* 01_default_suspend_quirks.patch: Disable video quirks when running on a
known-good video driver (proprietary nvidia and fglrx, and Intel >=
915GM). Doing this here is better than the previously applied pm-utils
patch, since it avoids ignoring explicit pm-utils command line arguments,
consistently uses the same behaviour for suspend and resume, and keeps the
logic where it actually belongs.
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Mon, 24 Mar 2008 17:35:38 +0100
was supposed to take care of. Seems that doesn't really work then?
Does /sys/module/nvidia exist for you? or do you use the free nv driver? Can you please edit /usr/lib/hal/scripts/linux/hal-system-power-suspend-linux and add the following two lines right after the first line:
set -x
exec 2>/suspend.log
and then try to suspend, and resume (or reboot, if it failed). Can you please attach /suspend.log here?
Hm, actually that's exactly the case that
hal (0.5.11~ rc2-1ubuntu3) hardy; urgency=low
* 01_default_ suspend_ quirks. patch: Disable video quirks when running on a
known-good video driver (proprietary nvidia and fglrx, and Intel >=
915GM). Doing this here is better than the previously applied pm-utils
patch, since it avoids ignoring explicit pm-utils command line arguments,
consistently uses the same behaviour for suspend and resume, and keeps the
logic where it actually belongs.
-- Martin Pitt <email address hidden> Mon, 24 Mar 2008 17:35:38 +0100
was supposed to take care of. Seems that doesn't really work then?
Does /sys/module/nvidia exist for you? or do you use the free nv driver? Can you please edit /usr/lib/ hal/scripts/ linux/hal- system- power-suspend- linux and add the following two lines right after the first line:
set -x
exec 2>/suspend.log
and then try to suspend, and resume (or reboot, if it failed). Can you please attach /suspend.log here?