Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2006 09:45:27 -0800 From: Ben Jencks <ben-freebsd-mobile@bjencks.net> To: Norberto Meijome <freebsd@meijome.net> Cc: freebsd-mobile@freebsd.org Subject: Re: ACPI Suspend, devd and rc.suspend Message-ID: <sa6zmjb6atk.fsf@wagner.bjencks.net> In-Reply-To: <20060327233509.22c4780d@localhost> (Norberto Meijome's message of "Mon, 27 Mar 2006 23:35:09 %2B1000") References: <20060327233509.22c4780d@localhost>
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Norberto Meijome <freebsd@meijome.net> writes:
> Hi there,
> machine : Thinkpad z60m, acpi.ko, acpi_ibm.ko loaded, 6.1 Prerelease
> kernel and world as of yesterday.
>
> If I run zzz , /etc/rc.suspend is run. on resume, /etc/rc.resume is
> executed.
>
> If I hit Fn-F4 ( == suspend event), the acpi sets the machine to
> suspend mode, but /etc/rc.suspend is NOT executed, and neither
> is /etc/rc.resume on resume.
>
> I don't know how to tell if devd catches the suspend event. I run it in
> debug mode (devd -dD) but couldn't see anything other than all the
> device motherboard's USB hubs being pulled off and added back in.
>
> I would love some enlightenment on this subject.
In order to make this work on my T43p, I set dev.acpi_ibm.0.events=1, so
that Fn-F4 generates an acpi_ibm event (which is handled by devd) rather
than a suspend event (which tells the kernel to suspend straightaway). I
have the block
notify 10 {
match "system" "ACPI";
match "subsystem" "IBM";
match "notify" "0x04";
action "/usr/sbin/zzz";
};
in my devd.conf, so that it calls zzz, which does the right thing.
-Ben Jencks
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