Francois,
I think this bug might be a side-effect of:
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=481766
In the above bug report Bart has prepared a pm-utils hook that might
help. Could you try integrating this script on your system and giving
it a test drive?
Bart may then consider
Dear Sheridan,
On Sunday, December 28, at 16:04, you wrote:
I think this bug might be a side-effect of:
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=481766
In the above bug report Bart has prepared a pm-utils hook that might
help. Could you try integrating this script on your
Francois Fleuret wrote:
It seems to work.
However, the situation seems more than fuzzy. Is there a clear reason
why this fix is needed ? I could not even figure out what script
puts the power management level to 128. The script /etc/init.d/hdparm
does not and /etc/acpi/*/90-hdparm.sh seem
I'll just clarify that the default value that is loaded is most likely
from within the hard drive firmware itself and that this will vary
according to each drive.
--
Regards,
Sheridan Hutchinson
sheri...@shezza.org
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Dear Sheridan,
On Sunday, December 28, at 18:31, you wrote:
I think the reason that we have this issue is because the value
that the power management value that is set is directly programmed
to the hard drive. When the machine suspends or hibernates the
drive is powered off and the
Francois Fleuret wrote:
Okay, it seems that it is what happens, at least on my Thinkpad X61s.
I removed acpi-support and laptop-mode-tools, put the computer to
suspend with 'echo mem /sys/power/state' and when the computer
resumed the state was indeed 128 again.
Good, this seems a nice
Dear Sheridan,
On Sunday, December 28, at 19:21, you wrote:
I understand that this is desired behaviour, a feature rather than
a bug so to speak. If the file was unmodified it would have been
removed.
There must be a misunderstanding.
The file /etc/laptop-mode/laptop-mode.conf was
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