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nvidia173-doc-html-173.14.31-1.1.mga1.nonfree.x86_64.rpm

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<h2 class="title"><a name="powermanagement" id=
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<p>The NVIDIA driver includes support for both APM- and ACPI- based
power management. The NVIDIA Linux driver supports APM-based
suspend and resume, as well as ACPI standby (S3) and suspend
(S4).</p>
<p>To use APM, your system's BIOS will need to support APM, rather
than ACPI. Many, but not all, of the GeForce2- and GeForce4-based
notebooks include APM support. You can check for APM support via
the procfs interface (check for the existence of /proc/apm) or via
the kernel's boot output:</p>
<pre class="screen">
    % dmesg | grep -i apm
</pre>
<p>a message similar to this indicates APM support:</p>
<pre class="screen">
    apm: BIOS version 1.2 Flags 0x03 (Driver version 1.16)
</pre>
<p>or a message like this indicates no APM support:</p>
<pre class="screen">
    No APM support in Kernel
</pre>
<p>Note: If you are using Linux kernel 2.6 and your kernel was
configured with support for both ACPI and APM, the NVIDIA kernel
module will be built with ACPI Power Management support. If you
wish to use APM, you will need to rebuild the Linux kernel without
ACPI support and reinstall the NVIDIA Linux graphics driver.</p>
<p>Sometimes chipsets lose their AGP configuration during suspend,
and may cause corruption on the bus upon resume. The AGP driver is
required to save and restore relevant register state on such
systems; NVIDIA's NvAGP is notified of power management events and
ensures its configuration is kept intact across suspend/resume
cycles.</p>
<p>Linux 2.4 AGPGART does not support power management, Linux 2.6
AGPGART does, but only for a few select chipsets. If you use either
of these two AGP drivers and find your system fails to resume
reliably, you may have more success with the NvAGP driver.</p>
<p>Disabling AGP support (see <a href="chapter-12.html" title=
"Chapter&nbsp;12.&nbsp;Configuring AGP">Chapter&nbsp;12,
<i>Configuring AGP</i></a> for more details on disabling AGP) will
also work around this problem.</p>
<p>More recent systems are more likely to support ACPI. ACPI is
supported by the NVIDIA graphics driver in 2.6 and newer kernels.
The driver supports ACPI standby (S3) and includes beta support for
ACPI suspend (S4).</p>
<p>If you enable ACPI S4 support via suspend2 patches, you will
need to tweak the Linux kernel such that it dynamically determines
the amount of pages needed by the drivers that will be suspended in
the system. This is done by issuing the following command as
root:</p>
<pre class="screen">
    % echo 0 &gt; /sys/power/suspend2/extra_pages_allowance
</pre>
<p>Older versions of suspend2 may provide a different interface, in
which case the following command needs to be issued as root:</p>
<pre class="screen">
    % echo 0 &gt; /proc/suspend2/extra_pages_allowance
</pre>
<p>The system does NOT need rebooting, and as a matter of fact, the
setting is volatile over reboots. You will need to include the
tweak in your startup scripts. However, failure to perform the
tweak will result in a hang going to sleep. For further information
regarding suspend2 patches, see <a href="http://www.suspend2.net/"
target="_top">http://www.suspend2.net/</a>.</p>
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