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Date:      Sun, 01 Feb 2004 22:19:15 +0300
From:      Yuri Grebenkin <rainbreath@hotpop.com>
To:        Sergey 'DoubleF' Zaharchenko <doublef@tele-kom.ru>
Cc:        Joe Lewis <joe@joe-lewis.com>
Subject:   Re: Power off
Message-ID:  <opr2phadgyw41ezb@smtp.hotpop.com>
In-Reply-To: <20040201094553.29bf45ee@Hal.localdomain>
References:  <opr2nvq9tew41ezb@smtp.hotpop.com> <44fzdvzp5p.fsf@be-well.ilk.org> <20040201094553.29bf45ee@Hal.localdomain>

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I've added
	device	acpica
to my kernel and removed
	device	apm0
Now all work very well!

Handbook says that ACPI is better to use than APM. I probably had problems 
while using APM (even enabled in any sort).
Also handbook says that to enable ACPI on -STABLE you need to add 'device 
acpi' to kernel config, but I found that it must be acpica instead! Maybe 
it's a mistake?

Yuri

On Sun, 1 Feb 2004 09:45:53 +0300, Sergey 'DoubleF' Zaharchenko 
<doublef@tele-kom.ru> wrote:

> On 31 Jan 2004 18:14:42 -0500
> Lowell Gilbert <freebsd-questions-local@be-well.ilk.org> probably wrote:
>
>> Yuri Grebenkin <rainbreath@hotpop.com> writes:
>>
>> > Hi. I used to run poweroff on RH Linux. Now I'm under FreeBSD 4.9 and
>> > I can't turn power off - I have to push button by my hand after
>> > running halt that prints that system has halted and ready to
>> > reboot. Is there any way to turn power off by software?
>>
>> Sure.  'shutdown -p now' will do it, assuming you have apm(4) in your 
>> kernel.
>
> and apm_enable="YES" in your /etc/rc.conf
>





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