On Fri, 29 Dec 2017 15:35:24 +0100
Didier Kryn wrote:
> Le 29/12/2017 à 12:35, J. Fahrner a écrit :
> > Am 2017-12-29 12:27, schrieb Didier Kryn:
> >> Actualy xscreensaver also prevents the suspend. I didn't notice
> >> the first time because it seems to take a logout-login before the
> >>
Am 2017-12-29 15:35, schrieb Didier Kryn:
Sure, but it comes just naked with essentially the right-click to
offer you to open a terminal emulator. That's not a very productive
way of working, compared to xfce4's panel.
You don't need to start with only X11 and xterm. Use openbox, tint2,
sp
Le 29/12/2017 à 12:35, J. Fahrner a écrit :
Am 2017-12-29 12:27, schrieb Didier Kryn:
Actualy xscreensaver also prevents the suspend. I didn't notice
the first time because it seems to take a logout-login before the
presence of the daemon to be noticed.
There is a hackish workaround: co
Am 2017-12-29 12:27, schrieb Didier Kryn:
Actualy xscreensaver also prevents the suspend. I didn't notice
the first time because it seems to take a logout-login before the
presence of the daemon to be noticed.
There is a hackish workaround: comment the following 3 lines in
/etc/acpi/lid.
Le 29/12/2017 à 10:44, Didier Kryn a écrit :
Found a simple solution to suspend on lid close:
1) uninstall xfce4-power-manager (probably true with
power-managers from other DEs). It doesn't work and it prevents the
default acpi methods to be called.
2) edit /etc/default/acpi-sup
Am 2017-12-29 10:50, schrieb Antony Stone:
Did the machine wake up again on opening the lid under Debian Wheezy or
did
you have to operate the power button there as well?
This sounds like a hardware feature of the particular laptop to me.
My observation is also, that waking up through openin
On Friday 29 December 2017 at 10:44:16, Didier Kryn wrote:
> Found a simple solution to suspend on lid close:
>
> 1) uninstall xfce4-power-manager (probably true with power-managers
> from other DEs). It doesn't work and it prevents the default acpi
> methods to be called.
>
> 2)
Le 28/12/2017 à 15:31, Didier Kryn a écrit :
The files listed below are all part of package acpi-support.
/etc/acpi/events/lidbtn causes the invocation of /etc/acpi/lid.sh
on lid events
/etc/acpi/lid/sh invokes a function called CheckPolicy(), which is
in file /usr/share/acpi-support