############################################################################### # # Configuration for Laptop Mode Tools # ----------------------------------- # # There is a "system" to the configuration setting names: # CONTROL_something=0/1 Determines whether Laptop Mode Tools controls # something # LM_something=value Value of "something" when laptop mode is active # NOLM_something=value Value of "something" when laptop mode is NOT active # AC_something=value Value of "something" when the computer is running # on AC power # BATT_something=value Value of "something when the computer is running on # battery power # # There can be combinations of LM_/NOLM_ and AC_/BATT_ prefixes, but the # available prefixes are different for each setting. The available ones are # documented in the manual page, laptop-mode.conf(8). If there is no LM_/NOLM_ # in a setting name, then the value is used independently of laptop mode state, # and similarly, if there is no AC_/BATT_, then the value is used independently # of power state. # # Some options only work on ACPI systems. They are marked ACPI-ONLY. # # Note that this configuration file is a fragment of bash shell script: you # can use all the features of the bash scripting language to achieve your # desired configuration. ############################################################################### ############################################################################### # Configuration debugging # ----------------------- ############################################################################### # Set this to 1 if you want to see a lot of information when you start/stop # laptop_mode. VERBOSE_OUTPUT=0 ############################################################################### # When to enable laptop mode # -------------------------- # # "Laptop mode" is the mode in which laptop mode tools makes the computer # consume less power. This includes the kernel "laptop_mode" feature, which # allows your hard drives to spin down, as well as various other settings which # can be tweaked by laptop mode tools. You can enable or disable all of these # settings using the CONTROL_... options further down in this config file. ############################################################################### # Enable laptop mode when on battery power. ENABLE_LAPTOP_MODE_ON_BATTERY=1 # Enable laptop mode when on AC power. ENABLE_LAPTOP_MODE_ON_AC=0 # Enable laptop mode when the laptop's lid is closed, even when we're on AC # power? (ACPI-ONLY) ENABLE_LAPTOP_MODE_WHEN_LID_CLOSED=0 ############################################################################### # When to enable data loss sensitive features # ------------------------------------------- # # When data loss sensitive features are disabled, laptop mode tools acts as if # laptop mode were disabled, for those features only. # # Data loss sensitive features include: # - laptop_mode (i.e., delayed writes) # - hard drive write cache # # All of the options that follow can be set to 0 in order to prevent laptop # mode tools from using them to stop data loss sensitive features. Use this # when you have a battery that reports the wrong information, that confuses # laptop mode tools. # # Disabling data loss sensitive features is ACPI-ONLY. ############################################################################### # Disable all data loss sensitive features when the battery level (in % of the # battery capacity) reaches this value. MINIMUM_BATTERY_CHARGE_PERCENT=3 # Disable data loss sensitive features when the battery reports its state # as "critical". DISABLE_LAPTOP_MODE_ON_CRITICAL_BATTERY_LEVEL=1 ############################################################################### # Controlled hard drives and partitions # ------------------------------------- # # For spinning down your hard drives, laptop mode will remount file systems and # adjust hard drive spindown timeouts. These parameters specify which # devices and partitions are affected by laptop mode. ############################################################################### # The drives that laptop mode controls. # Separate them by a space, e.g. HD="/dev/hda /dev/hdb". The default is a # wildcard, which will get you all your IDE and SCSI/SATA drives. HD="/dev/[hs]d[abcdefgh]" # The partitions (or mount points) that laptop mode controls. # Separate the values by spaces. Use "auto" to indicate all partitions on drives # listed in HD. You can add things to "auto", e.g. "auto /dev/hdc3". You can # also specify mount points, e.g. "/mnt/data". PARTITIONS="auto /dev/mapper/*" # If this is enabled, laptop mode tools will assume that SCSI drives are really # SATA drives that only _look_ like SCSI drives, and will use hdparm to control # them. Set this to 0 if you have /dev/sd devices and you want laptop mode # tools to use the "sdparm" command to control them. ASSUME_SCSI_IS_SATA=0 ############################################################################### # Hard drive behaviour settings # ----------------------------- # # These settings specify how laptop mode tools will adjust the various # parameters of your hard drives and file systems. ############################################################################### # Maximum time, in seconds, of work that you are prepared to lose when your # system crashes or power runs out. This is the maximum time that Laptop Mode # will keep unsaved data waiting in memory before spinning up your hard drive. LM_BATT_MAX_LOST_WORK_SECONDS=600 LM_AC_MAX_LOST_WORK_SECONDS=360 # Should laptop mode tools control readahead? CONTROL_READAHEAD=1 # Read-ahead, in kilobytes. You can spin down the disk while playing MP3/OGG # by setting the disk readahead to a reasonable size, e.g. 3072 (3 MB). # Effectively, the disk will read a complete MP3 at once, and will then spin # down while the MP3/OGG is playing. Don't set this too high, because the # readahead is applied to _all_ files that are read from disk. LM_READAHEAD=3072 NOLM_READAHEAD=128 # Should laptop mode tools add the "noatime" option to the mount options when # laptop mode is enabled? CONTROL_NOATIME=1 # Should laptop mode tools control the hard drive idle timeout settings? CONTROL_HD_IDLE_TIMEOUT=1 # Idle timeout values. (hdparm -S) # Default is 2 hours on AC (NOLM_HD_IDLE_TIMEOUT_SECONDS=7200) and 5 seconds # for battery and for AC with laptop mode on. ## LM_AC_HD_IDLE_TIMEOUT_SECONDS=5 ## LM_BATT_HD_IDLE_TIMEOUT_SECONDS=5 ## NOLM_HD_IDLE_TIMEOUT_SECONDS=7200 # 5min for hd on battery, 30mins for hd on ac without LM LM_AC_HD_IDLE_TIMEOUT_SECONDS=120 LM_BATT_HD_IDLE_TIMEOUT_SECONDS=300 NOLM_HD_IDLE_TIMEOUT_SECONDS=1800 # Should laptop mode tools control the hard drive power management settings? CONTROL_HD_POWERMGMT=1 # Power management for HD (hdparm -B values) BATT_HD_POWERMGMT=1 LM_AC_HD_POWERMGMT=255 NOLM_AC_HD_POWERMGMT=255 # Should laptop mode tools control the hard drive write cache settings? CONTROL_HD_WRITECACHE=0 # Write cache settings for HD (hdparm -W values) NOLM_AC_HD_WRITECACHE=1 NOLM_BATT_HD_WRITECACHE=0 LM_HD_WRITECACHE=0 ############################################################################### # CPU frequency scaling and throttling # ------------------------------------ # # Laptop mode tools can automatically adjust your kernel CPU frequency # settings. This includes upper and lower limits and scaling governors. # There is also support for CPU throttling, on systems that don't support # frequency scaling. # # This feature only works on 2.6 kernels. ############################################################################### # Should laptop mode tools control the maximum CPU frequency? CONTROL_CPU_FREQUENCY=0 # Legal values are "slowest" for the slowest speed that your # CPU is able to operate at, "fastest" for the fastest speed, # "medium" for some value in the middle, or any value listed in # /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/scaling_available_frequencies. BATT_CPU_MAXFREQ=medium BATT_CPU_MINFREQ=slowest BATT_CPU_GOVERNOR=ondemand LM_AC_CPU_MAXFREQ=fastest LM_AC_CPU_MINFREQ=slowest LM_AC_CPU_GOVERNOR=ondemand NOLM_AC_CPU_MAXFREQ=fastest NOLM_AC_CPU_MINFREQ=slowest NOLM_AC_CPU_GOVERNOR=performance # Should laptop mode tools control the CPU throttling? This is only useful # on processors that don't have frequency scaling. # (Only works when you have /proc/acpi/processor/CPU*/throttling.) CONTROL_CPU_THROTTLING=1 # Legal values are "maximum" for the maximum (slowest) throttling level, # "minimum" for minimum (fastest) throttling level, "medium" for a value # somewhere in the middle (this is usually 50% for P4s), or any value listed # in /proc/acpi/processor/CPU*/throttling. Be careful when using "maximum": # this may be _very_ slow (in fact, with P4s it slows down the processor # by a factor 8). BATT_CPU_THROTTLING=medium LM_AC_CPU_THROTTLING=medium NOLM_AC_CPU_THROTTLING=minimum ############################################################################### # Syslog configuration control # ---------------------------- # # Syslog daemons have a tendency to sync their log files when entries are # written to them. This causes disks to spin up, which is not very nice when # you're trying to save power. The syslog.conf can be tweaked to *not* sync # a given file, by prepending the log file name with a dash, like this: # # mail.* -/var/log/mail/mail.log # # Using the following options, you can let laptop mode switch between # different syslog configurations depending on whether you are working on # battery or on AC power. To set this up, start by configuring these options # for your syslog daemon, and then run lm-syslog-setup to create the various # files. Then edit the laptop mode-specific syslog configuration files to # remove the syncs only when laptop mode is active. ############################################################################### # Should laptop mode tools control which syslog.conf should be used? CONTROL_SYSLOG_CONF=1 # Laptop mode tools controls syslog.conf by replacing /etc/syslog.conf (or # whatever you specify in SYSLOG_CONF) by a link to the files configured here. # NOTE: these files are NOT created by default, and if they do not # exist this feature will not work. You can run the script # /usr/sbin/lm-syslog-setup to set things up. LM_AC_SYSLOG_CONF=/etc/syslog-on-ac-with-lm.conf NOLM_AC_SYSLOG_CONF=/etc/syslog-on-ac-without-lm.conf BATT_SYSLOG_CONF=/etc/syslog-on-battery.conf # Signal this program when syslog.conf has been replaced. SYSLOG_CONF_SIGNAL_PROGRAM=syslogd # This is the syslog configuration file that should be replaced by a link to the # other files. SYSLOG_CONF=/etc/syslog.conf ############################################################################### # X display settings # ------------------ # # Using these settings, you can let laptop mode tools control the X display # standby timeouts. ############################################################################### # Should laptop mode tools control DPMS standby settings for X displays? CONTROL_DPMS_STANDBY=1 # These settings specify the standby timeout for the X display, # in seconds. The suspend and poweroff timeouts are somewhat # larger values derived from these values. BATT_DPMS_STANDBY=300 LM_AC_DPMS_STANDBY=1200 NOLM_AC_DPMS_STANDBY=1200 ############################################################################### # Terminal settings # ----------------- # # Using these settings, you can let laptop mode tools control the terminal # blanking timeouts. ############################################################################### # Should laptop mode tools control terminal blanking settings? CONTROL_TERMINAL=1 # These settings specify the blanking and powerdown timeouts. Note that # the powerdown timeout is counted from the moment the screen is blanked, # i.e. BLANK_MINUTES=2 and POWERDOWN_MINUTES=5 means the screen powers # down after 7 minutes of inactivity. The range for all these settings is # 1 to 60 minutes, or 0 to disable. BATT_TERMINAL_BLANK_MINUTES=2 BATT_TERMINAL_POWERDOWN_MINUTES=1 LM_AC_TERMINAL_BLANK_MINUTES=10 LM_AC_TERMINAL_POWERDOWN_MINUTES=10 NOLM_AC_TERMINAL_BLANK_MINUTES=10 NOLM_AC_TERMINAL_POWERDOWN_MINUTES=50 ############################################################################### # Auto-hibernation settings # ------------------------- # # Using these settings, you can make laptop mode tools automatically put your # computer into hibernation when the battery level goes critically low. # # This feature only works on ACPI, and only works on computers whose batteries # give off battery events often enough. ############################################################################### # Should laptop mode tools perform auto-hibernation? ENABLE_AUTO_HIBERNATION=1 # The hibernation command that is to be executed when auto-hibernation # is triggered. ### HIBERNATE_COMMAND=/usr/sbin/hibernate HIBERNATE_COMMAND=/etc/acpi/fnf12.sh # Auto-hibernation battery level threshold, in percentage of the battery's # total capacity. AUTO_HIBERNATION_BATTERY_CHARGE_PERCENT=2 # Enable this to auto-hibernate if the battery reports that its level is # "critical". AUTO_HIBERNATION_ON_CRITICAL_BATTERY_LEVEL=1 ############################################################################### # Start/Stop Programs settings # ---------------------------- # # Laptop mode tools can automatically start and stop programs when entering # various power modes. Put scripts accepting "start" and "stop" parameters # in the directories /etc/laptop-mode/batt-stop, batt-start, lm-ac-stop, # lm-ac-start, nolm-ac-stop and nolm-ac-start. Laptop mode will call the # scripts in a state-"stop" directory with the "stop" parameter when entering # the state in question, and it will call the same scripts with the "start" # parameter when leaving the state. Scripts in a state-"start" directory are # called with the "start" parameter when the specified state is entered, and # with the "stop" parameter when the specified state is left. ############################################################################### # Should laptop mode start and stop programs? CONTROL_START_STOP=1 ############################################################################### # Settings you probably don't want to touch # ----------------------------------------- # # It is usually not necessary to change these parameters. They are included # for completeness' sake. ############################################################################### # Change mount options on partitions in PARTITIONS? You don't really want to # disable this. If you do, then your hard drives will probably not spin down # anymore. CONTROL_MOUNT_OPTIONS=1 # Dirty synchronous ratio. At this percentage of dirty pages the process # which calls write() does its own writeback. LM_DIRTY_RATIO=60 NOLM_DIRTY_RATIO=40 # Allowed dirty background ratio, in percent. Once DIRTY_RATIO has been # exceeded, the kernel will wake pdflush which will then reduce the amount # of dirty memory to dirty_background_ratio. Set this nice and low, so once # some writeout has commenced, we do a lot of it. LM_DIRTY_BACKGROUND_RATIO=1 NOLM_DIRTY_BACKGROUND_RATIO=10 # kernel default settings -- don't touch these unless you know what you're # doing. DEF_UPDATE=5 DEF_XFS_AGE_BUFFER=15 DEF_XFS_SYNC_INTERVAL=30 DEF_XFS_BUFD_INTERVAL=1 DEF_MAX_AGE=30 # This must be adjusted manually to the value of HZ in the running kernel # on 2.4, until the XFS people change their 2.4 external interfaces to work in # centisecs. This can be automated, but it's a work in progress that still # needs# some fixes. On 2.6 kernels, XFS uses USER_HZ instead of HZ for # external interfaces, and that is currently always set to 100. So you don't # need to change this on 2.6. XFS_HZ=100 # Seconds laptop mode has to to wait after the disk goes idle before doing # a sync. LM_SECONDS_BEFORE_SYNC=2