Re: [gentoo-user] suspend/resume

2006-06-28 Thread Grant
> Is there a way to shut the power of my laptop down and then power it > back on and have it resume right where it was when it was powered > down? I think this is called suspend/resume. I see there is a kernel > called suspend2-sources. Is there any way to do it with my > hardened-sources kerne

Re: [gentoo-user] suspend/resume

2006-06-27 Thread Evan Klitzke
On 6/26/06, Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Is there a way to shut the power of my laptop down and then power it back on and have it resume right where it was when it was powered down? I think this is called suspend/resume. I see there is a kernel called suspend2-sources. Is there any way to

Re: [gentoo-user] suspend/resume

2006-06-27 Thread Grant
> Is there a way to shut the power of my laptop down and then power it > back on and have it resume right where it was when it was powered > down? I think this is called suspend/resume. I see there is a kernel > called suspend2-sources. This uses suspend2, which is an externally maintained patc

Re: [gentoo-user] suspend/resume

2006-06-26 Thread Alexander Skwar
Grant wrote: Is there a way to shut the power of my laptop down and then power it back on and have it resume right where it was when it was powered down? Sure. Install the hibernate package and configure /etc/acpi/default.sh properly: case "$action" in p

Re: [gentoo-user] suspend/resume

2006-06-26 Thread Shaochun Wang
On Mon, Jun 26, 2006 at 05:44:09PM -0700, Grant wrote: > Is there a way to shut the power of my laptop down and then power it > back on and have it resume right where it was when it was powered > down? I think this is called suspend/resume. I see there is a kernel > called suspend2-sources. Is t

Re: [gentoo-user] suspend/resume

2006-06-26 Thread Richard Fish
On 6/26/06, Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Is there a way to shut the power of my laptop down and then power it back on and have it resume right where it was when it was powered down? I think this is called suspend/resume. I see there is a kernel called suspend2-sources. This uses suspend2,