On 5/5/26 16:06, King Beowulf wrote:
On 5/5/26 09:32, Dick Steffens wrote:
What are the more common files in which one would put something to add
to the normal running of Xubuntu 22.04?

A few months ago I made some changes based on a recommendation from
someone on this list. I put in more than desired and now always get an
error message every time the machine wakes up from screen saved
condition. I'd like to find my mistaken entry and get rid of it. It's
not a big problem, just an annoyance.

The error message is:

Power Manager
GDBus.Error:org.freedesktop.login1.SleepVerbNotSupported: Sleep verb
"suspend" not supported.


Since Xfce is the same pretty much anywhere, for this error (it does say
"Power Manager"), I would 1st check the Power Manager applet in the Xfce
Settngs Manager program.  This is typically found:

Mneu -> Settings -> Settings Manager

or

Menu -> Settings -> Power Manager

Check the settings. Suspend uses RAM, but hibernate is "suspend to disk"
for which you will need swap space at least as large as the RAM. Also,
make sure you only have ONE screen saver active, and check those
settijgs as well.
Power Manager Settings

General
Buttons
    When power button is pressed     [Ask]
    When sleep button is pressed        [Do nothing]
    When hibernate button is pressed    [Do nothing]
    When battery button is presesed    [Do nothing]
    Brightness step count                    [10]

Appearance
    Status notifications                (O __ )
    System tray icon                    (O __ )

System
System power saving
    System sleep mode        [Suspend ]
    When inactive for            (20 minutes )

Security
    [ ] Lock screen when system is going to sleep

Display
Display power management        ( __ O)
    Blank after                        (15 minutes)
Put to sleep after                 (Never)
Switch off after                    (Never)

Brightness reduction
    On inactivity reduce to            80%
    Reduce after                        Never



Also, you are using systemd, so you will need to check to if you did
something weird there. Since I do not use systemd for anything I cannot
comment further.

Nothing definitive, but several lines of research to pursue when I have time.

Thanks.

--
Regards,

Dick Steffens

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