On Tue, 14 May 2019 07:21:16 -0700
Gordon Messmer wrote:
> I'd venture a guess that it's more likely the video driver locking up.
> Use "journalctl" to get the logs from one of the failed periods and see
> if there are any "kernel" log messages from that boot.
Nothing in the logs that appears
On 5/14/19 4:59 AM, Tom Horsley wrote:
Is there some sort of ultra deep sleep mode
sddm goes into if it has been unused for a
while?
I'd venture a guess that it's more likely the video driver locking up.
Use "journalctl" to get the logs from one of the failed periods and see
if there are
On Tue, 14 May 2019 13:15:13 +0100
Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> Presumably you tried 'systemctl status sddm'
> and 'strace -p '?
Not yet. I'm usually in a hurry to do something
useful rather than spend time investigating :-),
so I thought I'd ask here first.
I did look at the old Xorg log, and
On 5/14/19 7:59 PM, Tom Horsley wrote:
> Is there some sort of ultra deep sleep mode
> sddm goes into if it has been unused for a
> while? No power on earth seems to be able to
> get any signal to appear on my monitor after
> I have let the system sit for a long weekend.
>
> Moving the mouse,
On Tue, 2019-05-14 at 07:59 -0400, Tom Horsley wrote:
> Is there some sort of ultra deep sleep mode
> sddm goes into if it has been unused for a
> while? No power on earth seems to be able to
> get any signal to appear on my monitor after
> I have let the system sit for a long weekend.
>
> Moving
Is there some sort of ultra deep sleep mode
sddm goes into if it has been unused for a
while? No power on earth seems to be able to
get any signal to appear on my monitor after
I have let the system sit for a long weekend.
Moving the mouse, tapping the spacebar, nothing
works. I've had to ssh