On 1/3/12, Jonathan Vasquez <jvasquez1011@gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 12:47 PM, Fabio Mancinelli <fabio.mancinelli@gmail.com> wrote:
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This fixed the redrawing issues but made my laptop start to freeze on suspend (with the proprietary driver, suspend worked without any issues)
I looked at the log in /var/log/ but everything seems to be ok.
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Thanks, Fabio
P.S.: When I say "freeze" I mean that the system switches to text mode, and the cursor appears in the top left corner (without blinking). Everything is blocked and I have to hard-poweroff the laptop and restart it.
P.P.S.: Here it is some configuration data:
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For me, I have the proprietary NVIDIA drivers, and everything is running on LVM, but I have the same problem. I've added "resume" to my mkinitcpio, and to my parameters for grub.
The problem for me is that when I go to suspend, it doesn't even suspend, it just closes everything, switches to a black/blank screen with the blinking symbol _ , and stays there. It doesn't fully shut down. Then I have to manually restart the computer.
I also have pm-utils installed.
- Jon
Jah, not only me then, :-) This is happening to me as well for 3 years, but not all the time (maybe 1 out of 3). I also use nouveau, but what I'm using right now to suspend is: % cat /usr/bin/local_s2disk.sh #!/usr/bin/env sh echo "Suspending to Disk NOW..." sync swapoff -a swapon -a netcfg -a acpitool -S netcfg-menu I believe "acpitool -S" does a direct write of "disk" to /sys/power/state, but I prefer acpitool, and I've been using it for quiet a while, :-) I also have: % 'grep' resume /etc/mkinitcpio.conf HOOKS="base udev autodetect pata scsi sata usb filesystems keymap usbinput resume" % 'grep' resume /etc/default/grub GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="resume=/dev/sda5" And I still get the misbehavior when attempting to suspend some times. As a side note, I wanted to use the UUID format to specify the swap partition to grab the image from which to resume, which works for me on debian. But on arch I'm not sure if it's due to the initrd image generated, or the way the kernel is compiled, but it doesn't work, I have to specify plain partition... Not sure if any one has tried using UUID instead. -- Javier.