On 01/01/08 20:02:11, Giuseppe Torelli wrote: > On Jan 1, 2008 6:31 PM, Robert McWilliam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > In /etc/acpi > gt[xarchiver]$ ls /etc/acpi/suspend.d/ <snip> > Ehm, can you tell me which one I executed? And also what shall I > change to have executed "sudo pm-suspend"?
I should point out that my understanding of this is a bit vague and comes from playing with it more than anything. As far as I've figured: apcid gets acpi events from the hardware, then looks for a matching event in /etc/acpi/events and that event file directs what to execute, which is usually one of the scripts in /etc/acpi As far as I can tell the contents of suspend.d/ are called from prepare.sh, which is used in sleep.sh and hibernate.sh, so it isn't actually anything in there that you want to change. I'm not entirely sure what pm-suspend does but I suspect it replaces the existing suspend to RAM or disk procedure. Sleep is suspend to RAM and hibernate is suspend to disk so replace the contents of either sleep.sh or hibernate.sh with a call to pm-suspend [1]. Alternatively you could probably put the call directly in the event file you want to trigger the pm-suspend call. Given that I am not entirely sure of this advice please be careful to keep backups of files before changing them so things can be put back if they break horribly :) Robert [1] I don't think you'll need the sudo ________________________________________________________ Robert McWilliam [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.ormiret.com We have enough youth. How about a fountain of smart? -- xubuntu-devel mailing list xubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/xubuntu-devel