On 01/09/2023 18:08, Tom Browder wrote:
When switching the KVM between the Win and Deb hosts, I could see the
mouse was not getting power (no sensor light) nor was the keyboard or
monitor screen. So that is probably why I could not wake up the Debian
PC by stirring the mouse or hitting a key.
On Fri, Sep 1, 2023 at 06:08 Tom Browder wrote:
My conclusion: I need to find out which sleep modes turn off power to the
> external input devices.
>
I forgot to mention that my problem child is all SSD, no moving parts (from
SilentPC).
-Tom
On Fri, Sep 1, 2023 at 01:15 The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2023-08-31 at 13:03, zithro wrote:
...
Tom, does your version of that file not include a comment with that same
> information?
Yes, and they are uncommented and set to 'no'.
So far all seems to be working. Now I need to study and understa
On 2023-08-31 at 13:03, zithro wrote:
> On 31 Aug 2023 14:17, Tom Browder wrote:
>
>> Note: The systemd "/etc/systemd/sleep.conf" file has all entries commented
>> out.
>
> Take care, commenting may NOT be the same as disabling/setting to NO !
>
> Each software has its own rules, but _usually_
On Thu, Aug 31, 2023 at 16:20 zithro wrote:
> On 31 Aug 2023 14:17, Tom Browder wrote:
> > Note: The systemd "/etc/systemd/sleep.conf" file has all entries
> commented
> > out.
>
> Take care, commenting may NOT be the same as disabling/setting to NO !
>
> Each software has its own rules, but _us
On Thu, Aug 31, 2023 at 11:50 AM Michel Verdier wrote:
> On 2023-08-31, Tom Browder wrote:
> > Is there a way to definitely deactivate all OS-related power changes so the
> > power button has only two functions (on/off)?
>
> To disable all sleep/suspend/hibernation I put in /etc/systemd/sleep.conf
On 31 Aug 2023 14:17, Tom Browder wrote:
Note: The systemd "/etc/systemd/sleep.conf" file has all entries commented
out.
Take care, commenting may NOT be the same as disabling/setting to NO !
Each software has its own rules, but _usually_ when you comment out the
lines, the app built-in defa
On Thu, Aug 31, 2023 at 08:12 Marco wrote:
> Am 31.08.2023 schrieb Tom Browder :
>
> > Is there a way to definitely deactivate all OS-related power changes
> > so the power button has only two functions (on/off)?
>
> You can disable sleep/hibernate at all.
>
> sudo systemctl mask sleep.target sus
On 2023-08-31, Tom Browder wrote:
> Is there a way to definitely deactivate all OS-related power changes so the
> power button has only two functions (on/off)?
To disable all sleep/suspend/hibernation I put in /etc/systemd/sleep.conf
[Sleep]
AllowSuspend=no
AllowHibernation=no
AllowSuspendThenHi
Am 31.08.2023 schrieb Tom Browder :
> Is there a way to definitely deactivate all OS-related power changes
> so the power button has only two functions (on/off)?
You can disable sleep/hibernate at all.
sudo systemctl mask sleep.target suspend.target hibernate.target
hybrid-sleep.target
My main Debian host is going to sleep and I can't awaken it without
holdiing the power button down for some period.
We have had some neighborhood power issues recently, and I have been
manually powering down while away for a few short trips (no UPS yet,
either, but my Windows box next to the Debia
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