Well, in that case, you should start to provide output from "all that stuff" I mentioned.
On 11.09.2017 13:08, Pierre Frenkiel wrote: > On Sun, 10 Sep 2017, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote: > >> You should not use "uswsusp" anymore on recent OS releases. Hibernate >> should work "out-of-the-box" assuming swap partition is big enough. >> Remove "uswsusp", double check "/etc/fstab" swap entry >> >> $ sudo blkid | grep swap >> /dev/sdb2: LABEL="swap" UUID="d0331ef1-bc12-473f-bd4a-b4edf0d4d0a8" >> TYPE="swap" PARTUUID="88839920-fc62-4f3a-aa7c-e97cd1ed4d5d" >> >> $ cat /etc/fstab | grep swap >> UUID=d0331ef1-bc12-473f-bd4a-b4edf0d4d0a8 none swap sw >> 0 0 >> >> and "/etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/resume" >> >> $ cat /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/resume >> RESUME=UUID=d0331ef1-bc12-473f-bd4a-b4edf0d4d0a8 >> >> Check swap is working via "swapon" >> After that either reinstall initramfs-tools via >> >> $ sudo apt-get install --reinstall initramfs-tools >> >> or update initramfs via >> >> $ sudo update-initramfs -u -v | grep "Adding config" >> >> This way you can see all config files and check them if swap >> partition\hibernation image is still not found. >> Reboot and try to hibernate. >> > I already did all that stuff, and increased my swap partition to > twice the > ram size... > > best regards,