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Hi to all: Here'a a refresher - I have an Ubuntu laptop I'm treating as a server and the hard drive keeps spinning down, making it an island. I had installed a cron job to keep network and the hard drive going, but then list members suggested I install a server kernel which would likely have the power management functions disabled. To balance the server kernel, I also opted to disable the cron job and see what the kernel was capable of. So for the last 10 or so days, it has been running without a cron job but with a server kernel. Latest - Last night I tried to ssh in from a family member's Mac, did so successfully, but then the system started to give me delayed responses. I was able to perform some functions from the ssh connection, such as using apt-get. But apt-get hung. Ps auwx showed dpkg running, then the session hung and kill -9 wouldn't work. Subsequent ssh connections started to hang at the password prompt, too. I was so tired I just went to sleep as soon as I got home. This morning I found the hard drive spun down. SShing from my Ubuntu desktop hung at the password prompt. I pressed Shift and on the laptop and it came back up and I finally logged in. So, it looks like the server kernel couldn't keep the drive spinning, but it did at least keep the network port going. But I wonder why I had some activity going (apt-get) but then it stopped responding... Anyway, I re-activated the cron jobs - ntpdate to a reliable time server and updatedb, 1100 and 2300 hours each daily. I learn so much from this group. I thought I'd give a little bit back. Thanks to all. Scott On Wed, 20 Jun 2007, Kristian Hermansen wrote: > On 6/20/07, Scott Ehrlich <scott-3s7WtUTddSA at public.gmane.org> wrote: >> scott at scott-laptop:~$ laptop-detect >> scott at scott-laptop:~$ echo $? >> 1 > > So, you don't have laptop-mode package installed, and your > laptop-detect seems to think you DO NOT have a laptop. Are you sure > the power management is due to being a laptop? It could just be > standard power management settings for desktops. Wonder why it didn't > detect a laptop. You can see what laptop-mode does for yourself, it > is just a shell script... > >> ls /etc/default > > Right. The config file is not there since you don't have that package > installed. > >> As for /etc/acpi, I chmod 000'd all the scripts. >> >> Any other ideas? It would be nice to not have to use cron to keep the >> system in server mode vs laptop mode. > > OK, chmodding them may work. However, did you try using a -server > kernel rather than a -generic? > > $ sudo aptitude install linux-server > -- > Kristian Hermansen > -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.
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