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Date:      05 Aug 1999 07:27:01 +0200
From:      Peter Mutsaers <plm@xs4all.nl>
To:        freebsd-current@freebsd.org
Subject:   recent apm changes
Message-ID:  <87n1w6hk62.fsf@muon.xs4all.nl>

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Hello,

After Linux I gave FreeBSD a try again, when I saw some improvements
to APM had been committed.

I hoped for a real suspend mode, but alas. Now I'm wondering what
makes the difference, and whether I could do it myself.

Let me explain: I run my (desktop) computer in the living room. I
don't want to shut it down all the time, but it must be 100% quiet
when I'm not using it.

In Linux, when suspend mode is activated (either through a short press
on the power button or by the (BIOS) timer ), the disks also spin down
(immediately, not waiting for their timer, which I disabled) and also
the CPU fan and/or the FAN of the box switches off.

In FreeBSD, when I activate suspend mode, I see the light on my
computer blinking, indicating it has gone into suspend mode, but still
there is no reduction in noise whatsoever. The disks keep spinning,
the CPU fan (or whatever) too. I could activate the BIOS spindown
timer on the HDD's, but I'd rather not (since then I also get
spindowns while I'm normally working with the computer) but still the
other fan will always continue to run.

What can I do to change this behaviour? Can anyone explain what Linux
(or Win95 for that matter) are doing to make it 100% quiet in suspend
mode? Then I could give it a try to have FreeBSD do the
same. Currently this prevents me from using FreeBSD alas.

Thanks,

-- 
Peter Mutsaers |  Abcoude (Utrecht), | Trust me, I know
plm@xs4all.nl  |  the Netherlands    | what I'm doing. 


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