Thanks a million for the info everybody. You've all given me a great place to start, so I'll try out some of these ideas and see what happens.
Mike On 2/23/06, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 2/23/06, Mike Myers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hey Iain, > > > > Thanks for the info! I kinda figured that klaptop did something > > different. It obviously didn't run the hibernate.conf scripts. I guess > > I can settle for running hibernate in the console, I mean, that's better > > than nothing, really. Klaptop and gkrellm at least still give a good > > indication of the battery status. Anyway, I'll start bugging the > > people on the suspend2 lists now about it. thanks a lot! > > If you have a standby button on your laptop, you can probably make it > do a standby or hibernate by merging acpid and modifying > /etc/acpi/default.sh. > > Personally, my system does a suspend-to-ram when I press the standby > button, and a suspend-to-disk when I press (momentarily) the power > button. My actions for the buttons look like: > > power) > if test -f /etc/.acpi_ignore_power; then > rm -f /etc/.acpi_ignore_power > >/dev/null 2>&1 > else > touch /etc/.acpi_ignore_power > /usr/sbin/hibernate > fi > ;; > sleep) /usr/sbin/hibernate -F > /etc/hibernate/standby.conf > ;; > > -Richard > > -- > [email protected] mailing list > > -- Mike Myers [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.yaay.us -- [email protected] mailing list

