@godzil, thanks for your reply!
By trial and error, I found that the service which trigger suspend is
systemd-logind. I have tried reinstalling and uninstalling acpid, but the
problem remains.



On Wed, Apr 30, 2014 at 10:53 PM, godzil <god...@godzil.net> wrote:

>  For the "suspend" after a wakeup, I've a similar problem on my EEEPC
> 1000HE, I didn't investigate a lot, but on my case I strongly suspect that
> it is caused by a two process/script that try to manage the same event.
>
> It does not happen when I press the Sleep button (Fn+F1 if I recall
> correctly) but happen everytime when closing the lid. I remember to had
> lots of problem with ACPI configuration, and some key are still not working
> as expected, anyway, I've may in my case mess with some ACPI script. Maybe
> you could look at this first?
>
> Manoel
>
>
>
> Le 2014-04-30 15:13, simsilver Lee a écrit :
>
> Forget to mention, I have tried kernel 3.14, 3.14.1, 3.13.7, and none
> works well on this.
>
>
> On Wed, Apr 30, 2014 at 10:11 PM, simsilver Lee 
> <yihuanlingj...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>>   Hello everyone, I have met a problem recently after once update. My
>> laptop suspends automatically after booting up, and suspends on and on
>> after wakeup. I have checked up the log and there is no obvious errors. It
>> works well on Win7 and Ubuntu Live, and on Gentoo the CPU is about 60 ℃.
>> It also works well in single mode, but suspends quickly after I start
>> NetworkManager service. And I found that it echo "^@" before the first-time
>> suspend in the console.
>>
>> I have tried some solutions such as pass "pcie_aspm=
>>
>> *force" to kernel, disable gdm service, none works. Masking
>> suspend.target and systemd-suspend.service helps, but I want a better
>> solution.*
>>
>>
>> *Could someone help me? And what info do I need to attach?*
>>
>> *Simsilver*
>>
>
>
>

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