Bonjour
demsg | grep apm me donne :
apm: BIOS version 1.2 Flags 0x03 (Driver version 1.13)
apm: disabled on user request.
dans /boot/config-2.2.18pre21 (qui je suppose est le fichier de conf du kernel)
CONFIG_APM=y
CONFIG_APM_DISABLE_BY_DEFAULT=y
Faut-il que je recompile le noyau pour avoir
Philippe Monroux wrote:
Bonjour
demsg | grep apm me donne :
apm: BIOS version 1.2 Flags 0x03 (Driver version 1.13)
apm: disabled on user request.
dans /boot/config-2.2.18pre21 (qui je suppose est le fichier de conf du kernel)
CONFIG_APM=y
CONFIG_APM_DISABLE_BY_DEFAULT=y
Faut-il que je
Philippe Monroux a écrit, samedi 6 octobre 2001, à 16:03 :
Bonjour
Bonjour.
demsg | grep apm me donne :
apm: BIOS version 1.2 Flags 0x03 (Driver version 1.13)
apm: disabled on user request.
dans /boot/config-2.2.18pre21 (qui je suppose est le fichier de conf du
kernel)
CONFIG_APM=y
boot : linux apm=on
ça marche :
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ dmesg | grep apm
apm: BIOS version 1.2 Flags 0x03 (Driver version 1.13)
je n'ai plus apm disable on user request
merci, ça m'évitera de recompiler.
Mais petite question: quand on a l'apm du kernel, vaut-il mieux
enlever l'apm du BIOS
Le Samedi 6 Octobre 2001 15:44, Jacques L'helgoualc'h a écrit :
Philippe Monroux a écrit, samedi 6 octobre 2001, à 16:03 :
CONFIG_APM=y
CONFIG_APM_DISABLE_BY_DEFAULT=y
Faut-il que je recompile le noyau pour avoir APM ?
Ou y a-t-il une solution moins compliquée ?
à tout hasard, avant
What!? And here I thought I was at the height of fashion with
my brand new PS/2 mouse. (The hell is a PS/2, anyway?).
Anyway, eventually I'll figure out how to dispense with the
mouse entirely and throw it happily out the window into the
lane. Lots of good things to be found in that lane.
-chris
Sadly, interrupt 12 is not listed in the power management section of
the BIOS setup. It goes, perversely, something like this:
Interrupt 3 [Primary Secondary Disabled]
Interrupt 4 [Primary Secondary Disabled]
Interrupt 5 [Primary Secondary Disabled]
Interrupt 6 [Primary Secondary Disabled]
maybe time to switch to a USB or serial mouse :)
or find a MB that supports that ...it may be worth emailing the company
that makes the MB(provided its not a real old one) and askin them about
that ..
nate
Krzys Majewski wrote:
Sadly, interrupt 12 is not listed in the power management
How can I disable the mouse interrupt for APM so that moving the mouse
does not resume the machine? (The mouse is on my desk, there are other
things on my desk, some of these things move occasionally, etc.)
I tried disabling IRQ4 in the apm section of the bios setup, which I
*think* is my mouse
On Sunday, 17 September 2000 at 14:31, Krzys Majewski wrote:
How can I disable the mouse interrupt for APM so that moving the mouse
does not resume the machine? (The mouse is on my desk, there are other
things on my desk, some of these things move occasionally, etc.)
I tried disabling IRQ4
, 2000 1:18 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: Jay Kelly; debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: APM Disable
According to the only package I found on Debian's site concerning APM
(apmd): The Debian default kernel does *not* contain APM support,
because it causes problems on some computers
of xset.
-Original Message-
From: Adam Shand [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, May 19, 2000 1:18 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: Jay Kelly; debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: APM Disable
According to the only package I found on Debian's site concerning APM
(apmd
my monitor shots off (led in front stays on, but no scan lines
show up even at maximum brightness) in console mode after
a few minuntes. xwindows ain't even running.
before running into debian i'd tried freebsd, and their
default install had a neat set of screensavers in console
mode that
Hello Guys,
After a few minutes my monitors shut due to APM. Where do I shutoff APM? I
checked the bios and didnt see anything dor the monitor.
Any sugestion would be great
Hoi Jay!
Jay After a few minutes my monitors shut due to APM. Where do I
Jay shutoff APM? I checked the bios and didnt see anything dor the
Jay monitor. Any sugestion would be great
How about setting your monitor's turn off time? Under X xset, under
console setterm can do the job for
Jay Kelly wrote:
Hello Guys,
After a few minutes my monitors shut due to APM. Where do I shutoff APM? I
checked the bios and didnt see anything dor the monitor.
Any sugestion would be great
--
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According to the only package I
According to the only package I found on Debian's site concerning APM
(apmd): The Debian default kernel does *not* contain APM support,
because it causes problems on some computers.
as of a few kernels ago in potato (at least a few months ago but i can't
remember when) apm support *is*
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