From: Lars Nood?n <lars.noo...@gmail.com> > To: Lubuntu Users <Lubuntu-users@lists.ubuntu.com> > Subject: No suspend after XFCE Power Manager added > Message-ID: <5511abdc.4060...@gmail.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 > > I installed Lubuntu-core on a small machine and suspend (sleep?) worked > fine. It suspended when I closed the lid and when I pressed the sleep > button. I added xfce-power-manager to the machine to be able to see in > the panel how much power remains in the battery and since then the > machine does not suspend either when I close the lid or when I press the > sleep button. Also, even though the power manager settings say "ask" > when the power button is pressed, nothing happens any more when I press > it. > > I don't need the power manager but I do need suspend (sleep?) / resume > and would very, very much like to have an easy way to track power > remaining in the battery. > > This is on Lubuntu 14.04 LTS on a Celeron M processor. Can anyone > suggest a way around this? > > Regards, > Lars > > > > > I wonder if power manager is actually running. For instance, if you > click Preferences: Power, does it report that it is not running? > > I have to use this workaround to make it auto-start: > > https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/lubuntu-default-settings/+bug/1242452/comments/24 > > > > Hi, > > You most likely need to make an appropriate polkit rule for using > consolekit/upower/devicekit. > > make a file > */etc/polkit-1/localauthority/50-local.d/consolekit.pkla* > containing: > > [Power] > Identity=unix-group:users > > Action=org.freedesktop.consolekit.system.*;org.freedesktop.upower.*;org.freedesktop.devicekit.* > ResultAny=yes > > This is how I use dbus to suspend machines without using a normal > session manager :D > > > Lars, et al:
I also would like "suspend/resume" to actually work. I think Lars and I have filed bug reports about this in the fairly recent past . . . and which does not really seem to have been addressed, as it still remains an issue in my PPC computers running various linux/ubuntu OSs. Whereas, in the same computers, running OSX . . . no problem. I'm seeing these two other suggestions about how to potentially fix the problem . . . one might ask if it was so simple why haven't the devs just fixed it? But, interesting to note that "before XFCE power manager it worked" . . . as most systems seem to use it . . . . Over on my LM MBPro, "suspend" does work, although it can have "issues" about "waking" . . . . This single problem is one significant barriar to more consistent use of linux as a frontline OS . . . I don't like to have the computer fan/processor blowing madly while I'm not actively using the computer, and like to be able to "wake up" faster than a cold boot at times throughout the day. But, Israel, you are saying that simply by creating a file that contains 5 short lines that the suspend/resume will be working? Again, why then are the devs not including those 5 lines in an update/upgrade patch? F
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