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

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