Power Management: Difference between revisions

From NixOS Wiki
imported>Samueldr
Created page with "{{expansion}} == Suspend == === Suspend hooks === NixOS provides the {{nixos:option|powerManagement.resumeCommands}} option which defines commands that are added to a globa..."
 
imported>Lelgenio
Add workaround for systems that immediatly wakeup after beign suspended
Line 28: Line 28:
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Troubleshooting ===
==== System Immediately wakes up from suspend ====
Particularly in some gigabyte motherboards with NVMe drives, the system may immediately wake up from being suspended.
This can be worked around by disabling the wakeup triggers for the offending components:
===== Solution 1: Disabling wakeup triggers for all PCIe devices =====
If you don't need your system to wakeup via PCIe components you can simply disable it for all without needing to search for what component is causing problems.
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
services.udev.extraRules = ''
  ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="pci", DRIVER=="pcieport", ATTR{power/wakeup}="disabled"
'';
</syntaxhighlight>
===== Solution 2: Disabling a common NVMe interface =====
Specifically on Gigabyte motherboards you can try targetting only the NVMe ports.
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
services.udev.extraRules = ''
  ACTION=="add" SUBSYSTEM=="pci" ATTR{vendor}=="0x1022" ATTR{device}=="0x1483" ATTR{power/wakeup}="disabled"
'';
</syntaxhighlight>
===== Solution 3: Disabling a single device's wakeup triggers =====
If you wish to be more granular in what components should no longer be able to wakeup your system you can manually search what component is causing the wakeup events.
First, list all components and their current wakeup status:
<syntaxhighlight lang="sh">
$ cat /proc/acpi/wakeup
Device S-state   Status  Sysfs node
GP12   S4 *enabled  pci:0000:00:07.1
GP13   S4 *disabled  pci:0000:00:08.1
XHC0   S4 *enabled  pci:0000:0a:00.3
GP30   S4 *disabled
....
PT27   S4 *disabled
PT28   S4 *disabled
PT29   S4 *disabled  pci:0000:03:09.0
</syntaxhighlight>
You can temporarily toggle a device by sending it's "Device" collumn back into `/proc/acpi/wakeup`
<syntaxhighlight lang="sh">
echo GPP0 | sudo tee /proc/acpi/wakeup
</syntaxhighlight>
After finding out which component is causing unwanted wakeups you can use the sysfs id to find out the "vendor" and "device" fields:
<syntaxhighlight lang="sh">
$ cat /sys/class/pci_bus/0000:04/device/0000:04:00.0/vendor
0x1987
$ cat /sys/class/pci_bus/0000:04/device/0000:04:00.0/device
0x5013
</syntaxhighlight>
And finally use those values in a udev rule:
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
services.udev.extraRules = ''
  ACTION=="add" SUBSYSTEM=="pci" ATTR{vendor}=="0x1987" ATTR{device}=="0x5013" ATTR{power/wakeup}="disabled"
'';
</syntaxhighlight>


== External resources ==
== External resources ==


* {{manual:nixos|sec=#sec-rebooting|chapter=Chapter 23. Rebooting and Shutting Down}}
* {{manual:nixos|sec=#sec-rebooting|chapter=Chapter 23. Rebooting and Shutting Down}}

Revision as of 23:45, 22 August 2023

Suspend

Suspend hooks

NixOS provides the powerManagement.resumeCommands option which defines commands that are added to a global script that will be executed after resuming.

powerManagement.resumeCommands = ''
  echo "This should show up in the journal after resuming."
'';

It is also possible, to use the post-resume target directly to make a service. Refer to the Systemd Services article for details about writing systemd services for NixOS.

  systemd.services.your-service-name = { 
    description = "Service description here";
    wantedBy = [ "post-resume.target" ];
    after = [ "post-resume.target" ];
    script = ''
    echo "This should show up in the journal after resuming."
    '';
    serviceConfig.Type = "oneshot";
  };

Troubleshooting

System Immediately wakes up from suspend

Particularly in some gigabyte motherboards with NVMe drives, the system may immediately wake up from being suspended. This can be worked around by disabling the wakeup triggers for the offending components:

Solution 1: Disabling wakeup triggers for all PCIe devices

If you don't need your system to wakeup via PCIe components you can simply disable it for all without needing to search for what component is causing problems.

services.udev.extraRules = ''
  ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="pci", DRIVER=="pcieport", ATTR{power/wakeup}="disabled"
'';
Solution 2: Disabling a common NVMe interface

Specifically on Gigabyte motherboards you can try targetting only the NVMe ports.

services.udev.extraRules = ''
  ACTION=="add" SUBSYSTEM=="pci" ATTR{vendor}=="0x1022" ATTR{device}=="0x1483" ATTR{power/wakeup}="disabled"
'';
Solution 3: Disabling a single device's wakeup triggers

If you wish to be more granular in what components should no longer be able to wakeup your system you can manually search what component is causing the wakeup events.

First, list all components and their current wakeup status:

$ cat /proc/acpi/wakeup
Device	S-state	  Status   Sysfs node
GP12	  S4	*enabled   pci:0000:00:07.1
GP13	  S4	*disabled  pci:0000:00:08.1
XHC0	  S4	*enabled   pci:0000:0a:00.3
GP30	  S4	*disabled
....
PT27	  S4	*disabled
PT28	  S4	*disabled
PT29	  S4	*disabled  pci:0000:03:09.0

You can temporarily toggle a device by sending it's "Device" collumn back into `/proc/acpi/wakeup`

echo GPP0 | sudo tee /proc/acpi/wakeup

After finding out which component is causing unwanted wakeups you can use the sysfs id to find out the "vendor" and "device" fields:

$ cat /sys/class/pci_bus/0000:04/device/0000:04:00.0/vendor
0x1987
$ cat /sys/class/pci_bus/0000:04/device/0000:04:00.0/device
0x5013

And finally use those values in a udev rule:

services.udev.extraRules = ''
  ACTION=="add" SUBSYSTEM=="pci" ATTR{vendor}=="0x1987" ATTR{device}=="0x5013" ATTR{power/wakeup}="disabled"
'';

External resources