I hadn’t known about it either (before I started using it), so I feel that.
Rtfm happy ending
please, forgive me
You, and only you, may be forgiven. For I am feeling merciful at this time and you asked so nicely bimbimboy.
❤️
#blessed by a chance to learn something on the aw 🙏
You have the systemd haters to thank for this one. They have wasted so much time talking shiz about a system they did not want to understand and downvoting folks posting about stuff they use. Next time you find something else useful in systemd and wonder “How come nobody told me?”, know that we tried and got drowned out by the cool kids.
I understand the concerns about blobbification of all these system into a technical monolith that you have to swallow whole or not at all, that you can’t really break down into it’s individual components. So if the thing you need isn’t in there, you have to chuck the entire systemd thing and switch back to SysV
However, I quite like systemd so far… except for having dozens of processes, that’s not super chill to have so much stuff I don’t use running but OK, convenient.
At least it’s not like Wayland, that we have been forced into while it was barely working, and still today it’s only kinda working with lot lot lots of non-working stuff and mega jank stuff while now X11 is rotting and dying. So we’re stuck with half-dead half-lobotomized graphics system… I hope they eventually get their shit together and I wish they would have made wayland working before killing X11.
At least the Arch Wiki is always there for us…
Is
systemctl suspend
different than closing the lid or clicking “sleep” on your DE’s power menu?No, it’s not different, I just use Arch and have no power menu anymore, nor did I usually close my laptop lid while I was still planning to use it. I usually just powered it down fully because it used to start very fast, but I think the laptop bios battery is dying or something, because it turns on much slower now than it did before. So finding the actual command that triggers the suspend state was so epic, because I can script and bind it now.
I just use Arch
You have only yourself to blame then. You’ve chosen a distribution which expects users to learn how the system works and it’s on you to figure out how to suspend the system.
I think the laptop bios battery is dying
This is unlikely. If the battery was dying, you’d be loosing BIOS/UEFI settings including time. Once the computer starts up, the battery is unused.
“I take full responsibility for my Arch install” is one of my favourite lines from a linux youtuber.
This quote has been yoinked. I need it on a shirt tbh.
Yes, that’s why I chose the distro I chose, and why this was not a serious post were I was actually upset, I enjoy learning and reading, I just wanted to make a post about suspend bc it has made me happy. I am also aware the bios battery does nothing once it’s booted, once it’s booted the performance is the same as it has always been. So I assumed the cmos battery is dying, but not dead enough to lose settings yet.
I am also aware the bios battery does nothing once it’s booted
The CMOS battery does nothing from the moment computer is turned on. If you’re saying booting takes longer, that’s not battery’s fault.
So I assumed the cmos battery is dying, but not dead enough to lose settings yet.
That’s not how CMOS battery work. It’s even good enough or you’re loosing the clock.
I like wlogout, I’ve mapped the power button to launch it.
But it supossed to work when u closing ur lid of laptop
Who closes their laptop?
Edit for clarity: /jPeople who carry it around and don’t just use it as a desktop replacement… With an open lid it doesn’t quite fit into my bag pack.
Sounds like a small backpack
Yeah, people stare if I hop on the commuter train with the the large one that fits camping gear and supplies for 2 weeks. And I don’t own anything in between.
In fact my laptop is barely ever opened when I use it lmao
Or use any of the UI options to sleep your computer, isn’t it?
Well I suppose maybe he is using i3 :)
Niri actually ^_^
Welcome to Linux