This restored the symlink to CPU0's cpufreq dir for me. I've modified the acpi-scripts directory in etc (/etc/acpi/resume, specifically) to do this now, and everything's fine. I've added those lines to /etc/acpi/resume.d/72-acpi-pain.sh at the end.
But, for some reason the HAL scripts (/usr/lib/hal/scripts/linux) in Ubuntu prefer to use powersaved to sleep & hibernate instead of the ACPI scripts. I modified the two appropriate scripts (hal-system-power-hibernate-linux and hal-system-power-suspend-linux) to prefer to use the scripts in /etc/acpi. I'm not entirely sure why Ubuntu has to have both powersaved and acpi-support to begin with, but whatever.
Try this:
--code--
modprobe -r acpi_cpufreq
modprobe acpi_cpufreq
--/code--
This restored the symlink to CPU0's cpufreq dir for me. I've modified the acpi-scripts directory in etc (/etc/acpi/resume, specifically) to do this now, and everything's fine. I've added those lines to /etc/acpi/ resume. d/72-acpi- pain.sh at the end.
But, for some reason the HAL scripts (/usr/lib/ hal/scripts/ linux) in Ubuntu prefer to use powersaved to sleep & hibernate instead of the ACPI scripts. I modified the two appropriate scripts (hal-system- power-hibernate -linux and hal-system- power-suspend- linux) to prefer to use the scripts in /etc/acpi. I'm not entirely sure why Ubuntu has to have both powersaved and acpi-support to begin with, but whatever.