suspend restart immediatly…

Questions about other topics - please check if your question fits better in another category before posting here
Forum rules
Before you post please read this

suspend restart immediatly…

Postby FDF on Tue Apr 10, 2012 2:28 am

Hello,

I applied the LMDE Pack four two days ago.
Since I found the computer wake up in the morning (it normally suspend after one hour), I wondered about the suspend.
So I try to force the computer to suspend (via menu shutdown). It do the process. I even hear the fan and the hard disk stop. But as soon as it has stopped it wake up again.
in the log, I can't see what has requested the computer to wake up, but maybe I don't know the proper log to look in.
Anyway, that is not very convenient…

I tried the same with the Hibernate option and face exactly the same problem. It is hibernating, but resume immediately (full boot of the hard).

Can anybody help me?

Thanks
FDF
Level 2
Level 2
 
Posts: 83
Joined: Fri Nov 04, 2011 7:55 pm

Linux Mint is funded by ads and donations.
 

Re: suspend restart immediatly…

Postby FDF on Sun Apr 15, 2012 4:38 am

Hi,

I have checked and made test.

When I select the kernel 2.6.39 in grub, instead of 3.0.2, suspend and hibernate works well. Thus I guess Kernel or module incompatibility with hardware, but I don't know how to solve that.

By the way, one questions is… is it really important to follow the "latest" kernel? what can really be expected by changing kernel? better hardware performance for very new things, or other important point?

Thanks and regards
FDF
Level 2
Level 2
 
Posts: 83
Joined: Fri Nov 04, 2011 7:55 pm

Re: suspend restart immediatly…

Postby äxl on Sun Apr 15, 2012 9:05 am

FDF wrote:When I select the kernel 2.6.39 in grub, instead of 3.0.2, suspend and hibernate works well. Thus I guess Kernel or module incompatibility with hardware, but I don't know how to solve that.

You could compare the output of lsmod if you think it's a module.
By the way, one questions is… is it really important to follow the "latest" kernel? what can really be expected by changing kernel? better hardware performance for very new things, or other important point?

http://wiki.debian.org/KernelFAQ
My Linux history: Ubuntu 10.04 - 10.10 - LMDE 201109 - UP4 My sources.list/preferences

Computers is not science. And it's not magic - it's something in between.
User avatar
äxl
Level 5
Level 5
 
Posts: 524
Joined: Fri Apr 06, 2012 6:14 am
Location: Germany


Return to Other Topics

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests

cron