>From the page: http://gamgee.acad.emich.edu/~roth/EXTENSA/suspend.html
I got the command: hdparm -m16 -c1 -u1 /dev/hda Which enabled suspend to disk on my Mitsubshi Amity. I've no idea if it will help you on your machine. The only problem I am left with is a very bizarre time warping... After coming out of suspend to disk time slows down on my laptop! A "sleep 1" command takes aproximately 5 seconds!! I haven't found a work around to that one yet and it really messes coda up. Any insight on that would be much appreciated. Matt -- Pontus Lidman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on 08/31/99 10:12:43 AM To: debian-laptop@lists.debian.org cc: Subject: Re: Suspend Mode On Tue, 24 Aug 1999, Seth Golub wrote: > Steve Robbins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > The machine also has a "suspend to disk" mode, > [..] > > Does it work with linux? > > In general, yes. This sounds very interesting to me, as I have a Dell Latitude CPi, and I've never managed to get suspend-to-disk working in Linux. Even normal suspend is a bit flaky. I have tried many 2.2 kernels with apm compiled in, and I run apmd too. It suspends and writes data to disk, but when I resume, it freezes with a black screen and a blinking cursor in the top left corner. Any ideas on how I can track this problem down? Regards, Pontus -- Pontus Lidman, [EMAIL PROTECTED], Development & support manager No matter how cynical you get, it's impossible to keep up. Scene: www.dc-s.com | MUD: tyme.envy.com 6969 | irc: irc.quakenet.eu.org -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]