# The following doesn't yet work, because current kernels (up to at least # 2.4.20) do not support rejection of APM events. Supporting this would # require substantial modifications to the APM driver. We will re-enable # this feature if the driver is ever modified. -- cph@debian.org # # Set the following to "false" if you want to reject system suspend or # system standby requests when the computer is running on AC power. # Otherwise set this to "true". Such requests are never rejected when # the computer is running on battery power. #SUSPEND_ON_AC=true # make an entry in the logfiles whenever the percentage of # battery power changes below the value specified here LOGPERCENTCHANGE=10 # warn on specified remainig battery percentage, use negative values # to disable this feature WARNPERCENT=5 # use -W to warn all users in a critical power state ADDPARAMS=-W # if you have problems with your X display after returning from suspend mode # give CHANGEVT the number of the virtual terminal your X-Server runs on #CHANGEVT=7 # If you set this to yes, the clock will be synced with the hardware clock # when the computer returns from suspend mode. CLOCK_SYNC=yes # Some broken BIOSes, like those found in Gericom 3xC notebooks, # won't wake up harddisks from suspend to disk unless they're set to PIO mode # and 16-bit. # Don't activate the following two lines unless you're getting # "hda: lost interrupt" after returning from a suspend to disk. #HDPARM_AT_SUSPEND="-q -X0 -q -c0 -q -d0 -q -u0 -q -S0" #HDPARM_AT_RESUME="-q -X66 -q -c1 -q -d1 -q -u1 -q -S30" # the error-beep of your terminal might be set to the default values after a # resume so set TERMINALBEEP to "yes" to restore the values in # /etc/sysconfig/keyboard TERMINALBEEP=no # if your sound sometimes doesn't work after a resume set RESTORESOUND # to "yes"; this will kill all sound applications, and, if you also # set $RESTORESOUNDPROGS to "yes", restart the sound applications as # the correct user and on the correct display RESTORESOUND=no RESTORESOUNDPROGS=no # I got frequent problems mainly with scsi-pcmcia-cards on the cardbus. Use # PCMCIARESTART=yes to stop the whole pcmcia-subsystem on a suspend and # to start it again after a resume. This can slow down your suspend and resume # process. Use PCMCIAWAIT to wait with the suspend until the pccard is removed # from the system. # Some BIOSes are too buggy to handle cardctl suspend and cardctl resume # properly, in these cases cardctl eject and cardctl insert can be used instead. # However, this actually ejects the card on hardware supporting it, so if # the BIOS isn't buggy, it shouldn't be used. Set PCMCIABIOSBUG to yes if # you are experiencing problems with PCMCIA cards after a resume. # Since buggy BIOSes seem to be far more common than hardware that can eject # PCMCIA cards (and it doesn't make a difference on systems that don't have # either), it is enabled by default. PCMCIARESTART=no PCMCIABIOSBUG=yes PCMCIAWAIT=no # Set ANACRON_ON_BATTERY to yes if you want to run anacron after a resume even # if you're on battery power. ANACRON_ON_BATTERY=no # Set LOCK_X to yes if you want to lock all your X displays at suspend LOCK_X=no # If NET_RESTART is set to yes, the network will be shut down at suspend and # restarted at resume. # This is especially useful if you're using DHCP, but usually won't hurt. NETWORK_RESTART=yes # If NETFS_RESTART is set to yes, NFS filesystems will be unmounted at # suspend, and remounted at resume (if possible). NETFS_RESTART=yes