System hibernation

This is a discussion on System hibernation within the Linux Administration forums, part of the Linux Forums category; How to configure the system to hibernate after a specified inactivity period (the same behavior as in Windows with setting &...


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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 09-26-2004
it
 
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Default System hibernation

How to configure the system to hibernate after a specified inactivity period (the same behavior as
in Windows with setting "System hibernates" time inside Control Panel / Power options)?

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  #2 (permalink)  
Old 09-27-2004
Rich Gibbs
 
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Default Re: System hibernation

it said the following, on 09/26/04 11:47:
> How to configure the system to hibernate after a specified inactivity
> period (the same behavior as in Windows with setting "System hibernates"
> time inside Control Panel / Power options)?


Yes, in general you can do this. How you do it is dependent on which
Linux distro / version you are using, and on your hardware. Many recent
distros have tools that make setting it up pretty simple. (KDE has a
"power control" tab in the Control Center app, for example.)

Your machine will need to support either APM or APCI, and you'll need
the kernel modules that support those facilities (which you may have
already).

--
Rich Gibbs
rgibbs@alumni.princeton.edu

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  #3 (permalink)  
Old 09-29-2004
Dan Boline
 
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Default Re: System hibernation

You can implement it through many system bioses, and there's something
called software suspend. But how well it works will depend on your
hardware (I've had hit and miss experiences with it).

Rich Gibbs wrote:

> it said the following, on 09/26/04 11:47:
>> How to configure the system to hibernate after a specified inactivity
>> period (the same behavior as in Windows with setting "System
>> hibernates" time inside Control Panel / Power options)?

>
> Yes, in general you can do this. How you do it is dependent on which
> Linux distro / version you are using, and on your hardware. Many
> recent
> distros have tools that make setting it up pretty simple. (KDE has a
> "power control" tab in the Control Center app, for example.)
>
> Your machine will need to support either APM or APCI, and you'll need
> the kernel modules that support those facilities (which you may have
> already).
>


--
Daniel Boline
Dept of Physics, Boston University

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