On 08/29/2016 04:37 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
I understand that Fedora has gone the way of my hated linux distribution
(Ubuntu) in actively disconnecting hibernate in a very disappointing
distribution, but I still think that someone may know what to do so I thought
that I would post this here and get suggestions and advice.
See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1206936 for why and how
it's being worked on.
However, of late, since F24, I have been having this problem that the laptop
comes back from hibernate but the nm-applet does not. Basically, what happens
is that the nm-applet has the disconnected symbol. The network does work (at
the location it was working from when the laptop was hibernated). It will not
work in a new location simply because nm-applet does not have the ability to
provide me with a list of new possibly connections. I have not tried this part
with ethernet but I suspect that the general idea would be similar.
Where do you see an "nm-applet"? I have no such process on my F24
laptop, so how do you restart it? I just did a hibernate test. I'm
using ethernet and when it resumed, the connection status at the top
showed disconnected even though it was working. However, in the menu it
said connected and unplugging and replugging the cord reset the status
icon. I had wifi hardware disabled at the time and re-enabling it
automatically connected. It takes so long to resume that I really don't
want to try again with wifi enabled, but it does seem to be fine.
There was one problem on resuming. gnome-settings-daemon was spamming
the pcscd process really badly for some reason. Restarting pcscd didn't
make any difference, I had to kill gnome-settings-daemon.
The only way I can get back to using nm-applet to provide me with Wifi
connections (beyond the one to which it has been connected) is by killing and
restarting nm-applet. The process has to be repeated for every hibernate.
Please explain how you did this.
PS: As an aside, one of the parameters in: /etc/default/grub, I have
GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true" -- I also tried with
GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="false" but there was no visible effect. I am not completely sure
what this parameter does because it seems to give me the same result irrespective of whether or not
it is set to "true".
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1055759
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