On Sun, 13 Jul 1997, Bruce Perens wrote: > > The kernel we distribute doesn't have Advanced Power Management configured > > in because it crashes some systems. Install the kernel-source package and > > make a custom kernel, with APM enabled. That should handle resume just fine. > > From: Pann McCuaig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > FWIW my 2105 handles resume just fine with the stock debian install > > kernel, either 2.0.27 or 2.0.29. Of course, the PCMCIA cards disappear > > after powering down, but linux comes back just fine. > > Try "cat /proc/apm". If it is there, APM _is_ in the kernel and my information > was out of date. If not, you really should be running a kernel with it before > you hit the suspend button.
"No such file or directory" -- your information is _not_ out of date. I have a small (40mb) partition on this laptop that I must use primarily for work-related DOS/Windows development -- I need (want) linux available, but normally boot in from DOS which keeps my modem alive, and neither the APM or PCMCIA features are important to me at this point. I just wanted to point out that, at least on this model, suspend/resume doesn't require APM (at least not if you're not using or don't need to access PCMCIA cards). Cheers, Pann -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .