systemd-sleep.conf
systemd
Developer
Zbigniew
Jędrzejewski-Szmek
zbyszek@in.waw.pl
systemd-sleep.conf
5
systemd-sleep.conf
Suspend and hibernation configuration file
/etc/systemd/sleep.conf
Description
systemd supports three general
power-saving modes:
suspend
a low-power state
where execution of the OS is paused,
and complete power loss might result
in lost data, and which is fast to
enter and exit. This corresponds to
suspend, standby, or freeze states as
understood by the kernel.
hibernate
a low-power state
where execution of the OS is paused,
and complete power loss does not
result in lost data, and which might
be slow to enter and exit. This
corresponds to the hibernation as
understood by the kernel.
hybrid-sleep
a low-power state
where execution of the OS is paused,
which might be slow to enter, and on
complete power loss does not result in
lost data but might be slower to exit
in that case. This mode is called
suspend-to-both by the kernel.
Settings in this file determine what strings
will be written to
/sys/power/disk and
/sys/power/state by
systemd-sleep8
when
systemd1
attempts to suspend or hibernate the machine.
Options
The following options can be configured in the
[Sleep] section of
/etc/systemd/sleep.conf:
SuspendMode=
HibernateMode=
HybridSleepMode=
The string to be written to
/sys/power/disk by,
respectively,
systemd-suspend.service8,
systemd-hibernate.service8, or
systemd-hybrid-sleep.service8.
More than one value can be specified by seperating
multiple values with commas. They will be tried
in turn, until one is written without error. If
neither suceeds, the operation will be aborted.
SuspendState=
HibernateState=
HybridSleepState=
The string to be written to
/sys/power/state by,
respectively,
systemd-suspend.service8,
systemd-hibernate.service8, or
systemd-hybrid-sleep.service8.
More than one value can be specified by seperating
multiple values with commas. They will be tried
in turn, until one is written without error. If
neither suceeds, the operation will be aborted.
Example: freeze
Example: to exploit the freeze
mode added
in Linux 3.9, one can use systemctl suspend
with
[Sleep]
SuspendState=freeze
See Also
systemd-sleep8,
systemd-suspend.service8,
systemd-hibernate.service8,
systemd-hybrid-sleep.service8,
systemd1,
systemd.directives7