On Thu, Nov 29, 2001 at 08:19:42AM -0800, jennyw wrote: | I don't know ... I did a dist-upgrade. Would that upgrade the kernel?
No. What does $ cat /proc/version say? | When I type poweroff, it does the same thing as before, the computer | just doesn't power down ... it unmounts all file systems then says power | off computer (or something like that) same as before -- it's just that | the computer remains on. | | I guess the solution is to recompile the kernel? That should only be necessary if apm support was not compiled at all. Did you make a custom kernel? If not, then apm support was compile, you just need to enable it. What does $ cat /proc/cmdline say? Does it have "apm=on" in it? If you have a 2.4 kernel, does $ /sbin/lsmod | grep apm output anything? Regardless of whether you have a 2.2 or 2.4 kernel you need to put "apm=on" in the kernel command line. This is done via your boot loader's configuration. (if you custom compile your kernel and say "Y" to apm then this is not necessary, but for the packaged kernels it is). If you have a 2.4 kernel you need to load the 'apm' module before shutting down the system. The easiest way is to add 'apm' to /etc/modules. (again, this is for the packaged kernels, if you compiled your own and said "Y" this is not necessary) HTH, -D -- For society, it's probably a good thing that engineers value function over appearance. For example, you wouldn't want engineers to build nuclear power plants that only _look_ like they would keep all the radiation inside. (Scott Adams - The Dilbert principle)