Hi, Danny Milosavljevic <dan...@scratchpost.org> writes:
> Hi, > >> I know more people than just me are using libreboot here, do you have >> any problems with suspend and recovery? > > I have a X200 and some time after waking up from suspend on the first larger > disk access it hangs, losing all the dirty sector payload in the process. > This is Guix-specific, the same machine works just fine on Ubuntu. > >> Following this[0] thread you can see the problems I have with libreboot >> latest (latest at the time of flashing) experimental release. > >> Can you test (if your system is already libreboot testing, if not wait >> for either the next release candidate which should happen soon or be >> ready to unbrick it) and provide logs so that we can fix it in our >> system? > > I don't update the BIOS (I disabled the ability to do so in the chip > settings). > > Given the ability for an update to brick, I only flashed it once before there > was any data on the machine - and I don't plan on doing it again on this > machine. > > I do actual work on this machine and were it not booting it would be much > worse than wakeup not working. > > I sometimes non-thinkingly close the laptop lid so it crashes from time to > time. So if logs help I can provide those. > > Also, dmidecode stopped working some time ago so I can't check which > libreboot version I have. > > $ sudo dmidecode > Password: > # dmidecode 2.12 > SMBIOS 2.7 present. > 8 structures occupying 382 bytes. > Table at 0xBDAB4020. > > /dev/mem: Operation not permitted > Table is unreachable, sorry. This seems to be normal for GuixSD. I don't have much knowledge about how the kernel and drivers here are packaged and configured, maybe some /dev/ devices are left out or we have more restriction than 'standard' systems. With libreboot and Gentoo, or at least with coreboot and Gentoo dmidecode worked… I think. I know that it works when I flash from ubuntu livedisk. Output for me (if not already written in my logs) is this: # dmidecode 2.12 SMBIOS 2.7 present. 8 structures occupying 386 bytes. Table at 0x7DAA0020. /dev/mem: Operation not permitted Table is unreachable, sorry. > $ uname -a > Linux dayas 4.6.4-gnu #1 SMP 1 x86_64 GNU/Linux -- ♥Ⓐ ng0 Current Keys: https://we.make.ritual.n0.is/ng0.txt For non-prism friendly talk find me on http://www.psyced.org