OK, I fixed it by editing
ee /usr/pkg//etc/kdm/kdmrc
HaltCmd= /sbin/shutdown -p now
Best,
Dave
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 11:47 AM, Francisco Reyes li...@stringsutils.comwrote:
Dragon Fly writes:
Well I got 34 OS on my box with 5 BSDs and I dont get this with other OS.
Prior to kde3.5
On 1/3/2011 4:27, Dragon Fly wrote:
Hi,
I can't shutdown the system from kde control panel or by shutdown -p
now. The system halts but it wont shut down.
Is ACPI loaded?
Sascha
Hi,
I can't shutdown the system from kde control panel or by shutdown -p now.
The system halts but it wont shut down.
Please help.
Best,
Dave
Dragon Fly writes:
I can't shutdown the system from kde control panel or by shutdown -p now.
The system halts but it wont shut down.
New install?
Did it used to work?
If a new install of Dfly, have you had any other OS previouly installed that
honored shutdown of the hardware?
Although
On Sat, Nov 25, 2006 at 08:04:26PM +, David Murray wrote:
I'm trying to get the front-panel power button to shut the system down
(cleanly). Currently when I press it, nothing discernible happens (no
console messages, nothing logged, and certainly no shutdown).
Some of machines around me
Hi Tomokazu,
On 28/11/06 8:59 am, YONETANI Tomokazu wrote:
On Sat, Nov 25, 2006 at 08:04:26PM +, David Murray wrote:
I'm trying to get the front-panel power button to shut the system
down (cleanly).
Pressing the power button delivers an interrupt to the acpi driver...
so the first step
logged, and certainly no shutdown).
shutdown -p now, and
acpiconf -s 5
You might try:
sysctl -w hw.acpi.power_button_state=S5
Johannes
both work just fine, which makes me think nothing's fundamentally broken.
My BIOS offers me either soft off or suspend for the front panel
button. I
On 26/11/06 1:29 pm, Johannes Hofmann wrote:
David Murray [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm trying to get the front-panel power button to shut the system
down (cleanly). Currently when I press it, nothing discernible happens
shutdown -p now, and
acpiconf -s 5
You might try:
sysctl -w
On Sun, November 26, 2006 9:50 am, David Murray wrote:
On 26/11/06 1:29 pm, Johannes Hofmann wrote:
Thanks for the suggestion, Johannes. However, it was already set to S5
(I should have said so in my original post).
I'm not sure if I've missed some piece of configuration necessary to get
On 26/11/06 3:25 pm, Justin C. Sherrill wrote:
I realize I'm asking about basic things, but it's always good to be sure:
Absolutely!
your power button works to turn the system on, correct?
Yes, I couldn't start the system otherwise! :-)
And it is wired to the motherboard?
Yes, and
Would anyone be good enough to help a DragonFly newbie with an ACPI
question?
I'm trying to get the front-panel power button to shut the system down
(cleanly). Currently when I press it, nothing discernible happens (no
console messages, nothing logged, and certainly no shutdown).
shutdown
Rahul Siddharthan wrote:
x
I tried upstart on my laptop and got the fastest console login I have
ever seen: within a couple of seconds of the kernel loading, I could
log in to my home directory, even as it continued to probe other
hardware, connect to the network, etc. The graphical login
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am puzzled hat nobody mentions
the most widely used OS which has parallel boot, it is WindowsXP. On my
machine which triple boots Windows, BSD and Linux, it is Windows which
boots faster by fast, in fact it takes half the time of unices to be in
graphical mode able to
I've long had a question on the shutdown process. Linux systems run a
separate shutdown script for every process that was started at boot,
and can take a minute or two to shutdown. FreeBSD and Dragonfly, as
far as I can tell, just kill all processes, flush buffers, unmount
filesystems
Rahul Siddharthan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've long had a question on the shutdown process. Linux systems run a
separate shutdown script for every process that was started at boot,
and can take a minute or two to shutdown. FreeBSD and Dragonfly, as
far as I can tell, just kill all
Rahul Siddharthan wrote:
I've long had a question on the shutdown process. Linux systems run a
separate shutdown script for every process that was started at boot,
and can take a minute or two to shutdown. FreeBSD and Dragonfly, as
far as I can tell, just kill all processes, flush buffers
On Thu, Sep 07, 2006 at 10:28:44AM +, Rahul Siddharthan wrote:
I've long had a question on the shutdown process. Linux systems run a
separate shutdown script for every process that was started at boot,
and can take a minute or two to shutdown. FreeBSD and Dragonfly, as
far as I can tell
Bill Hacker wrote:
Rahul Siddharthan wrote:
The question came to my mind again when I saw Ubuntu's specification
for shutdown in their future versions:
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Teardown
Basically, it says the majority of init scripts needn't be called at
shutdown because the processes can
Joerg Sonnenberger wrote:
On Thu, Sep 07, 2006 at 10:28:44AM +, Rahul Siddharthan wrote:
I've long had a question on the shutdown process. Linux systems run a
separate shutdown script for every process that was started at boot,
and can take a minute or two to shutdown. FreeBSD
before shutdown..)
Nope... if the burst of activity happens while (as I said) the machine
is powering off, something is seriously amiss. On linux, the sounds
die away and the machine is silent for a second or two BEFORE poweroff.
It might issue a stop command to ATA drives before calling
Just to clarify, the rc.shutdown script uses rcorder with the -k
shutdown option for /etc/rc.d/*.
pkgbox:/home/reed grep 'KEYWORD.*shutdown' /etc/rc.d/*
/etc/rc.d/cron:# KEYWORD: shutdown
/etc/rc.d/inetd:# KEYWORD: shutdown
/etc/rc.d/ipfs:# KEYWORD: shutdown
/etc/rc.d/local:# KEYWORD: shutdown
stopped. I don't get
this sound with linux or windows.
I had an older system that would do this with the fans; I never saw a
negative effect. I assumed it was some setting that was tripped as
systems were shutdown, which made the fans react as if the temperature was
too high - perhaps
that was tripped as
systems were shutdown, which made the fans react as if the temperature was
too high - perhaps the equivalent of a burst of static.
I have a computer on which the fan-controls does not start working until
somewhere post BIOS, before that they run for full. Might be something
like
On 2006-09-07 18:46, Oliver Fromme wrote:
PS: By the way, recently someone suggested in a FreeBSD
mailing list that start scripts could be run in parallel
if they don't depend on each other (which rcorder(8) can
easily find out). It would probably speed up booting.
However, I don't know if
On Thu, September 7, 2006 12:46 pm, Oliver Fromme wrote:
PS: By the way, recently someone suggested in a FreeBSD
mailing list that start scripts could be run in parallel
if they don't depend on each other (which rcorder(8) can
easily find out). It would probably speed up booting.
However,
On Thu, Sep 07, 2006 at 07:35:24PM +0200, Erik Wikström wrote:
On 2006-09-07 18:46, Oliver Fromme wrote:
PS: By the way, recently someone suggested in a FreeBSD
mailing list that start scripts could be run in parallel
if they don't depend on each other (which rcorder(8) can
easily find out).
this with the fans; I never saw a
negative effect. I assumed it was some setting that was tripped as
systems were shutdown, which made the fans react as if the temperature was
too high - perhaps the equivalent of a burst of static.
I never saw a negative effect either. It was just an alarming sound.
I have
Justin C. Sherrill wrote:
PS: By the way, recently someone suggested in a FreeBSD
mailing list that start scripts could be run in parallel
if they don't depend on each other (which rcorder(8) can
easily find out). It would probably speed up booting.
However, I don't know if anyone is
saw wrote @ Tue, 09 May 2006 12:34:38 +0200:
Thomas Schlesinger wrote:
Hi,
when I shutdown my notebook (ASUS V6800), I get a message to power it of on
console, but it doesn't happen automagically as in Linux. I believe to
remember, that I've read somewhere something about an sysctl
:Or just use the power button.
:
:--
:Andy
Yup. When ACPI works, anyhow. Its a godsend for turnkey systems, I
can just tell the computer illiterates to hit the power button and
wait for the thing to power itself off.
-Matt
On 2006-05-09 12:29, Thomas Schlesinger wrote:
Hi,
when I shutdown my notebook (ASUS V6800), I get a message to power it of on
console, but it doesn't happen automagically as in Linux. I believe to
remember, that I've read somewhere something about an sysctl switch which
enables
Am Dienstag, 9. Mai 2006 12:34 schrieb Sascha Wildner:
Thomas Schlesinger wrote:
Hi,
when I shutdown my notebook (ASUS V6800), I get a message to power it of
on console, but it doesn't happen automagically as in Linux. I believe
to remember, that I've read somewhere something about
Sascha Wildner wrote:
Thomas Schlesinger wrote:
Hi,
when I shutdown my notebook (ASUS V6800), I get a message to power it
of on console, but it doesn't happen automagically as in Linux. I
believe to remember, that I've read somewhere something about an
sysctl switch which enables
On 2006-05-10 00:12, Joseph Garcia wrote:
Sascha Wildner wrote:
Thomas Schlesinger wrote:
Hi,
when I shutdown my notebook (ASUS V6800), I get a message to power it
of on console, but it doesn't happen automagically as in Linux. I
believe to remember, that I've read somewhere something
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