Very slow wake from resume or hibernation
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Laurence Spiegel
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 07, 2004 10:34 pm
Very slow wake from resume or hibernation
Has anyone had the following issue:
If my T40p has been in sleep for hibernate for several hours, resume is slow. Ex: after sleep overnight, then press fn or (briefly) power:
fan starts on low
several minutes of inactivity
heat noticed from fan vent
delay of >1 min
varible response next:
typically, disk activity, delay, indicator lights flash, logon screen.
After hiberantiing for a 3 days the startup delay was well over 5 min.
Otherwise the system runs normally. If it's suspended/hibernated and resumed within an hour or 2 it responds normally.
If my T40p has been in sleep for hibernate for several hours, resume is slow. Ex: after sleep overnight, then press fn or (briefly) power:
fan starts on low
several minutes of inactivity
heat noticed from fan vent
delay of >1 min
varible response next:
typically, disk activity, delay, indicator lights flash, logon screen.
After hiberantiing for a 3 days the startup delay was well over 5 min.
Otherwise the system runs normally. If it's suspended/hibernated and resumed within an hour or 2 it responds normally.
Was same issue on mine.
I'm cleaning my machine currently prior to a disk wipe I'm planning to do today, backing up data etc, but first I ran some tests to find the problem.
It seems the ACPI drivers that IBM supplies caused this problem, by uninstalling them I've been able to resume from standby/hib. fast, even after a whole night of being in standby. You'll loose the power to hibernate with Fn+12 though, and I don't know if reinstalling them brings the problem back.
FYI, bootvis also showed ACPI.sys taking 30+ seconds to wake up, while everything else was up in microseconds :)
I'm cleaning my machine currently prior to a disk wipe I'm planning to do today, backing up data etc, but first I ran some tests to find the problem.
It seems the ACPI drivers that IBM supplies caused this problem, by uninstalling them I've been able to resume from standby/hib. fast, even after a whole night of being in standby. You'll loose the power to hibernate with Fn+12 though, and I don't know if reinstalling them brings the problem back.
FYI, bootvis also showed ACPI.sys taking 30+ seconds to wake up, while everything else was up in microseconds :)
Written behind a T42, 2373-9UG.
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
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Laurence Spiegel
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 07, 2004 10:34 pm
-
Laurence Spiegel
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 07, 2004 10:34 pm
That worked!
Thanks. Ever since my days as a "senior tech support" rep I've had a distaste for puzzling out IT trivia. I'm quite happy that didn't involve major surgery. One note - I first installed the new drv over the old==> no change. Un/reinstall did it.
Re: That worked!
I don't quite understand, did you reply to the right topic? ;)Laurence Spiegel wrote:Thanks. Ever since my days as a "senior tech support" rep I've had a distaste for puzzling out IT trivia. I'm quite happy that didn't involve major surgery. One note - I first installed the new drv over the old==> no change. Un/reinstall did it.
Anyways, I did a reinstallation of Windows, aka format c: (:P), and after some time, it reappeared (standby resuming delay). Now after some testing, I am sure it is related to services (Windows services - start-run-services.msc). To which, I don't know yet.
Written behind a T42, 2373-9UG.
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
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Laurence Spiegel
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 07, 2004 10:34 pm
I had the same experience. Uninstall old, then install new acpi ==> appeared to work. Then, hibernate overnight ==> issue comes back. I've previously pruned services so that items I can identify as nonessential are disabled or set to manual.
I did run bootvis, but could not find it's log file. Google came up with many dead ends when I tried to find a short bootvis manual/readme.
How do I use Bootvis? Can't find any logfile to open after several tries.
- Larry
I did run bootvis, but could not find it's log file. Google came up with many dead ends when I tried to find a short bootvis manual/readme.
How do I use Bootvis? Can't find any logfile to open after several tries.
- Larry
What do you mean by "run bootvis"?Laurence Spiegel wrote:I had the same experience. Uninstall old, then install new acpi ==> appeared to work. Then, hibernate overnight ==> issue comes back. I've previously pruned services so that items I can identify as nonessential are disabled or set to manual.
I did run bootvis, but could not find it's log file. Google came up with many dead ends when I tried to find a short bootvis manual/readme.
How do I use Bootvis? Can't find any logfile to open after several tries.
- Larry
When you monitor a hibernate/standby it'll display its findings, when you do boot monitoring Bootvis will start itself after everything has done loading.
Just go through the menus next to File :P
I'll explain once again: Hibernating and standby when less than an hour (or so) has passed will not "lag" (no unusual waiting), if you leave it for a longer period of time, voila, a minute of blank screen.
It is related to an unknown service, just try it yourself: Enable everything you've disabled/manual'ed and you'll see.
It could be related to a DCOM or Fast User Switching service for all I know, but I know for a fact, the problem went away when I restored the service settings.
After going over the services again, being a little more tolerant this time, I've done my tweaking without messing standby/hibernate up.
Written behind a T42, 2373-9UG.
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
I had a similar problem - do you use Skype? Maybe you'll find a solution here -> http://forum.skype.com/viewtopic.php?t= ... ht=suspend
Nope, not using Skype.saichmir wrote:I had a similar problem - do you use Skype? Maybe you'll find a solution here -> http://forum.skype.com/viewtopic.php?t= ... ht=suspend
Written behind a T42, 2373-9UG.
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
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Laurence Spiegel
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 07, 2004 10:34 pm
[/quote]What do you mean by "run bootvis"?
When you monitor a hibernate/standby it'll display its findings, when you do boot monitoring Bootvis will start itself after everything has done loading.
Just go through the menus next to File
Pardon if I've missed something obvious.
What I did: i Run bootvis ii File/new/next hibernate + resume. Cancel the automatic hibernate prompted by bootvis. After completing work, hibernate >1 hr.
Resume from hibernation. Open bootvis, File/Open. No log files. Search for file generated by bootvis (containing "trace" or "hibernate". Not found. So I have no record from bootvis. This is probably user error; I just don't see the correct procedure.
I'll explain once again: Hibernating and standby when less than an hour (or so) has passed will not "lag" (no unusual waiting), if you leave it for a longer period of time, voila, a minute of blank screen.
Yes I'm aware of that. It was >5 min this am after overnight hibernate.
It is related to an unknown service, just try it yourself: Enable everything you've disabled/manual'ed and you'll see.
It could be related to a DCOM or Fast User Switching service for all I know, but I know for a fact, the problem went away when I restored the service settings.
The last service I disabled was some time ago, the slow startup is more recent. It could still be a service created or changed by an install, or an interaction between my service changes + some other configuration item. I'd prefer to see the actual culprit rather than monkey around.
What services did you re-enable? Did you re-enable them to start Automatic or Manual?
After going over the services again, being a little more tolerant this time, I've done my tweaking without messing standby/hibernate up.[/quote]
When you monitor a hibernate/standby it'll display its findings, when you do boot monitoring Bootvis will start itself after everything has done loading.
Just go through the menus next to File
Pardon if I've missed something obvious.
What I did: i Run bootvis ii File/new/next hibernate + resume. Cancel the automatic hibernate prompted by bootvis. After completing work, hibernate >1 hr.
Resume from hibernation. Open bootvis, File/Open. No log files. Search for file generated by bootvis (containing "trace" or "hibernate". Not found. So I have no record from bootvis. This is probably user error; I just don't see the correct procedure.
I'll explain once again: Hibernating and standby when less than an hour (or so) has passed will not "lag" (no unusual waiting), if you leave it for a longer period of time, voila, a minute of blank screen.
Yes I'm aware of that. It was >5 min this am after overnight hibernate.
It is related to an unknown service, just try it yourself: Enable everything you've disabled/manual'ed and you'll see.
It could be related to a DCOM or Fast User Switching service for all I know, but I know for a fact, the problem went away when I restored the service settings.
The last service I disabled was some time ago, the slow startup is more recent. It could still be a service created or changed by an install, or an interaction between my service changes + some other configuration item. I'd prefer to see the actual culprit rather than monkey around.
What services did you re-enable? Did you re-enable them to start Automatic or Manual?
After going over the services again, being a little more tolerant this time, I've done my tweaking without messing standby/hibernate up.[/quote]
Well, you must have misunderstood the concept of Bootvis' automatic hibernation ;) Do your work before, then start bootvis, new hibernate+resume (or which ever you choose), then it'll trace, either wait the 10 seconds or click "Hibernate now", then it'll start itself in case you chose reboot, otherwise it'll simply display its findings when you resume from suspend-mode.
To be honest, I might be a bit wrong, or not, but I had another, this time only 7s or so, wait before it resumed from suspend -- and that has happened twice as far as I remember. Although I still think that enabling (Automatic) services reduces the delay, I haven't had a long wait since I re-enabled some of them as I don't shut my machine down, it sits in suspend through the night.
On a related subject, today I noticed, after working with AC (Firefox, Thunderbird, VMWare Workstation etc) then closing them all off and returning to DC, the machine is taking too much power, 14w instead of the regular 10-11w. For example, I rebooted the machine, started Thunderbird and Firefox with the same pages as before, and as I'm typing this, it takes a cool ~10.88w, everything is the same, no wifi, lvl 3 brightness, no fan. I left the machine sit for tens of minutes before, no active windows, a constant 14w. Powerplay seemed to be enabled aswell (under ATI's tabs). Any ideas?
To be honest, I might be a bit wrong, or not, but I had another, this time only 7s or so, wait before it resumed from suspend -- and that has happened twice as far as I remember. Although I still think that enabling (Automatic) services reduces the delay, I haven't had a long wait since I re-enabled some of them as I don't shut my machine down, it sits in suspend through the night.
On a related subject, today I noticed, after working with AC (Firefox, Thunderbird, VMWare Workstation etc) then closing them all off and returning to DC, the machine is taking too much power, 14w instead of the regular 10-11w. For example, I rebooted the machine, started Thunderbird and Firefox with the same pages as before, and as I'm typing this, it takes a cool ~10.88w, everything is the same, no wifi, lvl 3 brightness, no fan. I left the machine sit for tens of minutes before, no active windows, a constant 14w. Powerplay seemed to be enabled aswell (under ATI's tabs). Any ideas?
Written behind a T42, 2373-9UG.
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
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Laurence Spiegel
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 07, 2004 10:34 pm
No fix for that, but I've noted that FF can take an excessive cpu share, not realting to pages showing annoyances such as animations, sounds etc.dvorak wrote:ut my machine down, it sits in suspend through the night.
On a related subject, today I noticed, after working with AC (Firefox, Thunderbird, VMWare Workstation etc) then closing them all off and returning to DC, the machine is taking too much power, 14w instead of the regular 10-11w. For example, I rebooted the machine, started Thunderbird and Firefox with the same pages as before, and as I'm typing this, it takes a cool ~10.88w, everything is the same, no wifi, lvl 3 brightness, no fan. I left the machine sit for tens of minutes before, no active windows, a constant 14w. Powerplay seemed to be enabled aswell (under ATI's tabs). Any ideas?
Regarding resume and bootvis, I did get a trace file with bootvis after running it from the command line and allowing it to cause hiberation. I did not get any indication of what was causing the problem, and so far I can't interpret the graphs. They do appear simple... but there's no labels on each axis. They don't appear to reflect the _10 minute_ delay I see in power on; they show considerable disk activity but I find the machine mostly sits wtih no obvious activity for some time. Pretty [censored] aggravating for what's supposed to be a mature OS + top shelf hardware.
I've never seen a consumer Windows install that just plain worked. Locked down servers, some. Typical end user, never.
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meditate2001
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Laurence Spiegel
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 07, 2004 10:34 pm
You will want to dowload and install the current acpi drvs from ibm. They provide power mgmt.meditate2001 wrote:same problem here...
<<It seems the ACPI drivers that IBM supplies caused this problem, by uninstalling them I've been able to resume from standby/hib. fast
can you do that that simple ? just uninstalling and than hib. works also ? for what are than the drivers needed ???
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Laurence Spiegel
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 07, 2004 10:34 pm
One resolution: Uninstall AOL+Verizon applications
I have resolved the issue on my machine. It appears there are many possible causes for this issue, so my experience may serve as an example rather than a fix.
I had AOL installed for temporary access + for their deal with Verizon for dsl. AOL installs several services and runs several background processes, so it seemed a likely culprit. I also removed VZ's software for good measure - it adds a system tray item.
Lesson: Keep a dated list of all software + driver installs and a related, dated list of all annoyances.
I had AOL installed for temporary access + for their deal with Verizon for dsl. AOL installs several services and runs several background processes, so it seemed a likely culprit. I also removed VZ's software for good measure - it adds a system tray item.
Lesson: Keep a dated list of all software + driver installs and a related, dated list of all annoyances.
Re: One resolution: Uninstall AOL+Verizon applications
It seems to be working on mine again, I currently have some unnecassary services also running, such as Wireless Zero Conf, Windows Firewall (ICS), DCOM, but I'm a little afraid of tampering with them again :PLaurence Spiegel wrote:I have resolved the issue on my machine. It appears there are many possible causes for this issue, so my experience may serve as an example rather than a fix.
I had AOL installed for temporary access + for their deal with Verizon for dsl. AOL installs several services and runs several background processes, so it seemed a likely culprit. I also removed VZ's software for good measure - it adds a system tray item.
Lesson: Keep a dated list of all software + driver installs and a related, dated list of all annoyances.
I'm not very happy about the extra memory usage, but luckily those don't propose a security threat thanks to software firewalls :)
Regarding analyzing Bootvis, you'll see alot of smaller windows inside the main window, one of them lists drivers, they do list the drivers, and the one listed as taking too much time should be acpi.sys on all of our systems.
Written behind a T42, 2373-9UG.
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
-
Laurence Spiegel
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Dec 07, 2004 10:34 pm
Only power mgmt related services will help; other services lenghten starup/shutdown. You may want to scrutinize DCOM in partular, it's serves nearly no purpose other than to create a large security hole.
I've now got only a minute of "huh" after an overnight resume, total resume time is about 1.5 min now (vs 10 before)
I've now got only a minute of "huh" after an overnight resume, total resume time is about 1.5 min now (vs 10 before)
I beg to differ, of course logically thinking none of the services I/we have disabled should affect resume/hibernation, but unfortunately thanks to Windows' peculiarities or to someone's poor coding, they do. How else do you explain the fact that my standby is working nicely after enabling useless services? :)Laurence Spiegel wrote:Only power mgmt related services will help; other services lenghten starup/shutdown. You may want to scrutinize DCOM in partular, it's serves nearly no purpose other than to create a large security hole.
I've now got only a minute of "huh" after an overnight resume, total resume time is about 1.5 min now (vs 10 before)
Written behind a T42, 2373-9UG.
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
SATA is related to your hard-drive, so the regular power management driver would be sufficient.arjunrc wrote:one is called IBM SATA power management driver
other is IBM Thinkpad power management driver
which one do I uninstall ?
Written behind a T42, 2373-9UG.
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
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