Linux and UNIX Man Pages

Linux & Unix Commands - Search Man Pages

powerd(1m) [posix man page]

powerd(1M)																powerd(1M)

NAME
powerd - power manager daemon SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/power/powerd [-n] The powerd daemon is started by pmconfig(1M) to monitor system activity and perform an automatic shutdown using the suspend-resume feature. When the system is suspended, complete current state is saved on the disk before power is removed. On reboot, the system automatically starts a resume operation and the system is restored to the same state it was in immediately prior to suspend. Immediately prior to system shutdown, the daemon notifies syslogd(1M) of the shutdown, which broadcasts a notification. The following option is supported: -n No broadcast mode. The daemon silently shuts down the system without notifying syslogd(1M). /etc/power.conf Power Management configuration information file See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWpmu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Unstable | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ pmconfig(1M), dtpower(1M), syslogd(1M), power.conf(4), attributes(5), cpr(7), pm(7D) Using Power Management 15 Oct 1999 powerd(1M)

Check Out this Related Man Page

powerd(1M)                                                                                                                              powerd(1M)

NAME
powerd - power manager daemon SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/power/powerd [-n] The powerd daemon is started by pmconfig(1M) to monitor system activity and perform an automatic shutdown using the suspend-resume feature. When the system is suspended, complete current state is saved on the disk before power is removed. On reboot, the system automatically starts a resume operation and the system is restored to the same state it was in immediately prior to suspend. Immediately prior to system shutdown, the daemon notifies syslogd(1M) of the shutdown, which broadcasts a notification. The following option is supported: -n No broadcast mode. The daemon silently shuts down the system without notifying syslogd(1M). /etc/power.conf Power Management configuration information file See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWpmu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Unstable | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ pmconfig(1M), dtpower(1M), syslogd(1M), power.conf(4), attributes(5), cpr(7), pm(7D) Using Power Management 15 Oct 1999 powerd(1M)
Man Page

4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

DELL LCD monitor falls asleep

after sometime and will not wake up until we reboot the system. It is a DELL 24" LCD connected to a sunblade 1500. my power.conf file is set like this: # more /etc/power.conf # Copyright (c) 1996 - 2001 by Sun Microsystems, Inc. # All rights reserved. # #pragma ident ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jvmagic
0 Replies

2. Linux

file-max limit

Oct 31 00:00:02 FIREWALL003 syslogd 1.4.1: restart. Oct 31 00:00:02 FIREWALL003 syslogd 1.4.1: restart. Oct 31 00:00:02 FIREWALL003 syslogd 1.4.1: restart. Oct 31 02:37:09 FIREWALL003 kernel: srmLINUX: segfault at 00000000303a3031 rip 000000000026fe54 rsp 00000000ffbd05b8 error 4 Oct 31... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: itik
5 Replies

3. AIX

Hacmp broadcast error

Hello, I tried searching for the solution on the google...nothing so far... anyone know anything about this. Broadcast message from root@pr2serv (tty) at 00:01:04 ... Cluster Verification detected cluster configuration errors on node pr1serv. Detailed clverify output is available in... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: filosophizer
7 Replies

4. What is on Your Mind?

Power Hour?

I had some free time at work today so I decided to get a little practice with my shell scripts (I'm pretty new to the whole UNIX thing). I'm sure I'm not the only college student here so maybe this code will come in handy for future weekends. #!/bin/sh if then echo "No playlist... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: thedoobieman5
0 Replies