Hello. I just want to ask, I already tried search many resources, but I still can’t find a way to reduce battery drain while sleep on Ubuntu on Dell laptop.
I seen that it use S0ix, the new standard that many manufacturer use but when sleep it drains a lot battery, in just 6 hours the battery gone 0.
Any help is appreciated. This is company laptop and it requires me use ubuntu (I don’t like it but I don’t have options to changes OS/distro).
Thanks
Why not just set your laptop to automatically hibernate after it’s been in a suspended state for x seconds? That way your system will fully power off after it’s been suspended for a while, which would save even more battery compared to S3. With the speed of NVMe drives, resuming from hibernation only takes a couple of seconds on most modern systems.
How do you set that up? Please don’t say it’s a BIOS setting.
Nah, it’s a systemd setting. You need to edit
/etc/systemd/logind.conf
and changeHandleLidSwitch=
toHandleLidSwitch=suspend-then-hibernate
, and the create or edit/etc/systemd/sleep.conf
to change the timeout value:[Sleep] HibernateDelaySec=900
With the above, the system will automatically hibernate after 15 minutes of sleep.
Note that if you’re using a full-fledged DE or a third-party power profile manager, you may need to disable any lid-close actions in there (if it doesn’t have the suspend-then-hibernate option) so that systemd can handle it properly.
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I’m not familiar with gnome, is there any option on gnome for it? I never seen it.
https://lemmy.nz/comment/3039271