Trisquel 7 on a MacBook Pro 9,1 mid 2012

6 réponses [Dernière contribution]
nawi.is
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 12/10/2014

Hello !

I installed Trisquel 7 on a MacBook Pro 9,1 mid 2012 as dual boot with Mac OS X. Most things worked out of the box …

WIFI doesn´t work but I don´t need it and it also worked not very well on other Linux distributions.
Suspend doesn´t work as it should. If I close the lid, then the MBP goes to sleep as it should. If I open the lid then the wakeup starts, first I have a black screen, if I have luck, then I got the login after some time and after the login the system freezes. Has someone any ideas how to fix that ?

Thanks for your answers.

Regards,

C. M.

jxself
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 09/13/2010

Maybe nomodeset would be something to try?

Check out the section "How to permanently set kernel boot options on an installed OS (not wubi)"

Then see if it fixes your problem. If not you can repeat the process and remove nomodeset.

jxself
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 09/13/2010

Oops - I forgot the provide the URL I was referring to:
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1613132

nawi.is
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 12/10/2014

Thanks for your answer.

I had not so much time at the moment, so I could only try the LiveDVD with Gnome.

nomodeset has the same effect as without it.

noapic has the same effect plus no support for a display connected on the DisplayPort.

nolapic has the same effect but with external display and without USB for a external keyboard / mouse.

I will try acpi=off if I have time. The MBP uses a special EFI version and temp. things like fan control is done using Apple's SMC (System Management Controller). What I haven't checked is whether Trisquel provides the applesmc kernel module - that could also solve the problem. I know that suspend works on a Sabayon without problems.

lembas
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 05/13/2010

Also if you feel like poking around, here's a method that helped me a few versions ago and also a few other people since.

https://trisquel.info/en/wiki/troubleshooting-suspendhibernate

nawi.is
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 12/10/2014

Thanks for your answer.

Do you have another URL as the posted one ? I can´t open the page because of to much forwards (tries to jump always to the same pages) … tried with Chromium under Android and Safari.

Thanks.

lembas
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 05/13/2010

I don't think there is another URL but here's the content (albeit unformatted)

This guide is recommended only for users with considerable experience with the GNU/Linux terminal, and editing configuration files.
Symptoms

Your computer seems to suspend or hibernate but then hangs at some point or does not wake up. Also if your virtual terminals get messed up in the process this can help.
Causes

Often these problems are caused by your wifi card and/or your video card.
Method

Try switching off your wifi, and see if you can then suspend or hibernate. Start by suspending first, as it is the easier of the two to get right. If your wifi is the culprit, you can use the rfkill command from the rfkill package to modify the scripts at /usr/lib/pm-utils/sleep.d/ to automatically take out and restore wifi.

Start by reading the suspend/hibernate log. It's at /var/log/pm-suspend.log. Sometimes it contains useful information, sometimes it tries to fool you. You might want to rename/delete the old log before starting to experiment.

If that did not (completely) fix the problem, move onto the video card. Do not turn the wifi back on until your problem is solved.

First, run sudo nano /etc/default/grub, add "nomodeset" with quotes to the line that says GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT= (don't replace what is already there) and press Ctrl-X to exit nano.

Then update-grub and reboot. Make sure you got it right by checking /proc/cmdline to see nomodeset is there. Sometimes just adding the nomodeset parameter does the trick, as then the default quirks from the quirk database can be utilized. Then try to see if the default quirks were correct.

If it is still not working, proceed to read the pm-suspend manual page (info pm-suspend). pm-suspend is the command your computer uses when it goes into suspend mode; the manual page describes the quirks you can try with your hardware. For some of the quirks, you will need to install the vbetool package. You may need other packages too; the log will be useful here.

Then start the guesswork. For example: sudo pm-suspend --quirk-dpms-on

After an unsuccessful attempt, go read the log to see what it has to say, usually not much. Then test the next quirk. Sometimes you need more than one. One quirk allowed me to suspend/hibernate but another was needed to make sure my virtual terminals wouldn't get messed up in the process.

If you find a working combination, as the manual page says, edit /etc/pm/config.d/anyfile and input ADD_PARAMETERS="--quirk-dpms-on --quirk-blabla ...".
Other things

You may or may not need to add a line like resume=/dev/sda5 (= your swap, see with cat /proc/swaps) to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT in /etc/default/grub (and then update-grub) for hibernate to work.

zram could make hibernate not work even if suspend does work, one dubious workaround is to give your regular swap a higher priority by adding a pri=101 to the option column in /etc/fstab. Enter swapoff -a && swapon -a to apply the new priorities.

Good luck and patience!

Here is a forum thread about the issue.
Here is an example of someone who got it to work by following this guide.

If you cannot make it work

You can remove the suspend and hibernate buttons from the power off dialog (in Trisquel 5.5) by adding the following text to /var/lib/polkit-1/localauthority/10-vendor.d/com.ubuntu.desktop.pkla:

[Disable hibernate in power off dialog]
Identity=unix-user:*
Action=org.freedesktop.upower.hibernate
ResultActive=no

[Disable suspend in power off dialog]
Identity=unix-user:*
Action=org.freedesktop.upower.suspend
ResultActive=no