lavaeolus Posted June 17, 2006 Report Share Posted June 17, 2006 just some things I experienced on my notebooks with Mandriva 2006 Suspend: often Suspend-to-RAM does not work at all, Suspend-to-Disk is less problematic you may need either the up-1GB or the multimedia-kernel for suspend to work at all install the suspend-scripts-force-rpm, although it just changes the basic suspend-scripts, which can be done by hand too cpu-frequency-scaling: powernowd-rpm works on intel-cpus too (it works on all cpus that support frequency-scaling, it does the same as cpudyn, but since I use powernowd, my system runs cooler) laptop-mode-tools may prolong your battery-life, but may need some tweaking if you have a sleep-button, you can configure it either for S-to-R or S-to-D by editing /etc/acpi/events/sleep: event=button/sleep action=/usr/sbin/pmsuspend2 memory is for Suspend-to-RAM event=button/sleep action=/usr/sbin/pmsuspend2 is for Suspend-to-Disk acme may let you use some of your multimedia-buttons if boot-time is very slow with lilo, you should add the entry compact to the general options of your lilo.conf Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
theYinYeti Posted June 19, 2006 Report Share Posted June 19, 2006 Nice tips! Thank you :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lavaeolus Posted June 20, 2006 Author Report Share Posted June 20, 2006 (edited) some updates: since I forgot some things on my original post here they are: acpitool is a nice console tool, it gives you detailed information about the acpi-related stuff on your system, nicest thing is, it can show you if your batteries are still up to their full design capacity or on the way to death, and specially for toshiba-users it has the nice option to force the cpu-fan on or off (although I haven't the chance to test this, no toshiba on hand, sorry) for omnibook users there is a tool called komnibook, but it works only with a kernel that has the omnibook-kernel-module enabled (afaik the multimedia-kernel has it enabled), but tests on two omnibooks were without success, since the tool seems not to work with kernel 2.6 Direct Rendering (Hardware-3D) problems with SXGA+ (1400x1050): maybe your Direct Rendering (Hardware-3D) won't work with 1400x1050, you may get it working by reducing the resolution to 1280x1024 (not through grandr or krandr, but by telling XFdrake (or YAST; or whatelse) your monitor does only 1280x1024, but be warned, your screen will look ugly with 1280 scaled up to 1400, so this is only an option if you really need Hardware-3D, and sometimes XFdrake refuses to use these settings, since it insist on your 1400-Display) this Hardware-3D problem is not madriva-specific, had this on several suses and ubuntus too, and if you have xinerama enabled Hardware-3D will get disabled (this is not only the case on Notebooks) hot-swapping once it worked, but now pulling out my hot-swap media-bay locks my system entirely (think this occured first when the kernel was changed to 2.6 and udev was used, but I'm not entirely sure) if you have an IBM Thinkpad, you may be lucky; just be sure that ultrabayd is enabled as a service on startup (you can check/enable this in MCC/System Services), ultrabayd is part of the tpctl-package, so check if it is installed on your thinkpad (it should be) you may try to unregister your media-bay/corresponding IDE-interface with hdparm, but this may or may not work (for me it did not :wacko: ) this is again not mandriva-specific, tested it on suse 9.3 and ubuntu 6.06, all the same, for ubuntu there is a utility called hotswap (there is even a GUI-interface), but it seems that it tries nothing else than what I tried through hdparm (btw, it did not work for me, and it seems that the basic-tool is not maintained anymore) I tried this with kernels up to 2.6.15 (the one in ubuntu), since the IDE-part seems to be a work in progress at the moment, tests with newer kernels may give different results there is another thinkpad specific tool called apmiser, don't know what it does, but seems to do some energy-saving if you're on batteries, just like the laptop-mode-tools an update to multimedia-buttons: even with acme not all of your buttons may work (I have four on my omnibook, those for browser and email work, the other two, which were for HP-specific tools don't) this maybe a bit offtopic, but the volume, mute and email-button (for chat-button I don't know, don't use it) on my logitech mx-610 all work without any configuration needed :D one last note: do not use too many tools in parallel, e. g. cpudyn AND powernowd (mandriva lets you install both, while ubuntu wisely uninstalls one of them), some tools may interfere with each other, especially be cautious with all those energy-saving tools, sometimes I have the impression they are not more than placebo Edited June 20, 2006 by lavaeolus Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lavaeolus Posted July 25, 2006 Author Report Share Posted July 25, 2006 (edited) some things got better with hot-swapping: after I installed the package udev-tools I get at least a half-working hot-swap; when I pull out the media-bay the system freezes, but when I put it back in the system responds again, before it would just freeze and could only be reawakened by a reset one thing still remains mysterious: after that gnome thinks I have a cd-burner but the dvd-drive still works ok this lasts until I either run harddrake or reboot Edited July 25, 2006 by lavaeolus Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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