NAME
apmd
—
Advanced Power Management
daemon
SYNOPSIS
apmd |
[-AaCdHLs ] [-f
devname] [-S
sockname] [-t
seconds] |
DESCRIPTION
apmd
monitors the advanced power
management device, apm(4), acting on signaled events and upon user requests as
sent by the apm(8) program.
For suspend and standby request events delivered by the BIOS, or
via apm(8), apmd
runs the appropriate
configuration program (if one exists), syncs the buffer cache to disk and
initiates the requested state. When resuming after suspend or standby,
apmd
runs the appropriate configuration program (if
one exists).
When the power status changes (battery is connected or
disconnected) apmd
fetches the current status and
reports it via
syslog(3) with logging facility
LOG_DAEMON
.
The options are as follows:
-A
- Start
apmd
in automatic performance adjustment mode. Optimize for performance, but lower hw.setperf when running on battery power or when AC is connected but the battery charge level is low. -a
- BIOS-initiated suspend or standby requests are ignored if the system is connected to line current and not running from batteries (user requests are still honored).
-C
- Start
apmd
in cool running performance adjustment mode. Optimize for low power use by keeping hw.setperf low, except when CPU idle time drops and more performance is required. -d
apmd
enters debug mode, logging to facilityLOG_LOCAL1
, and stays in the foreground on the controlling terminal.-f
devname- Specify an alternate device file name, devname.
-H
- Start
apmd
in manual performance adjustment mode, initialising hw.setperf to 100. -L
- Start
apmd
in manual performance adjustment mode, initialising hw.setperf to 0. -S
sockname- Specify an alternate socket name, sockname. The socket is protected to mode 0660, UID 0, GID 0; this protects access to suspend requests to authorized users only.
-s
- Current battery statistics are reported via
syslog(3) and
apmd
exits without monitoring the APM status. -t
secondsapmd
periodically polls the APM driver for the current power state. If the battery charge level changes substantially or the external power status changes, the new status is logged. The polling rate defaults to once per 10 minutes, but may be specified using the-t
command-line flag.
When a client requests a suspend or stand-by state,
apmd
does not wait for positive confirmation that
the requested state has been entered before replying to the client; to do so
would mean the client does not get a reply until the system resumes from its
sleep state. Rather, apmd
replies with the intended
state to the client and then places the system in the requested state after
running the configuration script and flushing the buffer cache.
Actions can be configured for the following five transitions:
suspend, standby, resume, powerup, and powerdown. The suspend and standby
actions are run prior to apmd
performing any other
actions (such as disk syncs) and entering the new state. The resume program
is run after resuming from a stand-by or suspended state. The powerup and
powerdown programs are run after the power status (AC connected or not)
changes, as well as after a resume (if the power status changed in the mean
time).
FILES
- /dev/apmctl
- Default device used to control the APM kernel driver.
- /etc/apm/suspend
- /etc/apm/standby
- /etc/apm/resume
- /etc/apm/powerup
- /etc/apm/powerdown
- These files contain the host's customized actions. Each file must be an executable binary or shell script. A single program or script can be used to control all transitions by examining the name by which it was called, which is one of suspend, standby, resume, powerup, or powerdown.
- /var/run/apmdev
- Default UNIX-domain socket used for communication with apm(8).
SEE ALSO
syslog(3), apm(4), apm(8), sysctl(8)
Advanced Power Management (APM) BIOS Interface Specification (revision 1.2), Intel Corporation and Microsoft Corporation.
HISTORY
The apmd
command first appeared in
NetBSD 1.3. OpenBSD support
was added in OpenBSD 1.2.