Pavel Machek | d7ae79c | 2005-09-06 15:16:21 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | Some warnings, first. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 2 | |
| 3 | * BIG FAT WARNING ********************************************************* |
| 4 | * |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 5 | * If you touch anything on disk between suspend and resume... |
| 6 | * ...kiss your data goodbye. |
| 7 | * |
Pavel Machek | d7ae79c | 2005-09-06 15:16:21 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 8 | * If you do resume from initrd after your filesystems are mounted... |
| 9 | * ...bye bye root partition. |
| 10 | * [this is actually same case as above] |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 11 | * |
Pavel Machek | d7ae79c | 2005-09-06 15:16:21 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 12 | * If you have unsupported (*) devices using DMA, you may have some |
| 13 | * problems. If your disk driver does not support suspend... (IDE does), |
| 14 | * it may cause some problems, too. If you change kernel command line |
| 15 | * between suspend and resume, it may do something wrong. If you change |
| 16 | * your hardware while system is suspended... well, it was not good idea; |
| 17 | * but it will probably only crash. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 18 | * |
| 19 | * (*) suspend/resume support is needed to make it safe. |
Pavel Machek | 543cc27 | 2006-03-23 03:00:02 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 20 | * |
David Brownell | b9827e4 | 2006-05-16 17:33:14 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 21 | * If you have any filesystems on USB devices mounted before software suspend, |
Pavel Machek | 543cc27 | 2006-03-23 03:00:02 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 22 | * they won't be accessible after resume and you may lose data, as though |
David Brownell | b9827e4 | 2006-05-16 17:33:14 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 23 | * you have unplugged the USB devices with mounted filesystems on them; |
| 24 | * see the FAQ below for details. (This is not true for more traditional |
| 25 | * power states like "standby", which normally don't turn USB off.) |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 26 | |
| 27 | You need to append resume=/dev/your_swap_partition to kernel command |
| 28 | line. Then you suspend by |
| 29 | |
| 30 | echo shutdown > /sys/power/disk; echo disk > /sys/power/state |
| 31 | |
| 32 | . If you feel ACPI works pretty well on your system, you might try |
| 33 | |
| 34 | echo platform > /sys/power/disk; echo disk > /sys/power/state |
| 35 | |
Bojan Smojver | 62c552c | 2012-06-16 00:09:58 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 36 | . If you would like to write hibernation image to swap and then suspend |
| 37 | to RAM (provided your platform supports it), you can try |
| 38 | |
| 39 | echo suspend > /sys/power/disk; echo disk > /sys/power/state |
| 40 | |
Pavel Machek | 543cc27 | 2006-03-23 03:00:02 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 41 | . If you have SATA disks, you'll need recent kernels with SATA suspend |
| 42 | support. For suspend and resume to work, make sure your disk drivers |
| 43 | are built into kernel -- not modules. [There's way to make |
| 44 | suspend/resume with modular disk drivers, see FAQ, but you probably |
| 45 | should not do that.] |
| 46 | |
Rafael J. Wysocki | 853609b | 2006-02-01 03:05:07 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 47 | If you want to limit the suspend image size to N bytes, do |
Rafael J. Wysocki | ca0aec0 | 2006-01-06 00:15:56 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 48 | |
| 49 | echo N > /sys/power/image_size |
| 50 | |
| 51 | before suspend (it is limited to 500 MB by default). |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 52 | |
| 53 | |
| 54 | Article about goals and implementation of Software Suspend for Linux |
| 55 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
Oskar Schirmer | 1557cc4 | 2012-08-21 09:54:09 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 56 | Author: Gábor Kuti |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 57 | Last revised: 2003-10-20 by Pavel Machek |
| 58 | |
| 59 | Idea and goals to achieve |
| 60 | |
| 61 | Nowadays it is common in several laptops that they have a suspend button. It |
| 62 | saves the state of the machine to a filesystem or to a partition and switches |
| 63 | to standby mode. Later resuming the machine the saved state is loaded back to |
| 64 | ram and the machine can continue its work. It has two real benefits. First we |
| 65 | save ourselves the time machine goes down and later boots up, energy costs |
| 66 | are real high when running from batteries. The other gain is that we don't have to |
| 67 | interrupt our programs so processes that are calculating something for a long |
| 68 | time shouldn't need to be written interruptible. |
| 69 | |
| 70 | swsusp saves the state of the machine into active swaps and then reboots or |
| 71 | powerdowns. You must explicitly specify the swap partition to resume from with |
| 72 | ``resume='' kernel option. If signature is found it loads and restores saved |
| 73 | state. If the option ``noresume'' is specified as a boot parameter, it skips |
Bojan Smojver | f996fc9 | 2010-09-09 23:06:23 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 74 | the resuming. If the option ``hibernate=nocompress'' is specified as a boot |
| 75 | parameter, it saves hibernation image without compression. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 76 | |
| 77 | In the meantime while the system is suspended you should not add/remove any |
| 78 | of the hardware, write to the filesystems, etc. |
| 79 | |
| 80 | Sleep states summary |
| 81 | ==================== |
| 82 | |
| 83 | There are three different interfaces you can use, /proc/acpi should |
| 84 | work like this: |
| 85 | |
| 86 | In a really perfect world: |
| 87 | echo 1 > /proc/acpi/sleep # for standby |
| 88 | echo 2 > /proc/acpi/sleep # for suspend to ram |
| 89 | echo 3 > /proc/acpi/sleep # for suspend to ram, but with more power conservative |
| 90 | echo 4 > /proc/acpi/sleep # for suspend to disk |
| 91 | echo 5 > /proc/acpi/sleep # for shutdown unfriendly the system |
| 92 | |
| 93 | and perhaps |
| 94 | echo 4b > /proc/acpi/sleep # for suspend to disk via s4bios |
| 95 | |
| 96 | Frequently Asked Questions |
| 97 | ========================== |
| 98 | |
| 99 | Q: well, suspending a server is IMHO a really stupid thing, |
| 100 | but... (Diego Zuccato): |
| 101 | |
| 102 | A: You bought new UPS for your server. How do you install it without |
| 103 | bringing machine down? Suspend to disk, rearrange power cables, |
| 104 | resume. |
| 105 | |
| 106 | You have your server on UPS. Power died, and UPS is indicating 30 |
| 107 | seconds to failure. What do you do? Suspend to disk. |
| 108 | |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 109 | |
| 110 | Q: Maybe I'm missing something, but why don't the regular I/O paths work? |
| 111 | |
| 112 | A: We do use the regular I/O paths. However we cannot restore the data |
| 113 | to its original location as we load it. That would create an |
| 114 | inconsistent kernel state which would certainly result in an oops. |
| 115 | Instead, we load the image into unused memory and then atomically copy |
| 116 | it back to it original location. This implies, of course, a maximum |
| 117 | image size of half the amount of memory. |
| 118 | |
| 119 | There are two solutions to this: |
| 120 | |
| 121 | * require half of memory to be free during suspend. That way you can |
| 122 | read "new" data onto free spots, then cli and copy |
| 123 | |
| 124 | * assume we had special "polling" ide driver that only uses memory |
| 125 | between 0-640KB. That way, I'd have to make sure that 0-640KB is free |
| 126 | during suspending, but otherwise it would work... |
| 127 | |
| 128 | suspend2 shares this fundamental limitation, but does not include user |
| 129 | data and disk caches into "used memory" by saving them in |
| 130 | advance. That means that the limitation goes away in practice. |
| 131 | |
| 132 | Q: Does linux support ACPI S4? |
| 133 | |
| 134 | A: Yes. That's what echo platform > /sys/power/disk does. |
| 135 | |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 136 | Q: What is 'suspend2'? |
| 137 | |
| 138 | A: suspend2 is 'Software Suspend 2', a forked implementation of |
| 139 | suspend-to-disk which is available as separate patches for 2.4 and 2.6 |
| 140 | kernels from swsusp.sourceforge.net. It includes support for SMP, 4GB |
| 141 | highmem and preemption. It also has a extensible architecture that |
| 142 | allows for arbitrary transformations on the image (compression, |
| 143 | encryption) and arbitrary backends for writing the image (eg to swap |
| 144 | or an NFS share[Work In Progress]). Questions regarding suspend2 |
| 145 | should be sent to the mailing list available through the suspend2 |
| 146 | website, and not to the Linux Kernel Mailing List. We are working |
| 147 | toward merging suspend2 into the mainline kernel. |
| 148 | |
Rafael J. Wysocki | 8314418 | 2007-07-17 04:03:35 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 149 | Q: What is the freezing of tasks and why are we using it? |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 150 | |
Rafael J. Wysocki | 8314418 | 2007-07-17 04:03:35 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 151 | A: The freezing of tasks is a mechanism by which user space processes and some |
| 152 | kernel threads are controlled during hibernation or system-wide suspend (on some |
| 153 | architectures). See freezing-of-tasks.txt for details. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 154 | |
Johannes Berg | 11d77d0 | 2007-04-30 15:09:53 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 155 | Q: What is the difference between "platform" and "shutdown"? |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 156 | |
| 157 | A: |
| 158 | |
| 159 | shutdown: save state in linux, then tell bios to powerdown |
| 160 | |
| 161 | platform: save state in linux, then tell bios to powerdown and blink |
| 162 | "suspended led" |
| 163 | |
Johannes Berg | 11d77d0 | 2007-04-30 15:09:53 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 164 | "platform" is actually right thing to do where supported, but |
| 165 | "shutdown" is most reliable (except on ACPI systems). |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 166 | |
| 167 | Q: I do not understand why you have such strong objections to idea of |
| 168 | selective suspend. |
| 169 | |
Matt LaPlante | 2fe0ae7 | 2006-10-03 22:50:39 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 170 | A: Do selective suspend during runtime power management, that's okay. But |
| 171 | it's useless for suspend-to-disk. (And I do not see how you could use |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 172 | it for suspend-to-ram, I hope you do not want that). |
| 173 | |
| 174 | Lets see, so you suggest to |
| 175 | |
| 176 | * SUSPEND all but swap device and parents |
| 177 | * Snapshot |
| 178 | * Write image to disk |
| 179 | * SUSPEND swap device and parents |
| 180 | * Powerdown |
| 181 | |
| 182 | Oh no, that does not work, if swap device or its parents uses DMA, |
| 183 | you've corrupted data. You'd have to do |
| 184 | |
| 185 | * SUSPEND all but swap device and parents |
| 186 | * FREEZE swap device and parents |
| 187 | * Snapshot |
| 188 | * UNFREEZE swap device and parents |
| 189 | * Write |
| 190 | * SUSPEND swap device and parents |
| 191 | |
| 192 | Which means that you still need that FREEZE state, and you get more |
| 193 | complicated code. (And I have not yet introduce details like system |
| 194 | devices). |
| 195 | |
| 196 | Q: There don't seem to be any generally useful behavioral |
| 197 | distinctions between SUSPEND and FREEZE. |
| 198 | |
| 199 | A: Doing SUSPEND when you are asked to do FREEZE is always correct, |
Lucas De Marchi | 25985ed | 2011-03-30 22:57:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 200 | but it may be unnecessarily slow. If you want your driver to stay simple, |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 201 | slowness may not matter to you. It can always be fixed later. |
| 202 | |
| 203 | For devices like disk it does matter, you do not want to spindown for |
| 204 | FREEZE. |
| 205 | |
Matt LaPlante | 2fe0ae7 | 2006-10-03 22:50:39 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 206 | Q: After resuming, system is paging heavily, leading to very bad interactivity. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 207 | |
| 208 | A: Try running |
| 209 | |
| 210 | cat `cat /proc/[0-9]*/maps | grep / | sed 's:.* /:/:' | sort -u` > /dev/null |
| 211 | |
Adrian Bunk | a58a414 | 2006-01-10 00:08:17 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 212 | after resume. swapoff -a; swapon -a may also be useful. |
Pavel Machek | fc5fb2c | 2005-06-25 14:55:07 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 213 | |
| 214 | Q: What happens to devices during swsusp? They seem to be resumed |
| 215 | during system suspend? |
| 216 | |
| 217 | A: That's correct. We need to resume them if we want to write image to |
| 218 | disk. Whole sequence goes like |
| 219 | |
| 220 | Suspend part |
| 221 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 222 | running system, user asks for suspend-to-disk |
| 223 | |
| 224 | user processes are stopped |
| 225 | |
| 226 | suspend(PMSG_FREEZE): devices are frozen so that they don't interfere |
| 227 | with state snapshot |
| 228 | |
| 229 | state snapshot: copy of whole used memory is taken with interrupts disabled |
| 230 | |
| 231 | resume(): devices are woken up so that we can write image to swap |
| 232 | |
| 233 | write image to swap |
| 234 | |
| 235 | suspend(PMSG_SUSPEND): suspend devices so that we can power off |
| 236 | |
| 237 | turn the power off |
| 238 | |
| 239 | Resume part |
| 240 | ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 241 | (is actually pretty similar) |
| 242 | |
| 243 | running system, user asks for suspend-to-disk |
| 244 | |
Lucas De Marchi | 25985ed | 2011-03-30 22:57:33 -0300 | [diff] [blame] | 245 | user processes are stopped (in common case there are none, but with resume-from-initrd, no one knows) |
Pavel Machek | fc5fb2c | 2005-06-25 14:55:07 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 246 | |
| 247 | read image from disk |
| 248 | |
| 249 | suspend(PMSG_FREEZE): devices are frozen so that they don't interfere |
| 250 | with image restoration |
| 251 | |
| 252 | image restoration: rewrite memory with image |
| 253 | |
| 254 | resume(): devices are woken up so that system can continue |
| 255 | |
| 256 | thaw all user processes |
| 257 | |
| 258 | Q: What is this 'Encrypt suspend image' for? |
| 259 | |
| 260 | A: First of all: it is not a replacement for dm-crypt encrypted swap. |
| 261 | It cannot protect your computer while it is suspended. Instead it does |
| 262 | protect from leaking sensitive data after resume from suspend. |
| 263 | |
| 264 | Think of the following: you suspend while an application is running |
| 265 | that keeps sensitive data in memory. The application itself prevents |
| 266 | the data from being swapped out. Suspend, however, must write these |
| 267 | data to swap to be able to resume later on. Without suspend encryption |
| 268 | your sensitive data are then stored in plaintext on disk. This means |
| 269 | that after resume your sensitive data are accessible to all |
| 270 | applications having direct access to the swap device which was used |
| 271 | for suspend. If you don't need swap after resume these data can remain |
| 272 | on disk virtually forever. Thus it can happen that your system gets |
| 273 | broken in weeks later and sensitive data which you thought were |
| 274 | encrypted and protected are retrieved and stolen from the swap device. |
| 275 | To prevent this situation you should use 'Encrypt suspend image'. |
| 276 | |
| 277 | During suspend a temporary key is created and this key is used to |
| 278 | encrypt the data written to disk. When, during resume, the data was |
| 279 | read back into memory the temporary key is destroyed which simply |
| 280 | means that all data written to disk during suspend are then |
| 281 | inaccessible so they can't be stolen later on. The only thing that |
| 282 | you must then take care of is that you call 'mkswap' for the swap |
| 283 | partition used for suspend as early as possible during regular |
| 284 | boot. This asserts that any temporary key from an oopsed suspend or |
| 285 | from a failed or aborted resume is erased from the swap device. |
| 286 | |
| 287 | As a rule of thumb use encrypted swap to protect your data while your |
| 288 | system is shut down or suspended. Additionally use the encrypted |
| 289 | suspend image to prevent sensitive data from being stolen after |
| 290 | resume. |
Pavel Machek | 7e95888 | 2005-09-03 15:56:56 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 291 | |
Rafael J. Wysocki | ecbd0da | 2006-12-06 20:34:13 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 292 | Q: Can I suspend to a swap file? |
Pavel Machek | 7e95888 | 2005-09-03 15:56:56 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 293 | |
Rafael J. Wysocki | ecbd0da | 2006-12-06 20:34:13 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 294 | A: Generally, yes, you can. However, it requires you to use the "resume=" and |
| 295 | "resume_offset=" kernel command line parameters, so the resume from a swap file |
| 296 | cannot be initiated from an initrd or initramfs image. See |
| 297 | swsusp-and-swap-files.txt for details. |
Pavel Machek | d7ae79c | 2005-09-06 15:16:21 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 298 | |
| 299 | Q: Is there a maximum system RAM size that is supported by swsusp? |
| 300 | |
| 301 | A: It should work okay with highmem. |
| 302 | |
| 303 | Q: Does swsusp (to disk) use only one swap partition or can it use |
| 304 | multiple swap partitions (aggregate them into one logical space)? |
| 305 | |
| 306 | A: Only one swap partition, sorry. |
| 307 | |
| 308 | Q: If my application(s) causes lots of memory & swap space to be used |
| 309 | (over half of the total system RAM), is it correct that it is likely |
| 310 | to be useless to try to suspend to disk while that app is running? |
| 311 | |
| 312 | A: No, it should work okay, as long as your app does not mlock() |
| 313 | it. Just prepare big enough swap partition. |
| 314 | |
Adrian Bunk | a58a414 | 2006-01-10 00:08:17 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 315 | Q: What information is useful for debugging suspend-to-disk problems? |
Pavel Machek | d7ae79c | 2005-09-06 15:16:21 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 316 | |
| 317 | A: Well, last messages on the screen are always useful. If something |
| 318 | is broken, it is usually some kernel driver, therefore trying with as |
| 319 | little as possible modules loaded helps a lot. I also prefer people to |
| 320 | suspend from console, preferably without X running. Booting with |
| 321 | init=/bin/bash, then swapon and starting suspend sequence manually |
| 322 | usually does the trick. Then it is good idea to try with latest |
| 323 | vanilla kernel. |
| 324 | |
Pavel Machek | 543cc27 | 2006-03-23 03:00:02 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 325 | Q: How can distributions ship a swsusp-supporting kernel with modular |
| 326 | disk drivers (especially SATA)? |
| 327 | |
| 328 | A: Well, it can be done, load the drivers, then do echo into |
| 329 | /sys/power/disk/resume file from initrd. Be sure not to mount |
| 330 | anything, not even read-only mount, or you are going to lose your |
| 331 | data. |
| 332 | |
| 333 | Q: How do I make suspend more verbose? |
| 334 | |
| 335 | A: If you want to see any non-error kernel messages on the virtual |
| 336 | terminal the kernel switches to during suspend, you have to set the |
Pavel Machek | e084dbd | 2006-06-23 02:04:50 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 337 | kernel console loglevel to at least 4 (KERN_WARNING), for example by |
| 338 | doing |
Pavel Machek | 543cc27 | 2006-03-23 03:00:02 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 339 | |
Pavel Machek | e084dbd | 2006-06-23 02:04:50 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 340 | # save the old loglevel |
| 341 | read LOGLEVEL DUMMY < /proc/sys/kernel/printk |
| 342 | # set the loglevel so we see the progress bar. |
| 343 | # if the level is higher than needed, we leave it alone. |
| 344 | if [ $LOGLEVEL -lt 5 ]; then |
| 345 | echo 5 > /proc/sys/kernel/printk |
| 346 | fi |
| 347 | |
| 348 | IMG_SZ=0 |
| 349 | read IMG_SZ < /sys/power/image_size |
| 350 | echo -n disk > /sys/power/state |
| 351 | RET=$? |
| 352 | # |
| 353 | # the logic here is: |
| 354 | # if image_size > 0 (without kernel support, IMG_SZ will be zero), |
| 355 | # then try again with image_size set to zero. |
| 356 | if [ $RET -ne 0 -a $IMG_SZ -ne 0 ]; then # try again with minimal image size |
| 357 | echo 0 > /sys/power/image_size |
| 358 | echo -n disk > /sys/power/state |
| 359 | RET=$? |
| 360 | fi |
| 361 | |
| 362 | # restore previous loglevel |
| 363 | echo $LOGLEVEL > /proc/sys/kernel/printk |
| 364 | exit $RET |
Pavel Machek | 543cc27 | 2006-03-23 03:00:02 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 365 | |
| 366 | Q: Is this true that if I have a mounted filesystem on a USB device and |
| 367 | I suspend to disk, I can lose data unless the filesystem has been mounted |
| 368 | with "sync"? |
| 369 | |
David Brownell | b9827e4 | 2006-05-16 17:33:14 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 370 | A: That's right ... if you disconnect that device, you may lose data. |
| 371 | In fact, even with "-o sync" you can lose data if your programs have |
| 372 | information in buffers they haven't written out to a disk you disconnect, |
| 373 | or if you disconnect before the device finished saving data you wrote. |
Pavel Machek | 543cc27 | 2006-03-23 03:00:02 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 374 | |
David Brownell | b9827e4 | 2006-05-16 17:33:14 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 375 | Software suspend normally powers down USB controllers, which is equivalent |
| 376 | to disconnecting all USB devices attached to your system. |
| 377 | |
| 378 | Your system might well support low-power modes for its USB controllers |
| 379 | while the system is asleep, maintaining the connection, using true sleep |
| 380 | modes like "suspend-to-RAM" or "standby". (Don't write "disk" to the |
| 381 | /sys/power/state file; write "standby" or "mem".) We've not seen any |
| 382 | hardware that can use these modes through software suspend, although in |
Johannes Berg | 11d77d0 | 2007-04-30 15:09:53 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 383 | theory some systems might support "platform" modes that won't break the |
| 384 | USB connections. |
Pavel Machek | 543cc27 | 2006-03-23 03:00:02 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 385 | |
| 386 | Remember that it's always a bad idea to unplug a disk drive containing a |
David Brownell | b9827e4 | 2006-05-16 17:33:14 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 387 | mounted filesystem. That's true even when your system is asleep! The |
| 388 | safest thing is to unmount all filesystems on removable media (such USB, |
| 389 | Firewire, CompactFlash, MMC, external SATA, or even IDE hotplug bays) |
| 390 | before suspending; then remount them after resuming. |
Pavel Machek | d7ae79c | 2005-09-06 15:16:21 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 391 | |
Alan Stern | 0458d5b | 2007-05-04 11:52:20 -0400 | [diff] [blame] | 392 | There is a work-around for this problem. For more information, see |
| 393 | Documentation/usb/persist.txt. |
| 394 | |
Pavel Machek | 23b168d | 2008-02-05 19:27:12 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 395 | Q: Can I suspend-to-disk using a swap partition under LVM? |
| 396 | |
| 397 | A: No. You can suspend successfully, but you'll not be able to |
| 398 | resume. uswsusp should be able to work with LVM. See suspend.sf.net. |
| 399 | |
Pavel Machek | e084dbd | 2006-06-23 02:04:50 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 400 | Q: I upgraded the kernel from 2.6.15 to 2.6.16. Both kernels were |
| 401 | compiled with the similar configuration files. Anyway I found that |
| 402 | suspend to disk (and resume) is much slower on 2.6.16 compared to |
| 403 | 2.6.15. Any idea for why that might happen or how can I speed it up? |
| 404 | |
| 405 | A: This is because the size of the suspend image is now greater than |
| 406 | for 2.6.15 (by saving more data we can get more responsive system |
| 407 | after resume). |
| 408 | |
| 409 | There's the /sys/power/image_size knob that controls the size of the |
| 410 | image. If you set it to 0 (eg. by echo 0 > /sys/power/image_size as |
| 411 | root), the 2.6.15 behavior should be restored. If it is still too |
| 412 | slow, take a look at suspend.sf.net -- userland suspend is faster and |
| 413 | supports LZF compression to speed it up further. |