
Dmesg log taken after closing the lid, waiting 10-15 seconds, and then re-opening it.Run dmesg and inspect log for evidence of the suspend sequence. Let it sit for a while (~1 minute) and re-open the lid. Wait a few seconds and observe that the CPU cooling fan is still spinning audibly. Currently running libdrm master as of commit 669e1087ab606 and mesa master as of commit 395511d16915297b39d11.ĭetach power cord, close lid. Custom kernel: generic 64-bit kernel image from.Type of Display Connection: internal monitor.If I open the lid, the laptop does not come back from its pseudo-sleep, and there are no keys that can be pressed that will "wake it" up. If I wait a longer period of time (30-45 minutes?), the fan is no longer spinning, but I can see by peeking between the LCD/body that the power-LED is still on (as if the laptop is still on with the fan/screen off). macOS: Launch mand from either a terminal window or by double clicking the file. Instructions: Linux: Launch SSDTTime.py with any somewhat recent version of Python from either a terminal window or by running the file normally. The fan is still mildly audible, and dmesg shows some stack traces related to failing to enter suspend. Additionally on Linux and Windows the tool can be used to dump the system DSDT. I have managed to extract the DSDT.aml file, but do not know how to edit and re-implement it. When I close the lid of my laptop, it does not actually enter the suspend/sleep state. I am trying to fix the sound on my mbp11 UEFI install of Windows 10 following this guide: I unfortunately do not have access to the macOS side of the computer (or rather it doesnt exist) and so I am trying to edit my DSDT files from windows.
