An interesting test might be to run “echo mem | sudo tee /sys/power/state” from a terminal; this will *just* get the kernel to suspend, without executing any other suspend hooks (like locking the screen, etc).
I concur with “that person on Mastodon” (☺), though; it looks a lot like that mutter bug.
An interesting test might be to run “echo mem | sudo tee /sys/power/state” from a terminal; this will *just* get the kernel to suspend, without executing any other suspend hooks (like locking the screen, etc).
I concur with “that person on Mastodon” (☺), though; it looks a lot like that mutter bug.