Disable sleep on closing lid?

Is there a way to disable the powerbook from sleeping when i close the lid? I want it to continue to function with my second display (touchscreen).

This KBase article should answer your question.
Jrsy

Similar Messages

  • Helix cannot sleep when closing lid

    Helix does not sleep after closing lid, even though I set to let it sleep in power plan in windows.
    I previously do not have this problem. Not notice anything changed.
    Any suggestions? Thanks!
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    Somehow, after rebooting, this problem is gone. So next time, I will try a reboot first. Thanks!

  • 10.5.2 wake/sleep and closed-lid problems

    As of 10.5.2 my MBP no longer works correctly in closed lid mode using a hardware
    setup that previously worked flawlessly. After plugging in power and video, plugging
    in the USB keyboard seems to wake the system, but no video. I then must open the
    lid, unplug the USB and video and try to get the system to respond. I often must cycle
    the power to reset the system--very disturbing to do that.
    Also as of 10.5.2, I have had to power-cycle the machine when it has refused to wake
    in open-lid mode and this weekend I the entire machine froze (no mouse movement,
    no expose, etc) in the middle of work using a graphics-intensive program and I had
    to reboot by cycling the power.
    A friend also reported similar issue in which the system would not respond after the
    screensaver became active.
    Are others seeing problems like these? I am beginning to suspect that the post-10.5.2
    graphics update has problems.

    I just wiped my HD and reinstalled everything besides the Graphics Update. I can now close the lid of my MBP and use my external monitor alone. The Graphics Update had made that impossible.
    Further, I am in the habit of putting my MCP to sleep and putting it in a backpack in the morning, meeting friends for breakfast, and re-awakening it at the office. When I did get to my office, I found (as another user had on another thread) that the MBP, even closed, had woken itself up and was hot as heck. I am uncertain that sleep will work properly under 10.5.2, but I know that the display wackiness of the Graphics Update was driving me nuts. I will not install it until Apple fixes it.
    I looked around for awhile for a way to uninstall the Graphics Update, but could not find it...I suspect it exists somewhere.
    The 10.5.2 Combo update (343MB download) DOES NOT include the Graphics Update, and at this time, I seem quite ok with everything else updated.

  • MacBook Pro keeps going to sleep in closed-lid mode and external monitor

    I am trying to run the MacBook in closed lid mode with an external monitor. It seems to work fine at first, but after about 10 seconds, it goes to sleep. I can wake it back up but it just goes to sleep again.
    Has anyone seen this before?

    I figured it out. Apparently you can't run in closed-lid mode on battery. I plugged in the power adapter and it's working fine now.

  • KDE: Laptop only sleeps when closing lid every other time

    Hello all,
    I'm running KDE 4.14.1 on an older Toshiba Satellite laptop. In the KDE System Settings, I've told it to sleep when closing the lid and this works - but strangely only every other time I close the lid. It will work once, then I open the lid and it powers up just fine. Then I close it again and the screen just turns off but the laptop stays fully powered.
    Any ideas what might be going on? It consistently only sleeps every other time when I close the lid (the other times it just turns the screen off).

    Take a look at /etc/systemd/logind.conf
    Is systemd also trying to manage this?

  • No sleep with closed lid?

    I am a mere days away from receiving my new MacBook in the mail My buddies have some and some still have iBooks and no one knew if there was a way to have the lid closed, but to not have the MB go to sleep (disconnect from the internet mainly). I know that if you have external stuff hooked up it won't, but is there anyway that you can prevent sleep with the lid closed with only the MacBook being used?

    Make sure that you read the comments made by the developer on the PRODUCT PAGE and that you're comfortable with them before you install and run this.
    All of the comments about it surround heat issues. The developer, though he doesn't publish an actual warning, says that it could be harmful to the LCD if your machine runs over 50 degrees C while it is closed.
    Personally, I wouldn't run the risk.

  • Alternative of InsomniaT for disabling sleep function on lid closed situation

    Hello.
    I am finding the alternative method to let my MacBook Air not come to sleep mode while its lid is closed. Since installation of InsomniaT occures another problem. Usage of terminal command is OK. Please teach me.
    Thank you very much.

    I found it by myself. "No Sleep" app is available and it works fine.

  • Disable LCD without closing lid?

    As I use my Macbook as a desktop replacement, with external monitor and keyboard - I find it a bit of an annoyance to have to close the lid, wake the machine, then reopen the lid whenever I want to use the external display without the LCD active.
    Is there a software/onscreen method that one can use to disable the LCD totally, rather than just turning the brightness down or going through the close/wake/open method? I know that older mac laptops have the option, but it appears to be missing in the display preferences of the macbook, and I can't seem to go through the right settings gymnastics to fudge together a solution.
    It's made even more annoying by the fact that the ATI drivers that come with Boot Camp can allow windows to do this, but OS X can't.

    try pressing the F7 key on your macbook keyboard a number of times. (not an attached usb keyboard)
    edit:
    i think this only changes between mirror and extended desktop. i'll check in the office tomorrow, but I am sure this can be done without closing the lid 'cause thats how i worked the first few days (now i extend desktop to both screens, and leave email open on macbook screen - kind of handy, you should try it)

  • Preventing MacBook Air 2012 from sleeping on closing lid

    I'm running Mountain Lion now and still there is no option to adjust settings on Lid Closing. I intend to prevent my Mac from sleeping after I close the lid. All the settings made in Energy Saver become redundant if my Mac sleeping as soon as I close the lid.
    This might seem a minor issue, but is very irksome. Had expected it on 10.8....
    APPLE, please fix this long-standing issue!!

    You are not talking to Apple here, we are just other users like yourself. Use the following link -
    http://www.apple.com/feedback/macbookair.html
    Do not expect a reply, however.
    Best of luck.

  • MBP won't go to sleep when closing lid...

    ...but it would go to sleep if I select that manually.
    Is that a mechanical problem or software related ? I repaired permissions several times and reset PMU but nothing changed.
    Any ideas ?

    OK, I forgot to mention... maybe this was important...
    Same MBP with freshly installed SL, no additional software, no system settings changed, no software running, wireless and BT off, same story... Sleep works with every method but closing the lid. Kinda makes me think of a hardware issue.
    I'm expecting a "take it to Apple" answer very soon, but I'm just hoping someone had the same problem before and worked it out somehow, cause I can't figure it out
    Thank you for the answer though...

  • MBP won't sleep when closing lid

    Since I did the 10.6.2 update, when I close the lid on my MBP and that the power is connected it won't go to sleep, my "apple" is still bright with the lid closed.

    HI,
    Try resetting the SMC.
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1411
    If that doesn't help, try resetting the PRAM / NVRAM.
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1379
    Carolyn

  • Macbook pro does not go to sleep when closing lid

    Hi,
    I'm having a weird problem with my macbook pro. When I close the lid, my macbook does not go to sleep. Even more weird: when I put my macbook to sleep using cmd + alt + the eject button or using the apple button => sleep, my macbook stops sleeping as soon as I close the lid
    It seems like this problem occured after installing the Nosleep extension for mac (http://code.google.com/p/macosx-nosleep-extension/). I already deleted that program and rebooted, but that did not help.

    Please read this whole message before doing anything.
    I've tested these instructions only with the Safari web browser. If you use another browser, they may not work as described.
    This procedure is a diagnostic test. It won’t solve your problem. Don’t be disappointed when you find that nothing has changed after you complete it.
    Third-party system modifications are a common cause of usability problems. By a “system modification,” I mean software that affects the operation of other software — potentially for the worse. The following procedure will help identify which such modifications you've installed. Don’t be alarmed by the complexity of these instructions — they’re easy to carry out and won’t change anything on your Mac. 
    These steps are to be taken while booted in “normal” mode, not in safe mode. If you’re now running in safe mode, reboot as usual before continuing. 
    Below are instructions to enter some UNIX shell commands. The commands are harmless, but they must be entered exactly as given in order to work. If you have doubts about the safety of the procedure suggested here, search this site for other discussions in which it’s been followed without any report of ill effects. 
    Some of the commands will line-wrap or scroll in your browser, but each one is really just a single line, all of which must be selected. You can accomplish this easily by triple-clicking anywhere in the line. The whole line will highlight, and you can then copy it. The headings “Step 1” and so on are not part of the commands. 
    Note: If you have more than one user account, Step 2 must be taken as an administrator. Ordinarily that would be the user created automatically when you booted the system for the first time. The other steps should be taken as the user who has the problem, if different. Most personal Macs have only one user, and in that case this paragraph doesn’t apply. 
    Launch the Terminal application in any of the following ways: 
    ☞ Enter the first few letters of its name into a Spotlight search. Select it in the results (it should be at the top.) 
    ☞ In the Finder, select Go ▹ Utilities from the menu bar, or press the key combination shift-command-U. The application is in the folder that opens. 
    ☞ Open LaunchPad. Click Utilities, then Terminal in the icon grid. 
    When you launch Terminal, a text window will open with a line already in it, ending either in a dollar sign (“$”) or a percent sign (“%”). If you get the percent sign, enter “sh” and press return. You should then get a new line ending in a dollar sign. 
    Step 1 
    Triple-click anywhere in the line of text below on this page to select it:
    kextstat -kl | awk '!/com\.apple/{printf "%s %s\n", $6, $7}' | open -ef 
    Copy the selected text to the Clipboard by pressing the key combination command-C. Then click anywhere in the Terminal window and paste (command-V). A TextEdit window will open with the output of the command. If the command produced no output, the window will be empty. Post the contents of the TextEdit window (not the Terminal window), if any — the text, please, not a screenshot. You can then close the TextEdit window. The title of the window doesn't matter, and you don't need to post that. No typing is involved in this step.
    Step 2 
    Repeat with this line:
    { sudo launchctl list | sed 1d | awk '!/0x|com\.(apple|openssh|vix\.cron)|org\.(amav|apac|cups|isc|ntp|postf|x)/{print $3}'; echo; sudo defaults read com.apple.loginwindow LoginHook; echo; sudo crontab -l; } 2> /dev/null | open -ef 
    This time you'll be prompted for your login password, which you do have to type. Nothing will be displayed when you type it. Type it carefully and then press return. You may get a one-time warning to be careful. Heed that warning, but don't post it. If you see a message that your username "is not in the sudoers file," then you're not logged in as an administrator. 
    Note: If you don’t have a login password, you’ll need to set one before taking this step. If that’s not possible, skip to the next step. 
    Step 3
    { launchctl list | sed 1d | awk '!/0x|com\.apple|org\.(x|openbsd)/{print $3}'; echo; crontab -l 2> /dev/null; } | open -ef 
    Step 4
    ls -A /e*/{cr,la,mach}* {,/}Lib*/{Ad,Compon,Ex,Fram,In,Keyb,La,Mail/Bu,P*P,Priv,Qu,Scripti,Servi,Spo,Sta}* L*/Fonts .la* 2> /dev/null | open -ef  
    Important: If you formerly synchronized with a MobileMe account, your me.com email address may appear in the output of the above command. If so, anonymize it before posting. 
    Step 5
    osascript -e 'tell application "System Events" to get name of login items' | open -ef 
    Remember, steps 1-5 are all copy-and-paste — no typing, except your password. Also remember to post the output. 
    You can then quit Terminal.

  • Disable closing lid sleep

    Is there a way of disabling sleeping on close lid? I am using my macbook primarily as a workstation with external display keyboard and mouse. So its a bit anoying that it sleeps when i close the lid ...
    Further more if i want to play itunes with it and have it my backpack i have to have the screen open or else itunes stops playing (ofcorse because its going to sleep.

    Is there a way of disabling sleeping on close lid? I
    am using my macbook primarily as a workstation with
    external display keyboard and mouse. So its a bit
    anoying that it sleeps when i close the lid ...
    The computer draws air in through the keyboard for cooling. Leaving the lid open a bit will produce more efficient cooling.
    Further more if i want to play itunes with it and
    have it my backpack i have to have the screen open or
    else itunes stops playing (ofcorse because its going
    to sleep.
    Oh Dude, you don't want to do that! You may overheat the unit. Get a cheap iPod instead. I recently bought a Shuffle for $40.00 and it plays as good, if not better, than my 60G Photo iPod.
    -Bmer
    Mac Owners Support Group
    Join Us @ MacOSG.com
    iTunes: MacOSG Podcast
     An Apple User Group 

  • MBP (13-inch, early 2011) goes into hibernation instead of safe sleep upon closing the lid (only when using battery power)

    MBP details
    13-inch MacBook Pro, early 2011 (model identifier: MacBookPro8,1)
    Running Yosemite, OS X 10.10.1 (however, problem started while using Mavericks)
    2.5 GHz Intel Core i5
    4 GB memory
    Symptoms
    * the MBP goes into hibernation instead of sleep upon closing the lid on battery power (i.e.,  when AC adapter is NOT connected)
      -- problem does not occur when AC adapter is connected
    * putting the computer to sleep by other means does not induce the problem; these other means include:
      -- [i] option+command+Power,
      -- [ii] Apple Icon --> Sleep,
      -- [iii] in Terminal: pmset sleepnow
    * the battery is NOT getting drained at all; if I close the lid on 87%, the battery is still at about 87% when I get the MBP back up and running
    To be as clear as possible:
    (1) MBP is on and in use  (power source: battery); battery is at X%
    (2) the lid is then closed
    (3) the battery indicator light glows bright for about 10 seconds, then shuts off, and with it so does the MBP (all fans and sounds cease)
    (4) opening the lid and pressing any key on the keyboard does nothing (the computer is not sleeping)
    (5) to turn the MBP back on, I must hit the power button once; this brings up  and the gray screen and loading bar indicative of returning from hibernation
    (6) log in; battery is still at X%
    Attempted Solutions / Fixes
    There are Apple Discussions addressing similar MBP issues, many of which at least have work-arounds, if not full-blown solutions. However, I have tried many of the proposed work-arounds and solutions; nothing has solved my problem. Such attempted solutions include:
      * made sure EFI/SMC firmware was up to date
      * updated all software
      * logged in as a different user
      * booted in Safe Mode
      * reset the PRAM
      * repaired disk permissions using Disk Utility
      * repaired additional disk permissions in recovery mode (a la this chron.com advice)
      * ran the Apple Hardware Test multiple times (short test while plugged in, short test on battery, extended test while plugged in, extended test on battery)
      * booted from an external known-good OS on USB drive
      * reseated the RAM
      * used MemTest to test the RAM's health (it was good)
      * tested my battery's health with the app Battery Health (it is healthy!)
      * booted my computer with one stick of the MBP's original RAM at a time (figured "why not?")
      * booted my computer using other sticks of RAM
      * checked my power management settings using PMSET in the terminal (e.g., pmset -g); tried various hibernation modes (e.g., sudo pmset -a hibernationmode X, where X=0,1,3, etc)
      * searched/grepped through my power management logs and Console messages to look for googleable items (e.g., pmset -g log | grep WORD, where WORD=failure, sleep, etc);  still have not found help online
      * brought the MBP to a Mac Genius
    -- he ran some further tests, but found nothing;
    -- he re-installed my OS as a hopeful-hail-mary-just-maybe-last-ditch effort; the problem persisted!
    -- we both agreed that we had ruled out a software cause
    -- he offered me to leave my MBP to get fixed for a flat fee of $300.00 (which after a couple weeks of trying to figure this out is starting to sound more and more reasonable)
    Given that it is likely not a software issue, what hardware might it be? By booting from an OS on an external drive, I think I've ruled out a bad hard drive or hard drive cable. Also, given that inducing sleep in any way other than closing the MBP's lid does not cause the problem, it seems there might be a wire (or something) in the hinge section of the MBP that gets moved when the lid is closed possibly causing some kind of short circuit...or something.
    If someone with more experience interpreting Console messages, for example, can help, I'd be happy to provide some logs, or any additional information.
    Thank you for your time and consideration.

    Ok, this is a crazy-simple, quasi-embarrassing fix, but I'll post it anyway just in case anyone is having a similar problem (for example, this guy: Changes to pmset being ignored).
    Some time around late last August / early September (2014) this issue began happening for me (specifically, issue = closing lid while on battery power induces hibernation / shut down instead of sleep --- independent of hibernation mode). Maybe it was when I upgraded to Yosemite (not sure what the exact date of that was). As detailed in my original post, I frantically tried everything I could think of... At that time, however, I had quite a few presentations and posters to create and present at meetings and conferences, so I held off fixing it for a couple of months and returned to it this past week, where I tried a few more things listed above, but again to no avail...
    This morning, I simply tried fudging around with all my power management settings again (via pmset in Terminal). The simplicity of the fix surprised me. But now that I understand it, I know it is likely the same fix for other threads I've read, such as the one above:
                                        (TLDR in bold)
    (1) Take note of your power management settings (Terminal:  pmset -g custom)
    (2) Is the "standby" flag set to 0? If so, set it to 1. Wa-la! Done.
    This fix is crazy and embarrassing b/c I was so close to it for so long. I tried changing my hibernation modes multiple times (sudo pmset -a hibernatemode X, where X=0,1,3,25,etc). I read about manipulating other PMSET settings that helped other people with newer MBPs, like "autopoweroff" and "autopoweroffdelay" --- settings that I do not have on the MBP early 2011 (check your settings: pmset -g cap). And most amazingly of all, I even messed with the "standbydelay" setting, trying to make it so long that my computer should never go into hibernation... Yet, from what I can tell by looking over my notes, I never simply set "standby" from 0 to 1.
    There are interesting questions that arise due to this fix. For example, why did this problem persist on clean installs of OS Yosemite? Is "standby" being set to 0 the Yosemite default? I'm not sure. If it is, then Kappy was right: this was normal behavior... It just wasn't always the normal behavior...at least not for my MBP. Normal behavior (hibernatemode 3) used to be (and now is again) that the MBP goes into safe sleep, and then only after an allotted amount of time will it go into full-blown hibernation.
    NOTE: the "standby" and "standbydelay" PMSET settings are not available in some earlier MBP models (e.g., my brother has a 2010 and does not have these settings); so if you're having a similar problem with an earlier model, this fix might not be of any help to you.

  • MacBook (Lion) doesn't sleep even after closing lid

    Is anyone experiencing this as well? I have encounter the same problem a few times now. My macbook would have it's fan keep running even when the lid is closed. Isn't it strange? I haven't had this problem before in Snow Leopard.
    In snow leopard, even when the fan is running at 6200rpm, as soon as I close the lid. My macbook would be quiet almost instantly. However, with Lion my fan and processor would keep running. Anyone else? any idea?

    Hey Pascale,
    I am not sure if you have fixed this but I had the same problem and found some advice from another website...
    http://www.adeepbite.com/lion-seems-having-insomnia-it-doesnt-sleep-easily/
    All I had to do was turn off my "internet sharing"  (System preferences -> Sharing -> Internet Sharing (uncheck) )
    and presto, no more closing lid problems. 
    If your internet sharing wasn't the issue then I don' t know what is.
    Cheers

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