>> "DCR" == David C Rankin
<drankinatty-hPWwJ4didUaz5mO2DORSKdBPR1lH4CV8(a)public.gmane.org> writes:
On 12/06/2019 08:14 AM, Uwe Brauer wrote:
> Lid closes hibernates in Gnome but *not* in TDE
>
>
> > If this has been changed, then I could see Gnome/TDE handling the suspend on
> > lid-close differently.
>
> So what happens to you in TDE, if you close the lid?
The computer suspends to RAM and computer enters
low-power state where RAM is
kept warm and the lid-open interrupts is monitored, but little else. (actually
KDE3 at the moment).
The only non-default entry in my login.conf is the
power-button, because I
like being able to press the power-button and leave the lit open and still
suspend to RAM, e.g.
$ noc /etc/systemd/logind.conf
[Login]
HandlePowerKey=suspend
The 'hibernate' writes to disk and then enters
a poweroff state but leaves the
filesystems with a flag set to show they are still in use. I have never liked
hibernate on dual-boot systems just for that reason.
Thanks. But I think that is a misunderstanding. I know what suspend and
hibernate are doing. What I was trying to ask is whether it works for
you in the setting indicated.
And if I understand you correctly either suspend or hibernate work for
you with the setting indicated under TDE. Is this correct?
May I ask you which laptop you use, and which
linux distribution and which precise TDE version?
So the conclusion is there is NO BUG in TDE, but a problem with certain
hardware or linux distributions?
The odd thing for me is: hibernate and suspend work for me, with the
default gnome desktop but no with TDE, so that is why I think it might
be a bug.