Re: Debian wheezy:machine auto booted after poweroff

2011-06-26 Thread xuyuanwei
在 2011-06-24五的 00:02 +0800,yuanwei xu写道:
 2011/6/23 yuanwei xu xuyuan...@gmail.com:
  2011/6/23 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:
  On Thu, 23 Jun 2011 22:07:29 +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:
 
  2011/6/22 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:
 
  Yes, it works, thanks for your reply. Hope there will be a final
  solution soon.
 
  It worked?? Hum... I didn't expect it did.
 
  At least, it had not auto booted in one night after #init 1 and
  #poweroff.
 
  Good.
 
  This could be something to investigate further. At a first glance I can
  think in acpi being the culprit... is the acpid service loaded in
  single-user mode?
 
  In /etc/rc2.d, $ls | grep acpi, there are files:
 
  S18acpi-fakekey
  S19acpid
  S19acpi-support
  In /etc/rc1.d,$ls | grep acpi, there is file:
  K01acpi-support
  Oh, the acpid service also started in runlevel 1, it existed in the
  process list,I thought it shouldn't started because there is no
  Sxxacpid file.
 

 
 
  Hum... so at init 1 there is no acpid service running on background.
  This can be relevant for your issue when powering off the machine... How
  about stopping acpid service on a normal session and then try to
  shutdown the machine? Just to test with other variant...


In /etc/rc2.d, i disabled acpi-fakekey,acpid and acpi-support,the
auto start problem still happened,both 2.6.38-2-686 and 2.6.39-2-686-pae
kernel.

It seems the problem has something to do with the uptime, but more
observation is needed.
 
 
  Greetings,
 
  --
  Camaleón
 
 
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Re: Debian wheezy:machine auto booted after poweroff

2011-06-26 Thread Camaleón
On Sun, 26 Jun 2011 16:37:19 +0800, xuyuanwei wrote:

 在 2011-06-24五的 00:02 +0800,yuanwei xu写道:
 2011/6/23 yuanwei xu xuyuan...@gmail.com:
  2011/6/23 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:

(...)

  Hum... so at init 1 there is no acpid service running on
  background. This can be relevant for your issue when powering off
  the machine... How about stopping acpid service on a normal
  session and then try to shutdown the machine? Just to test with
  other variant...
 
 
 In /etc/rc2.d, i disabled acpi-fakekey,acpid and acpi-support,the
 auto start problem still happened,both 2.6.38-2-686 and 2.6.39-2-686-pae
 kernel.

Take a look into dmesg, just in case there is something suspicious in 
there:

dmesg | grep -i -e acpi -e bios

And also think in opening a bug report, now is the time to handle testing 
problems.

 It seems the problem has something to do with the uptime, but more
 observation is needed.

With uptime? How is that? :-?

Greetings,

-- 
Camaleón


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Re: Debian wheezy:machine auto booted after poweroff

2011-06-24 Thread Darac Marjal
On Fri, Jun 24, 2011 at 12:02:54AM +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:
 2011/6/23 yuanwei xu xuyuan...@gmail.com:
  2011/6/23 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:
  On Thu, 23 Jun 2011 22:07:29 +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:
 
  This could be something to investigate further. At a first glance I can
  think in acpi being the culprit... is the acpid service loaded in
  single-user mode?
 
  In /etc/rc2.d, $ls | grep acpi, there are files:
 
          S18acpi-fakekey
          S19acpid
          S19acpi-support
  In /etc/rc1.d,$ls | grep acpi, there is file:
          K01acpi-support
  Oh, the acpid service also started in runlevel 1, it existed in the
  process list,I thought it shouldn't started because there is no
  Sxxacpid file.
 
 Sorry, I am a little confused. I run #init 1 under gnome-terminal,
 then the system quit gnome to console, the screen shows:
 INIT:  Goging single user
 INIT: Sending processes the TERM signal
 Give root password for maintenance
 (or type Control-D to continue):
 I press Control-D, then some Stopping and some Starting(include
 acpi_fakekey daemon and ACPI service).
 Then I login as root,run #runlevel, it outputs N 2. here why is not
 runlevel 1?

Runlevel 1 is single-user mode. That single user is root. The Give root
password for maintenance prompt is your indication that you are at
runlevel 1. You should log in as root at that point and proceed as
above. When you press Ctrl+D, you are leaving runlevel 2 and going back
to multi-user mode which is why you're able to log in as any user.

-- 
Paul Saunders


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Re: Debian wheezy:machine auto booted after poweroff

2011-06-23 Thread yuanwei xu
2011/6/22 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:
 On Wed, 22 Jun 2011 22:43:06 +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:

 2011/6/19 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:
 On Sun, 19 Jun 2011 15:13:37 +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:

 After upgrade from Squeeze to Wheezy, my notebook always auto booted
 after I shutdowned it using #poweroff in gnome terminal. Sometimes, it
 auto booted in 1 minutes, sometimes in 3 minutes after poweroff. I
 have to  use #poweroff to shutdown it once more, and it wouldn't auto
 boot anymore.
 I tried to go back to kernel 2.6.32-5-686, it didn't have such
 problem.

 So it could be a kernel related issue... There are others reporting a
 similar problem:

 Computer is not turned off at shutdown
 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/762203

 unexpected reboot after rebooting or shutting down from Ubuntu 11.04
 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/791089

 and I compiled kernel 2.6.39.1 using oldconfig of 2.6.38-2-686, the
 auto boot still happened.
 It made me crazy, any advice is appreciated.

 (...)

 Make a quick test: go to init 1 and try to shutdown from there
 (shutdown -h now).

 Yes, it works, thanks for your reply. Hope there will be a final
 solution soon.

 It worked?? Hum... I didn't expect it did.

At least, it had not auto booted in one night after #init 1 and #poweroff.

 This could be something to investigate further. At a first glance I can
 think in acpi being the culprit... is the acpid service loaded in
 single-user mode?

In /etc/rc2.d, $ls | grep acpi, there are files:

S18acpi-fakekey
S19acpid
S19acpi-support
In /etc/rc1.d,$ls | grep acpi, there is file:
K01acpi-support


 Greetings,

 --
 Camaleón


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Re: Debian wheezy:machine auto booted after poweroff

2011-06-23 Thread Camaleón
On Thu, 23 Jun 2011 22:07:29 +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:

 2011/6/22 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:

 Yes, it works, thanks for your reply. Hope there will be a final
 solution soon.

 It worked?? Hum... I didn't expect it did.
 
 At least, it had not auto booted in one night after #init 1 and
 #poweroff.

Good. 

 This could be something to investigate further. At a first glance I can
 think in acpi being the culprit... is the acpid service loaded in
 single-user mode?
 
 In /etc/rc2.d, $ls | grep acpi, there are files:
 
 S18acpi-fakekey
 S19acpid
 S19acpi-support
 In /etc/rc1.d,$ls | grep acpi, there is file:
 K01acpi-support

Hum... so at init 1 there is no acpid service running on background. 
This can be relevant for your issue when powering off the machine... How 
about stopping acpid service on a normal session and then try to 
shutdown the machine? Just to test with other variant...

Greetings,

-- 
Camaleón


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Re: Debian wheezy:machine auto booted after poweroff

2011-06-23 Thread yuanwei xu
2011/6/23 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:
 On Thu, 23 Jun 2011 22:07:29 +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:

 2011/6/22 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:

 Yes, it works, thanks for your reply. Hope there will be a final
 solution soon.

 It worked?? Hum... I didn't expect it did.

 At least, it had not auto booted in one night after #init 1 and
 #poweroff.

 Good.

 This could be something to investigate further. At a first glance I can
 think in acpi being the culprit... is the acpid service loaded in
 single-user mode?

 In /etc/rc2.d, $ls | grep acpi, there are files:

         S18acpi-fakekey
         S19acpid
         S19acpi-support
 In /etc/rc1.d,$ls | grep acpi, there is file:
         K01acpi-support
Oh, the acpid service also started in runlevel 1, it existed in the
process list,I thought it shouldn't started because there is no
Sxxacpid file.


 Hum... so at init 1 there is no acpid service running on background.
 This can be relevant for your issue when powering off the machine... How
 about stopping acpid service on a normal session and then try to
 shutdown the machine? Just to test with other variant...

 Greetings,

 --
 Camaleón


 --
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Re: Debian wheezy:machine auto booted after poweroff

2011-06-23 Thread yuanwei xu
2011/6/23 yuanwei xu xuyuan...@gmail.com:
 2011/6/23 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:
 On Thu, 23 Jun 2011 22:07:29 +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:

 2011/6/22 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:

 Yes, it works, thanks for your reply. Hope there will be a final
 solution soon.

 It worked?? Hum... I didn't expect it did.

 At least, it had not auto booted in one night after #init 1 and
 #poweroff.

 Good.

 This could be something to investigate further. At a first glance I can
 think in acpi being the culprit... is the acpid service loaded in
 single-user mode?

 In /etc/rc2.d, $ls | grep acpi, there are files:

         S18acpi-fakekey
         S19acpid
         S19acpi-support
 In /etc/rc1.d,$ls | grep acpi, there is file:
         K01acpi-support
 Oh, the acpid service also started in runlevel 1, it existed in the
 process list,I thought it shouldn't started because there is no
 Sxxacpid file.

Sorry, I am a little confused. I run #init 1 under gnome-terminal,
then the system quit gnome to console, the screen shows:
INIT:  Goging single user
INIT: Sending processes the TERM signal
Give root password for maintenance
(or type Control-D to continue):
I press Control-D, then some Stopping and some Starting(include
acpi_fakekey daemon and ACPI service).
Then I login as root,run #runlevel, it outputs N 2. here why is not
runlevel 1?

So where i said i found the acpid process in runlevel 1, it in fact
was in runlevel 2.

I edit the /etc/inittab to change default runlevel to be 1,and reboot,
run #ps -e | grep acpi, there were:
kacpid
kacpi_notify
kacpi_hotplug
but no acpid and acpi_fakekeyd



 Hum... so at init 1 there is no acpid service running on background.
 This can be relevant for your issue when powering off the machine... How
 about stopping acpid service on a normal session and then try to
 shutdown the machine? Just to test with other variant...

I will try it.Thanks.


 Greetings,

 --
 Camaleón


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Re: Debian wheezy:machine auto booted after poweroff

2011-06-22 Thread yuanwei xu
2011/6/19 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:
 On Sun, 19 Jun 2011 15:13:37 +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:

 After upgrade from Squeeze to Wheezy, my notebook always auto booted
 after I shutdowned it using #poweroff in gnome terminal. Sometimes, it
 auto booted in 1 minutes, sometimes in 3 minutes after poweroff. I have
 to  use #poweroff to shutdown it once more, and it wouldn't auto boot
 anymore.
 I tried to go back to kernel 2.6.32-5-686, it didn't have such problem.

 So it could be a kernel related issue... There are others reporting a
 similar problem:

 Computer is not turned off at shutdown
 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/762203

 unexpected reboot after rebooting or shutting down from Ubuntu 11.04
 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/791089

 and I compiled kernel 2.6.39.1 using oldconfig of 2.6.38-2-686, the auto
 boot still happened.
 It made me crazy, any advice is appreciated.

 (...)

 Make a quick test: go to init 1 and try to shutdown from there
 (shutdown -h now).

Yes, it works, thanks for your reply. Hope there will be a final solution soon.

 Greetings,

 --
 Camaleón


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Re: Debian wheezy:machine auto booted after poweroff

2011-06-22 Thread Camaleón
On Wed, 22 Jun 2011 22:43:06 +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:

 2011/6/19 Camaleón noela...@gmail.com:
 On Sun, 19 Jun 2011 15:13:37 +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:

 After upgrade from Squeeze to Wheezy, my notebook always auto booted
 after I shutdowned it using #poweroff in gnome terminal. Sometimes, it
 auto booted in 1 minutes, sometimes in 3 minutes after poweroff. I
 have to  use #poweroff to shutdown it once more, and it wouldn't auto
 boot anymore.
 I tried to go back to kernel 2.6.32-5-686, it didn't have such
 problem.

 So it could be a kernel related issue... There are others reporting a
 similar problem:

 Computer is not turned off at shutdown
 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/762203

 unexpected reboot after rebooting or shutting down from Ubuntu 11.04
 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/791089

 and I compiled kernel 2.6.39.1 using oldconfig of 2.6.38-2-686, the
 auto boot still happened.
 It made me crazy, any advice is appreciated.

 (...)

 Make a quick test: go to init 1 and try to shutdown from there
 (shutdown -h now).
 
 Yes, it works, thanks for your reply. Hope there will be a final
 solution soon.

It worked?? Hum... I didn't expect it did.

This could be something to investigate further. At a first glance I can 
think in acpi being the culprit... is the acpid service loaded in 
single-user mode?

Greetings,

-- 
Camaleón


-- 
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Re: Debian wheezy:machine auto booted after poweroff

2011-06-19 Thread Camaleón
On Sun, 19 Jun 2011 15:13:37 +0800, yuanwei xu wrote:

 After upgrade from Squeeze to Wheezy, my notebook always auto booted
 after I shutdowned it using #poweroff in gnome terminal. Sometimes, it
 auto booted in 1 minutes, sometimes in 3 minutes after poweroff. I have
 to  use #poweroff to shutdown it once more, and it wouldn't auto boot
 anymore.
 I tried to go back to kernel 2.6.32-5-686, it didn't have such problem.

So it could be a kernel related issue... There are others reporting a 
similar problem:

Computer is not turned off at shutdown
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/762203

unexpected reboot after rebooting or shutting down from Ubuntu 11.04 
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/791089

 and I compiled kernel 2.6.39.1 using oldconfig of 2.6.38-2-686, the auto
 boot still happened.
 It made me crazy, any advice is appreciated.

(...)

Make a quick test: go to init 1 and try to shutdown from there 
(shutdown -h now).

Greetings,

-- 
Camaleón


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