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Date:      Fri, 5 Jan 2001 02:44:36 -0500
From:      "Donald J . Maddox" <dmaddox@sc.rr.com>
To:        Graham Wheeler <gram@cequrux.com>
Cc:        Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com>, hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Just how standard is APM?
Message-ID:  <20010105024436.A2700@cae88-102-101.sc.rr.com>
In-Reply-To: <3A556040.6B9163BB@cequrux.com>; from gram@cequrux.com on Fri, Jan 05, 2001 at 07:48:48AM %2B0200
References:  <3A545615.3597BCF3@cequrux.com> <200101042234.f04MYM147333@harmony.village.org> <3A556040.6B9163BB@cequrux.com>

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Yeah, I thought that APM was APM, but the apm device does nothing
on my desktop with power management hardware...  That is, things like
'shutdown -p now' don't work, both 'apm' and 'apmd' just return
'device not configured', etc.  Interestingly, at least 'shutdown -p'
does work with ACPI anyway :)  Of course, maybe I'm just misunder-
standing the whole thing anyway...  Is power management hardware
== APM?

On Fri, Jan 05, 2001 at 07:48:48AM +0200, Graham Wheeler wrote:
> Warner Losh wrote:
> > 
> > APM is standard.  Except when it is broken in some brain damaged ways.
> > 
> > However, you likely have your apm device disabled in your kernel and
> > all you need to do is enable it.
> > 
> 
> Nope - as I said, I added log messages to apm.c to log the BIOS probe
> and they log a failure (I have "device apm0" in my config file).
> 
> gram
> 
> -- 
> Dr Graham Wheeler                        E-mail: gram@cequrux.com
> Director, Research and Development       WWW:    http://www.cequrux.com
> CEQURUX Technologies                     Phone:  +27(21)423-6065
> Firewalls/VPN Specialists                Fax:    +27(21)424-3656
> 
> 
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