Ok...
So, I recompiled my kernel after tweaking a few things (made everything in
ACPI compiled-in instead of a module), and now echo 4 > /proc/acpi/sleep
works fine. echo -n "disk" > /sys/power/state doesn't work though. Odd.
- Matt
On Saturday 21 August 2004 07:14
Hi All,
I recently had Linux on my Dell 600m, then wiped it because of a corrupted
partition table. Now I'm putting Debian back on...
Anyhow, I'm having trouble with getting suspend to work properly. I can get
it to sleep, but not resume properly.
If I echo -n "disk" > /sys/power/state, it p
Ok...
So, I recompiled my kernel after tweaking a few things (made everything in
ACPI compiled-in instead of a module), and now echo 4 > /proc/acpi/sleep
works fine. echo -n "disk" > /sys/power/state doesn't work though. Odd.
- Matt
On Saturday 21 August 2004 07:14
Hi All,
I recently had Linux on my Dell 600m, then wiped it because of a corrupted
partition table. Now I'm putting Debian back on...
Anyhow, I'm having trouble with getting suspend to work properly. I can get
it to sleep, but not resume properly.
If I echo -n "disk" > /sys/power/state, it p
Hi,
I recently got a Dell 600m laptop. I installed linux on it, but I ran into a
few snags that are pretty much keeping me from leaving linux installed on it.
It has an ATI Radeon mobility 9000 graphics card, which I successfully have
working in X. However, when I'm in X, and close the lid (
Hi,
I recently got a Dell 600m laptop. I installed linux on it, but I ran into a
few snags that are pretty much keeping me from leaving linux installed on it.
It has an ATI Radeon mobility 9000 graphics card, which I successfully have
working in X. However, when I'm in X, and close the lid (
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