next time I reboot. Reading the bios manual, it looks like acpi 2.0 support is disabled by default, which may be where it is; otherwise I don't see anything obvious. Thanks. _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"