(07-02-2024, 10:36 AM)g40 link Wrote:[...] Machine in question is an Intel i5 Dell Vostro w/ 16GB RAM, Samsung 512GB SSD. Please let me know if more info required.
Is it possible to use the Terminal?
If YES, than type:
Then copy and paste the result in a new post here.
From the info provided, it is likely that the space available to perform this kind of task, is too low.
Read the manual and see what means "Sleep". The system state is copied and this takes a lot of space. Usually, it takes at least 10 GB of space, maybe more, depending on what is installed.
Briefly:
"
systemctl hybrid-sleep suspends the system both to RAM and disk, so a complete power loss does not result in lost data. This mode is also called suspend to both. systemctl suspend-then-hibernate initially suspends the system to RAM as long as possible, then wakes it with an RTC alarm and hibernates."
That means that you need plenty of RAM, too.
Is 16 GB enough to store all data? As i said before, depends on the amount of the installed applications and the number of the running ones, the number of opened documents.
The most space consuming is the browser. So, if you put the computer to sleep with lots of documents opened in your browser, this is the result you get.
Another possible reason, is the state of the drive. If the drive is old, this meaning it has over 15,000 hours of service, the reliability is low and many errors can occur when performing the Sleep task due to read/write errors.
Unfortunately, the diagnostic tools will warn you only if there are bad sectors. Otherwise, the report will say "The drive state is perfect".
Best regards, Șerban.
"It's easy to die for an idea. It's way harder TO LIVE for your idea!"
Current Machine:
Dell Precision T1700, 16 GB RAM, SSD Kingston A400, 480 GB.
Laptop:
ASUS X200MA , Intel® Celeron® N2830, 2 GB RAM, SSD Kingston A400, 480 GB.