On Tue, 2006-05-02 at 10:18 -0500, Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote: > Aaron Konstam wrote: > > I asked this question at the end of another long message where it > > probably was not seen. So I am trying again. > > > > This is no doubt a stupid question but I have to ask. Why can't we > > implement the suspend event by the lines: > > event=button/sleep > > action=/usr/bin/acpitools -s > > > > This causes the suspension when you hit the suspend button but when you > > resume by pushing the power button the running of the machine quickly > > locks up. What is the reason? > I am not an expert on this, but from what I understand, there is > some housekeeping that needs to be done before suspending the > machine, and some preparations that need to be done so that hardware > that doesn't suspend properly gets re-initialized when you come out > of suspend. For example, on my laptop, the video has to be change > from X to a VT before suspending, and changed back when coming out > of suspend. For some people, the sound drivers have to be removed > before going into suspend, and restored afterwards. Network > connections almost always need to be restarted as well. The way I > understand it, running "/usr/bin/acpitools -s" only handles putting > the processor(s) in suspend mode, and does not take care of the > housekeeping. It is intended for use inside a suspend script. > > Mikkel > -- > > Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, > for thou art crunchy and taste good with Ketchup! Ok, but as I say in a separate message how exactly does one wake the machine up. I used the script that was posted here which dos the supend things you indicate but i can't wake the machine up. How is that done? Why does fedora not come with a suspend and wake up function that does the right thigs? Noy just because this is built in to Windows but it because it makes sense. For example how does one find out that: echo mem > /sys/power/state will cause the processor to suspend. Is there a similar wake up sequence. -- Aaron Konstam <akonstam@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>