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Revision 1.4, Fri Oct 1 15:10:15 2004 UTC (13 years ago) by nathans.longdrop.melbourne.sgi.com
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.3: +11 -31 lines

Upgrade kernel to 2.6.9-rc3 and kdb to 4.4
Merge of 2.6.x-xfs-melb:linux:19628a by kenmcd.

config PM
	bool "Power Management support"
	---help---
	  "Power Management" means that parts of your computer are shut
	  off or put into a power conserving "sleep" mode if they are not
	  being used.  There are two competing standards for doing this: APM
	  and ACPI.  If you want to use either one, say Y here and then also
	  to the requisite support below.

	  Power Management is most important for battery powered laptop
	  computers; if you have a laptop, check out the Linux Laptop home
	  page on the WWW at <http://www.linux-on-laptops.com/> or
	  Tuxmobil - Linux on Mobile Computers at <http://www.tuxmobil.org/>
	  and the Battery Powered Linux mini-HOWTO, available from
	  <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>.

	  Note that, even if you say N here, Linux on the x86 architecture
	  will issue the hlt instruction if nothing is to be done, thereby
	  sending the processor to sleep and saving power.

config PM_DEBUG
	bool "Power Management Debug Support"
	---help---
	This option enables verbose debugging support in the Power Management
	code. This is helpful when debugging and reporting various PM bugs, 
	like suspend support.

config SOFTWARE_SUSPEND
	bool "Software Suspend (EXPERIMENTAL)"
	depends on EXPERIMENTAL && PM && SWAP
	---help---
	  Enable the possibilty of suspendig machine. It doesn't need APM.
	  You may suspend your machine by 'swsusp' or 'shutdown -z <time>' 
	  (patch for sysvinit needed). 

	  It creates an image which is saved in your active swaps. By the next
	  booting the, pass 'resume=/dev/swappartition' and kernel will 
	  detect the saved image, restore the memory from
	  it and then it continues to run as before you've suspended.
	  If you don't want the previous state to continue use the 'noresume'
	  kernel option. However note that your partitions will be fsck'd and
	  you must re-mkswap your swap partitions. It does not work with swap
	  files.

	  Right now you may boot without resuming and then later resume but
	  in meantime you cannot use those swap partitions/files which were
	  involved in suspending. Also in this case there is a risk that buffers
	  on disk won't match with saved ones.

	  For more information take a look at Documentation/power/swsusp.txt.

config PM_STD_PARTITION
	string "Default resume partition"
	depends on SOFTWARE_SUSPEND
	default ""
	---help---
	  The default resume partition is the partition that the suspend-
	  to-disk implementation will look for a suspended disk image. 

	  The partition specified here will be different for almost every user. 
	  It should be a valid swap partition (at least for now) that is turned
	  on before suspending. 

	  The partition specified can be overridden by specifying:

		resume=/dev/<other device> 

	  which will set the resume partition to the device specified. 

	  Note there is currently not a way to specify which device to save the
	  suspended image to. It will simply pick the first available swap 
	  device.