Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: sudden poweroff ??
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers sudden poweroff ?? Post 63061 by locustfurnace on Tuesday 22nd of February 2005 01:48:02 PM
Old 02-22-2005
Need some more information.
Are you using a UNIX or a GNU/Linux Distribution. Which one in particular? Name and release number.
Is the machine a laptop or a desktop model?
How old is the machine?
Did the machine boot-up with a video signal before? Does it boot-up with a video signal now, and then quickly shutdown, such as in a sleep stage?
Have you made any changes to the power management settings, APM?
How long after pinging the machine does it go back "out"?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Automatic PowerOff!!

Hi Guys, I faced a problem in one of our workstations, from five days ago when i come to office i see that this system has been powred off & when i start it up again it goes trough the "System Setup Restoring " & seems that automatic power off is active . For disabling this i went to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nikk
2 Replies

2. Linux

Restricing normal user from poweroff

HI, How can I restrict normal user from doing 'poweroff' ? Regards JAGDISH (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jagdish.machhi@
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

script to poweroff when running on UPS

Hi all, The place where i stay experiences lot of power cuts and my solaris box is almost always on. It so happens that many times i will not be around to switch it off as soon as there is a power cut..(i also have UPS which provides alternative supply for 15min) So i wanted to write a script... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: wrapster
3 Replies

4. OS X (Apple)

Sudden LOCK'd volume syndrome

I have depended heavily on an external hd I named 300FWR. It has my backed-up apps, docs, and hours of captured video from digital video recordings of my wife and kids. 90% of the contents are indispensable to me. Recently, the 300FWR volume popped up on my desktop with a Lock icon on the Drive... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ejmjensen
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

poweroff

I want 2 authorize all the users to use poweroff command. How can I do this ??:o (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: lipun4u
1 Replies

6. Solaris

System date sudden change

Hi there, We have a Solaris 10 machine which has been up and running for more than 400 days. A strange behaviour happened. The system date defaulted to epoch timestamp. Oracle stopped and application failed causing management to parade. We managed to reset the date. All other servers and... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: sundar63
8 Replies

7. Solaris

T4-1/Solaris 11 and sudden 50% performance drop

We have a SPARC T4-1 server, running Solaris 11, and it's doing some pretty extensive parsing on roughly 100GB data set. All was well still few weeks ago, when I was testing the performance, I was reaching rougly 50minute calculation times, and it was more or less expected performance. Now... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: julumme
0 Replies

8. Solaris

Sudden rise in heap memory of a process

Hi, There is a abrupt memory rise observed for a process on solaris. When the process is started the memory is around 268 MB and is stable for a day. Then suddenly the memory increased to 4364 MB. Below is the pmap -xs output for the process (only for heap) Address Kbytes ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Nidds
1 Replies

9. Solaris

Sudden Service Busy Alarms

Hi, I am getting service busy alarms on my machines which are using MongoDB every now and then. When the service busy alarm appears, I get the following errors on my mongo router logs. Tue Apr 7 08:01:08.445 dbclient_rs nodes.ok = true hxcslc-b05:27014 Tue Apr 7 08:01:08.445 dbclient_rs... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: sni_engineer
0 Replies

10. HP-UX

Sudden application crash in servers

Hi, This weekend there was a sudden application crash in the server. I did not know where to start to investigate the problem, so I first looked into the /var/adm/syslog/syslog.log, and this was what I found : Dec 17 00:38:02 L28bi01 sshd: error: accept: No buffer space available Dec 17... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: anaigini45
9 Replies
PMSET(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						  PMSET(1)

NAME
pmset -- modify power management settings SYNOPSIS
pmset [-a | -b | -c] [dim minutes] [spindown minutes] [sleep minutes] [womp 1/0] [ring 1/0] [autorestart 1/0] [dps 1/0] [reduce 1/0] [powerbutton 1/0] [lidwake 1/0] [acwake 1/0] [boot] pmset -g [disk | live | cap | sched] DESCRIPTION
pmset changes and reads power management settings such as idle sleep timing, wake on administrative access, automatic restart on power loss, etc. SETTING
The -a, -b, -c flags determine whether the settings apply to battery (-b), charger (wall power) (-c), or all (-a). Use a minutes argument of 0 to set the idle time to never. pmset must be run as root. The boot argument tells power management that system bootup is complete. Loginwindow handles this on a normal Mac OS X system. GETTING
The -g flag outputs the settings currently in use (same as -g live ). -g disk will tell you the settings on disk. -g cap will tell you which power management features the machine supports. -g sched will show scheduled startup/wake and shutdown/sleep events. ARGUMENTS
dim - display dim timer (value in minutes) spindown - disk spindown timer (value in minutes) sleep - system sleep timer (value in minutes) womp - wake on ethernet magic packet (value = 0/1) ring - wake on modem ring (value = 0/1) autorestart - automatic restart on power loss (value = 0/1) dps - dynamically change processor speed based on load (value = 0/1) reduce - reduce processor speed (value = 0/1) powerbutton - sleep the machine when power button is pressed (value = 0/1) lidwake - wake the machine when the laptop lid(or clamshell) is opened (value = 0/1) acwake - wake the machine when power source (AC/battery) is changed (value = 0/1) OTHER ARGUMENTS
These arguments don't directly affect power management settings: boot - tell the kernel that system boot is complete EXAMPLES
pmset -b dim 5 pmset -a dim 10 spindown 10 sleep 30 womp 1 pmset -g live FILES
All changes made through pmset are saved in a persistent preferences file (per-system, not per-user) at /Library/Preferences/SystemConfiguration/com.apple.PowerManagement.plist pmset modifies the same file that System Preferences Energy Saver modifies. Darwin August 19, 2002 Darwin
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:40 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy