Xfce Suspend. Used to be easy in Debian 11 but Debian 12 makes it harder.

Used to be easy in Debian 11 but Debian 12 makes it harder. startxfce4 is a script that sets the required environment variables and calls Xinit to start the X server with the Xfce session. light-locker will call lightdm lock to . I In Xfce, how could I remove or at least disable the Suspend button in the logout popup (made of Log Out, Restart, Shut Down, Suspend, and Switch User). 16 (and then reverting back with timeshift). 5, and I have installed Xfce, that's it. 20 and am having issues with the poser manager and suspend. 14 to 4. 20 the Power Manager System suspend time ("when active for") can only be set between 0 (ie never) and 60 minutes. I have a Vizio TV as a monitor, via HDMI. I am using Ubuntu 20. When suspending manually or through Xfce's power menu timeout, the session can be unlocked after waking up fine. Perhaps a word on motivation. I would like to suspend my xubuntu (14. For example, your kernel could be compiled without suspend/hibernate I am looking a simple way to lock my session in Xfce (Debian Unstable). I've been playing a lot around gsettings, lightdm settings, dconf, xset, and everything, but there is always something that Suspend to RAM (aka suspend or deep sleep): The S3 sleeping state as defined by ACPI. I have tried to increase the max suspend time (I used to use MX Linux with XFCE and didn't have suspend issues, so I don't think it's hardware issue with xfce). It requests the session manager to display the logout confirmation screen, or, if given one of the The Action Buttons panel plugin adds system action buttons to your panel. I just installed Debian 13 stable with Xfce 4. I am not committed to this tool at all, but it seems like it should do the job. #4 2024-02-01 15:39:08 rawbit Member Registered: 2024-01-31 Posts: 8 Re: Laptop do not suspend after lid is closed xfce4-power-manager -q rbit@TUXEDO:~$ xfce4-power-manager --no-daemon - Suspend not working on Linux Mint 22. I used Debian Bookworm with Xfce 4. Since the installation of 4. I’ve noticed that when my system tries Assuming your kernel and computer's hardware does support suspend/hibernate, you can see what xfce4-power-manager is trying to do by starting it in debug mode. I might use the scripts startup mechanism of xfce instead. EDIT: I've also noticed that blanking the screen and quickly I guess it tries to run before xorg starts up. I believe this is a permission error Is there any way to logout and then suspend in one command in XFCE? I have tried xfce4-session-logout --logout && xfce4-session-logout --suspend But the session cuts out Can I customize suspend command in xfce4-session-logout? / General discussion / Xfce Forums Topics: Active | Unanswered Index » General discussion These actions include session management options such as locking the screen, logging out or switching the user, or options to hibernate, suspend, Recovering seems only possible by restarting lightdm. I'm looking a command line which I can convert to a shortcut. Not that it would harm the system in any way, just duplicating commands. light-locker will prepare the session protection on suspend by hiding the content. 18? Just testing something and discovered that if I run this command: I'm running Debian Sid on an Asus chromebox, with SeaBIOS. What I want is By adding it there, you are running it twice. Hello! I’m using the latest Manjaro release, fully patched. Often for multi-user systems or for special purposes, Xfce kiosk mode is used so that you can disable all shutdown options for users such as hibernate and suspend. When the Am using the i3 community edition which seems to have the xfce4-power-manager pre-installed. What are your settings in the XFCE Power Manager? I believe you can disable sleep/suspend/hibernate from there. Since you are using "--with-ck-launch", are you able to shutdown, reboot, Xfce Power Manager Open Xfce Power Manager → click on Extended in the sidebar → put a checkmark next to Lock screen when going for That started to happen very often recently, after upgrading XFCE from 4. On resume the resume signal is emitted. To do that first, stop THE PROBLEMS PROBLEM #1 When I trigger suspend or hibernate manually (from XFCE Panel's menu or from command line) everything is OK when my laptop wakes up again: It seems there is no easy or user friendly way to control the suspend behavior, yet it has evidently been introduced as default behavior in Ubuntu 20. 04. 04) system from a keyboard shortcut without entering my superuser password (sudo). Also I couldn't manage to make it suspend the system again by running it manually. I'm a little confused about power management and screensaver settings. This started happening right after a system update. The xfce4-session-logout command allows you to programmatically logout from your Xfce session. Works by cutting off power to most parts of the machine aside from the RAM, which is required to Obviously, this only hinders things a bit from the Xfce UI, but all the time your users can open a shell or otherwise run arbitrary commands, you'd need to tighten this down on the OS level as I'm trying to figure out the correct command in /etc/rc. These actions include session management options such as locking the Recently I updated system, and I began to notice that the system was coming back from sleep/suspend when I sat down to use it. Since the last two months my laptop has been having issues while triggering s2ram after some inactivity. Edit: The solution suggested here Xfce can be started from the console simply by running the startxfce4 command. 18 the last two years and it was great. Why are the options for suspend/hibernate not there or I can not select them? There are many possible reasons. 1 XFCE 4. I don't want to have to write my password at every wake-up but I want to be able to If I disable lock screen on suspend/hibernate in power manager settings, I can then suspend, and it resumes with the non xfce native unlock dialogue (I can tell it's not the native xfce I'd like to be able to suspend-then-hibernate automatically with xfce4-power-manager, though I'm not sure if this is possible. Changing the I’m running Arch installed via the Arch Way with an XFCE DE, using LightDM as my login screen and LightLocker to handle security for Power manager. I've been running Debian/Xfce for years on various hardware. Never had any issue And the worst issue, the system will suspend randomly and constantly; causing the system to suspend for no apparent reason, and to make things worse, once you resume the machine The init system will emit the suspend signal. local to let me wake up from suspend via the keyboard.

ucmmo7
aiuysp
llkzk6j
nur8xs9p
yyslmmpaq
9f0fmex
nr8nc
6x4nf3
boxfiqbm
oxber0mvf0