Re: [gentoo-user] Powertop constantly tells me to enable USB suspend, but it is already enabled
Paul Hartman wrote: On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 8:06 PM, Eric Martin freak4u...@gmail.com wrote: Paul Hartman wrote: Hi, As the subject line says, powertop constantly tells me my USB devices (keyboard/mouse) are active 100% of the time and to enable USB suspend, which I do, but it keeps telling me constantly. How can I tell if: A) USB suspend is actually on or not B) powertop is doing anything when I press U I've got USB Suspend/resume support in my kernel, and according to the kernel docs the usbcore.usbsuspend default delay is 2 (powertop suggests changing it to 1). Powertop's refresh delay is 5 seconds. Thanks, Paul Check for USB_SUSPEND in /proc/config.gz I do not have a /proc/config.gz but i have this in /boot/config: CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND=y Are you sure you're running a kernel with that configured? Why not enable kernel .config? It's [CONFIG_IKCONFIG] General Setup - Kernel .config support. Obviously it adds more to your kernel images but it makes tracking down problems like this very easy. I too have a usb keyboard / mouse and I'm pretty sure powertop doesn't register 100% for those interfaces... Heck, unless you're 100% opposed to turning on kernel .config support (or can't reboot the server), turn it on, recompile, install, reboot and see if CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND is there, and see what powertop says. I was trying to chase down a similar problem (disabling kernel options) when I was getting vmalloc() errors with xfs and I discovered that they always weren't taking affect. My guess was I rebooted before cache could be written to disk. HTH -- Eric Martin Key fingerprint = D1C4 086E DBB5 C18E 6FDA B215 6A25 7174 A941 3B9F signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature
Re: [gentoo-user] Powertop constantly tells me to enable USB suspend, but it is already enabled
On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 7:58 AM, Eric Martin freak4u...@gmail.com wrote: Paul Hartman wrote: On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 8:06 PM, Eric Martin freak4u...@gmail.com wrote: Paul Hartman wrote: Hi, As the subject line says, powertop constantly tells me my USB devices (keyboard/mouse) are active 100% of the time and to enable USB suspend, which I do, but it keeps telling me constantly. How can I tell if: A) USB suspend is actually on or not B) powertop is doing anything when I press U I've got USB Suspend/resume support in my kernel, and according to the kernel docs the usbcore.usbsuspend default delay is 2 (powertop suggests changing it to 1). Powertop's refresh delay is 5 seconds. Thanks, Paul Check for USB_SUSPEND in /proc/config.gz I do not have a /proc/config.gz but i have this in /boot/config: CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND=y Are you sure you're running a kernel with that configured? Why not enable kernel .config? It's [CONFIG_IKCONFIG] General Setup - Kernel .config support. Obviously it adds more to your kernel images but it makes tracking down problems like this very easy. I too have a usb keyboard / mouse and I'm pretty sure powertop doesn't register 100% for those interfaces... Heck, unless you're 100% opposed to turning on kernel .config support (or can't reboot the server), turn it on, recompile, install, reboot and see if CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND is there, and see what powertop says. I was trying to chase down a similar problem (disabling kernel options) when I was getting vmalloc() errors with xfs and I discovered that they always weren't taking affect. My guess was I rebooted before cache could be written to disk. Hi, I actually had it enabled in my kernel, but as a module, and I have never used it before so I didn't even realize it was there. I had to dig a little to find out that modprobe configs is what I needed to turn it on. I have this section: # # Miscellaneous USB options # CONFIG_USB_DEVICEFS=y # CONFIG_USB_DEVICE_CLASS is not set # CONFIG_USB_DYNAMIC_MINORS is not set CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND=y # CONFIG_USB_OTG is not set # CONFIG_USB_MON is not set # CONFIG_USB_WUSB is not set # CONFIG_USB_WUSB_CBAF is not set So it appears I do have it properly configured, at least. Is there any way to tell whether or not a device is suspended, or if autosuspend is kicking in? I don't know what's it's supposed to do, really. Does the fact that I'm using a desktop computer mean that there's a chance USB suspend isn't even available? Thanks, Paul
Re: [gentoo-user] Powertop constantly tells me to enable USB suspend, but it is already enabled
Paul Hartman wrote: On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 7:58 AM, Eric Martin freak4u...@gmail.com wrote: Paul Hartman wrote: On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 8:06 PM, Eric Martin freak4u...@gmail.com wrote: Paul Hartman wrote: Hi, As the subject line says, powertop constantly tells me my USB devices (keyboard/mouse) are active 100% of the time and to enable USB suspend, which I do, but it keeps telling me constantly. How can I tell if: A) USB suspend is actually on or not B) powertop is doing anything when I press U snip Check for USB_SUSPEND in /proc/config.gz I do not have a /proc/config.gz but i have this in /boot/config: CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND=y Are you sure you're running a kernel with that configured? Why not enable kernel .config? It's [CONFIG_IKCONFIG] General Setup - Kernel .config support. Obviously it adds more to your kernel images but it makes tracking down problems like this very easy. I too have a usb keyboard / mouse and I'm pretty sure powertop doesn't register 100% for those interfaces... Heck, unless you're 100% opposed to turning on kernel .config support (or can't reboot the server), turn it on, recompile, install, reboot and see if CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND is there, and see what powertop says. I was trying to chase down a similar problem (disabling kernel options) when I was getting vmalloc() errors with xfs and I discovered that they always weren't taking affect. My guess was I rebooted before cache could be written to disk. Hi, I actually had it enabled in my kernel, but as a module, and I have never used it before so I didn't even realize it was there. I had to dig a little to find out that modprobe configs is what I needed to turn it on. I have this section: # # Miscellaneous USB options # CONFIG_USB_DEVICEFS=y # CONFIG_USB_DEVICE_CLASS is not set # CONFIG_USB_DYNAMIC_MINORS is not set CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND=y # CONFIG_USB_OTG is not set # CONFIG_USB_MON is not set # CONFIG_USB_WUSB is not set # CONFIG_USB_WUSB_CBAF is not set So it appears I do have it properly configured, at least. Is there any way to tell whether or not a device is suspended, or if autosuspend is kicking in? I don't know what's it's supposed to do, really. Does the fact that I'm using a desktop computer mean that there's a chance USB suspend isn't even available? Ok, now I'm confused. USB_SUSPEND can't be configured as a module, so I have no idea what you're talking about. I apparently don't have it configured on this machine (shame on me) so I'm recompiling right now, I'll reboot and let you know so I can help more. Again though, the only way I'm 100% sure *anything* is in my running kernel is by checking /proc/config.gz. Granted that's not even 100% because there are plenty of times I just add modules and don't install the new kernel. -- Eric Martin Key fingerprint = D1C4 086E DBB5 C18E 6FDA B215 6A25 7174 A941 3B9F signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature
Re: [gentoo-user] Powertop constantly tells me to enable USB suspend, but it is already enabled
On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 10:10 AM, Eric Martin freak4u...@gmail.com wrote: Paul Hartman wrote: On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 7:58 AM, Eric Martin freak4u...@gmail.com wrote: Paul Hartman wrote: On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 8:06 PM, Eric Martin freak4u...@gmail.com wrote: Paul Hartman wrote: Hi, As the subject line says, powertop constantly tells me my USB devices (keyboard/mouse) are active 100% of the time and to enable USB suspend, which I do, but it keeps telling me constantly. How can I tell if: A) USB suspend is actually on or not B) powertop is doing anything when I press U snip Check for USB_SUSPEND in /proc/config.gz I do not have a /proc/config.gz but i have this in /boot/config: CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND=y Are you sure you're running a kernel with that configured? Why not enable kernel .config? It's [CONFIG_IKCONFIG] General Setup - Kernel .config support. Obviously it adds more to your kernel images but it makes tracking down problems like this very easy. I too have a usb keyboard / mouse and I'm pretty sure powertop doesn't register 100% for those interfaces... Heck, unless you're 100% opposed to turning on kernel .config support (or can't reboot the server), turn it on, recompile, install, reboot and see if CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND is there, and see what powertop says. I was trying to chase down a similar problem (disabling kernel options) when I was getting vmalloc() errors with xfs and I discovered that they always weren't taking affect. My guess was I rebooted before cache could be written to disk. Hi, I actually had it enabled in my kernel, but as a module, and I have never used it before so I didn't even realize it was there. I had to dig a little to find out that modprobe configs is what I needed to turn it on. I have this section: # # Miscellaneous USB options # CONFIG_USB_DEVICEFS=y # CONFIG_USB_DEVICE_CLASS is not set # CONFIG_USB_DYNAMIC_MINORS is not set CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND=y # CONFIG_USB_OTG is not set # CONFIG_USB_MON is not set # CONFIG_USB_WUSB is not set # CONFIG_USB_WUSB_CBAF is not set So it appears I do have it properly configured, at least. Is there any way to tell whether or not a device is suspended, or if autosuspend is kicking in? I don't know what's it's supposed to do, really. Does the fact that I'm using a desktop computer mean that there's a chance USB suspend isn't even available? Ok, now I'm confused. USB_SUSPEND can't be configured as a module, so I have no idea what you're talking about. I apparently don't have it configured on this machine (shame on me) so I'm recompiling right now, I'll reboot and let you know so I can help more. Again though, the only way I'm 100% sure *anything* is in my running kernel is by checking /proc/config.gz. Granted that's not even 100% because there are plenty of times I just add modules and don't install the new kernel. No no no, sorry for not being clearer. I had /proc/config.gz support compiled as a module. Once I did modprobe configs it was available for me to look at.
[gentoo-user] Powertop constantly tells me to enable USB suspend, but it is already enabled
Hi, As the subject line says, powertop constantly tells me my USB devices (keyboard/mouse) are active 100% of the time and to enable USB suspend, which I do, but it keeps telling me constantly. How can I tell if: A) USB suspend is actually on or not B) powertop is doing anything when I press U I've got USB Suspend/resume support in my kernel, and according to the kernel docs the usbcore.usbsuspend default delay is 2 (powertop suggests changing it to 1). Powertop's refresh delay is 5 seconds. Thanks, Paul
Re: [gentoo-user] Powertop constantly tells me to enable USB suspend, but it is already enabled
Paul Hartman wrote: Hi, As the subject line says, powertop constantly tells me my USB devices (keyboard/mouse) are active 100% of the time and to enable USB suspend, which I do, but it keeps telling me constantly. How can I tell if: A) USB suspend is actually on or not B) powertop is doing anything when I press U I've got USB Suspend/resume support in my kernel, and according to the kernel docs the usbcore.usbsuspend default delay is 2 (powertop suggests changing it to 1). Powertop's refresh delay is 5 seconds. Thanks, Paul Check for USB_SUSPEND in /proc/config.gz
Re: [gentoo-user] Powertop constantly tells me to enable USB suspend, but it is already enabled
On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 8:06 PM, Eric Martin freak4u...@gmail.com wrote: Paul Hartman wrote: Hi, As the subject line says, powertop constantly tells me my USB devices (keyboard/mouse) are active 100% of the time and to enable USB suspend, which I do, but it keeps telling me constantly. How can I tell if: A) USB suspend is actually on or not B) powertop is doing anything when I press U I've got USB Suspend/resume support in my kernel, and according to the kernel docs the usbcore.usbsuspend default delay is 2 (powertop suggests changing it to 1). Powertop's refresh delay is 5 seconds. Thanks, Paul Check for USB_SUSPEND in /proc/config.gz I do not have a /proc/config.gz but i have this in /boot/config: CONFIG_USB_SUSPEND=y