/etc/bluetooth/main.conf:
AutoEnable is set to "true". This causes BT to be enabled upon boot REGARDLESS of any GNOME
settings the user might have set. When I set it to "false", I've tried rebooting in these two
scenarios:
1. If the GNOME setting is OFF prior to reboot..., BT stays OFF upon reboot.
2. If the GNOME setting is ON prior to reboot..., BT turns ON upon reboot.
HOWEVER..., in ALL suspend/wake scenarios, regardless of the AutoEnable setting or the GNOME setting, OR even if a "systemctl stop bluetooth" is performed prior to suspend/wake, (or any permutation of all 3)..., BT is re-enabled upon wake.
This SEEMS to be some sort of lack of coordination between systemd configuration and some GNOME component.
Some observations:
/etc/bluetooth/ main.conf:
AutoEnable is set to "true". This causes BT to be enabled upon boot REGARDLESS of any GNOME
settings the user might have set. When I set it to "false", I've tried rebooting in these two
scenarios:
1. If the GNOME setting is OFF prior to reboot..., BT stays OFF upon reboot.
2. If the GNOME setting is ON prior to reboot..., BT turns ON upon reboot.
HOWEVER..., in ALL suspend/wake scenarios, regardless of the AutoEnable setting or the GNOME setting, OR even if a "systemctl stop bluetooth" is performed prior to suspend/wake, (or any permutation of all 3)..., BT is re-enabled upon wake.
This SEEMS to be some sort of lack of coordination between systemd configuration and some GNOME component.