On Wed, Mar 20, 2013 at 9:34 AM, Rogan Creswick <[email protected]> wrote:
> It does seem to be related to the lid switch, or the way the lid switch > puts the system to sleep. If I suspend the machine via the power icon in > the xfce panel, then I can close the lid (while it's suspended) and opening > the lid wakes the machine correctly (and it stays woken up). > If you 1) put laptop to sleep with lid close, 2) wake laptop with lid open event, wait for suspend, close lid again, 3) wake laptop with lid open event... Does the laptop go back to sleep again? If so, open and close the lid a few more times and then try using the power button to wake it. Does it only take one power button press to keep it awake, or does the system queue up additional suspend requests? I'm trying to figure out the lid close is creating multiple sleep events, or if it's the lid open or resume process that's triggering the subsequent sleeps. Do you have an external monitor connected when performing the suspend/resume? Does it make a difference? Can you try suspending the system while the dbus-monitor is running and see if it produces anything interesting? You should run each of these commands separately during the suspend (I'm not sure what you're using so only one might give something useful): dbus-monitor --session "interface='org.freedesktop.PowerManagement'" dbus-monitor --system "interface='org.freedesktop.DeviceKit'" dbus-monitor --system "interface='org.freedesktop.UPower'" If the above doesn't work, try without the interface (might produce a lot of noise): dbus-monitor --system dbus-monitor --session If you have the "acpi_listen" command installed, try running that and then suspending to see what that produces. Also Is there a way in XFCE power manager to disable suspend on lid close? If so, and you disable suspend, does closing the lid still trigger a suspend? _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
