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  • Red@reddthat.comtoLinux@lemmy.mlKDE often not sleeping when idle
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    5 months ago

    Close, that is because of the wakeup. (I think)

    See all of your devices that make your computer: cat /proc/acpi/wakeup

    Toggle all of them one by one:

    echo GPP0 | sudo tee /proc/acpi/wakeup (where GPP0 is the item in the left hand column)

    Cat again if you want to see if it’s disabled

    Keep going until you find the one that is ‘waking’ your computer back up after a sleep.

    When you find the right one, add it to your crontab so it turns it off on every boot:

    sudo crontab -e
    @reboot echo "GPP0" > /proc/acpi/wakeup
    











  • Those wakelock devices map to specific devices. If you run lsusb you will see the pci:0000:00:1c.4 and others.

    • Find the one that your mouse is.
    • Do the echo command into that device RP05.
    • Confirm it’s disabled.
    • suspend & then try moving the mouse
    • if it works edit the systemd script with the correct echo command
    • make sure you make the service Enabled (otherwise it won’t start on boot)
    • reboot and confirm it’s still disabled.

    That should be what is needed to disable waking up from the mouse.




  • Yep. Keep the WAN port dhcp Client enabled if you can, just one less thing to worry about.

    Also take note that when you change the static IP of the new router it would conflict with the old one (and dhcp might fail). So you might need to set your local clients IP. Take note of the configuration it has and the steps to set it manually.

    The rest all sounds right.


  • Your router’s IP can be anything. Choose any internal IP address on your subnet.

    You can have 2 routers on the same subnet just make sure you disable DHCP on the new one while you perform the setup of everything else.
    Then when you want to switch over, toggle on dhcp on the new router and replace the cables and you should be fine. You’ll know it’s working when you plug into it and get a default route of the new router.




  • Red@reddthat.comtoLinux Gaming@lemmy.mlBest partitioning scheme for dual boot ?
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    1 year ago

    The only thing I would change is your backup drive. Linux can write to NTFS without issues. You'd be better off with 2 TB instead of 2x1TB.

    I would get rid of all the HDDs for games as they are too slow. Verifying files under steam or other clients is so slow compared to SSDs. (If you can afford it of course, otherwise it's fine)

    There isn't anything else wrong per-se. Except for still having windows installed 🤣. Proton (wine) via steam or lutris, solves 99% of all issues with running games on linux. (except for Anti-Cheat games like valorant).