Date: Fri, 8 Aug 1997 10:44:13 -0400 From: "Larry S. Marso" <lsmarso@panix.com> To: Hiroyuki HANAI <hanai@astec.co.jp>, freebsd-mobile@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Libretto 50 and FSD Message-ID: <19970808104413.04431@panix.com> In-Reply-To: <19970808105009Z.hanai@astec.co.jp>; from Hiroyuki HANAI on Fri, Aug 08, 1997 at 10:50:09AM %2B0900 References: <Pine.BSF.3.91.970807165320.26373A-100000@server.arg.sj.co.uk> <19970808105009Z.hanai@astec.co.jp>
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On Fri, Aug 08, 1997 at 10:50:09AM +0900, Hiroyuki HANAI wrote: > > to disk (rather than just continuing to refresh the DRAM while suspended). > > Yes, Toshiba calls this `hibernation', i.e. the memory image > is dumped into the last region of the hard disk and the Libretto > really hibernates! > This is very good for the life of battery, but it takes long time, > about 30 seconds, to suspend/resume. > Yes, you are right. > In hibernation, the memory image is placed on the last 32MB slice > of the hard disk. So, you must take care of it when you install FreeBSD. My Chembook notebook also has a suspend to special partition feature, but after a little experimentation I decided that it was incompatible with FreeBSD, suitable for WinTel systems. Are you actually saying you have a "suspend to disk" feature working for FreeBSD? Maybe I gave up in my own case too quickly. -- Larry S. Marso lsmarso@panix.com
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