[SOLVED] GNOME Power Manager Icon

Hello,
With the recent influx of GNOME 2.22 packages, gnome-power-manager has begun to behave strangely on my system.
In gnome-power-preferences, I have specified that the notification area icon should only be displayed when my laptop battery is charging or discharging. Since I upgraded my GNOME packages, the icon has always appeared in my notication area upon login -- even if I am running on AC power. In that situation, the tooltip for the icon reads as follows:
Computer is running on AC power
Laptop batteries discharging (100%)
Battery discharge time is currently unknown
If I unplug the power cord from my computer,  the icon (strangely) disappears. If I then proceed to plug the cord back in, the icon will appear briefly (I assume to indicate that what little power was drained from the battery is being replenished) and then disappear once more.
This problem is occurring on a Dell Inspiron 6400 (E1505). I feel that I might need to report this issue as a bug, but I'd first like to know if anyone else has noticed this oddity since the upgrade.
Thanks!
Edit:
It seems as if gnome-power-manager thinks that I have two laptop batteries (though I have only one). Clicking on the notification icon lists two batteries: one with the usual "on AC power" icon and the other with the "discharging" (standard battery) icon.
I do not think that there are any problems with ACPI: running acpi yields the following:
Battery 1: charged, 100%
I'm not quite sure where gnome-power-manager procures its information about the batteries)....
Last edited by ssjlegendx (2008-04-20 18:34:53)

I just updated to HAL 0.5.11rc2-2, and it seems that my problem has been solved!
I didn't see the related bug report before starting this thread.... Thanks, JGC!
Last edited by ssjlegendx (2008-08-02 20:44:41)

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    recently, I updated system, and now I have same problem like you had. I was not sure, what could cause this brightness fast changing. I thought about hal, dbus, udev. Never tried to downgrade udev. Now, I have udev 146. I am not sure what version I had before system upgrading.
    Now, I have kernel 2.6.31, and I am not sure if udev 141 will work with this kernel...
    I have MSI WIND, also...
    Last edited by kunalagon (2010-01-08 11:15:54)

  • Gnome-power-manager with networkmanager_sleep option

    I have a wireless device using the ipw2200 module. I have always found it extremely annoying that gnome-power-manager asks NetworkManager to sleep before suspending, since, first of all, the ipw2200 module doesn't need to be unloaded and, secondly, because I always have to wait the extra few seconds it takes for NM to send the dhcp request after resuming. I made a patch that adds an option to turn the NM-sleep call on or off via a gconf entry (networkmanager_sleep). The patch has been accepted upstream and included in CVS. However, I've made a patch that applies cleanly to gnome-power-manager 2.16.1 as well. Here it is:
    diff -Naur gnome-power-manager-2.16.1/data/gnome-power-manager.schemas.in gnome-power-manager-2.16.1-new/data/gnome-power-manager.schemas.in
    --- gnome-power-manager-2.16.1/data/gnome-power-manager.schemas.in 2006-07-30 14:51:52.000000000 +0200
    +++ gnome-power-manager-2.16.1-new/data/gnome-power-manager.schemas.in 2006-10-05 11:56:10.000000000 +0200
    @@ -571,6 +571,17 @@
    <long>This is the laptop panel screen brightness used when the session is idle. Only valid when use_time_for_policy is true.</long>
    </locale>
    </schema>
    + <schema>
    + <key>/schemas/apps/gnome-power-manager/networkmanager_sleep</key>
    + <applyto>/apps/gnome-power-manager/networkmanager_sleep</applyto>
    + <owner>gnome-power-manager</owner>
    + <type>bool</type>
    + <default>true</default>
    + <locale>
    + <short>If Networkmanager should disconnect.</short>
    + <long>Chooses whether Networkmanager should disconnect from the network before suspending.</long>
    + </locale>
    + </schema>
    </schemalist>
    </gconfschemafile>
    diff -Naur gnome-power-manager-2.16.1/src/gpm-manager.c gnome-power-manager-2.16.1-new/src/gpm-manager.c
    --- gnome-power-manager-2.16.1/src/gpm-manager.c 2006-09-17 22:33:51.000000000 +0200
    +++ gnome-power-manager-2.16.1-new/src/gpm-manager.c 2006-10-05 12:03:22.000000000 +0200
    @@ -1172,6 +1172,7 @@
    gboolean allowed;
    gboolean ret;
    gboolean do_lock;
    + gboolean nm_sleep;
    gpm_manager_allowed_hibernate (manager, &allowed, NULL);
    @@ -1190,7 +1191,12 @@
    gpm_screensaver_lock (manager->priv->screensaver);
    - gpm_networkmanager_sleep ();
    + nm_sleep = gconf_client_get_bool (manager->priv->gconf_client,
    + GPM_PREF_NETWORKMANAGER_SLEEP, NULL);
    + if (nm_sleep) {
    + gpm_networkmanager_sleep ();
    + }
    +
    ret = gpm_hal_hibernate (manager->priv->hal);
    manager_explain_reason (manager, GPM_GRAPH_EVENT_RESUME,
    @@ -1230,7 +1236,12 @@
    if (do_lock) {
    gpm_screensaver_poke (manager->priv->screensaver);
    - gpm_networkmanager_wake ();
    + nm_sleep = gconf_client_get_bool (manager->priv->gconf_client,
    + GPM_PREF_NETWORKMANAGER_SLEEP, NULL);
    + if (nm_sleep) {
    + gpm_networkmanager_wake ();
    + }
    +
    sync_dpms_policy (manager);
    @@ -1257,6 +1268,7 @@
    gboolean allowed;
    gboolean ret;
    gboolean do_lock;
    + gboolean nm_sleep;
    GpmPowerStatus status;
    char *message;
    int charge_before_suspend;
    @@ -1279,7 +1291,12 @@
    gpm_screensaver_lock (manager->priv->screensaver);
    - gpm_networkmanager_sleep ();
    + nm_sleep = gconf_client_get_bool (manager->priv->gconf_client,
    + GPM_PREF_NETWORKMANAGER_SLEEP, NULL);
    + if (nm_sleep) {
    + gpm_networkmanager_sleep ();
    + }
    +
    /* We save the current charge in mWh so we can see how much power we
    lost or gained over the suspend cycle */
    @@ -1348,7 +1365,12 @@
    if (do_lock) {
    gpm_screensaver_poke (manager->priv->screensaver);
    - gpm_networkmanager_wake ();
    + nm_sleep = gconf_client_get_bool (manager->priv->gconf_client,
    + GPM_PREF_NETWORKMANAGER_SLEEP, NULL);
    + if (nm_sleep) {
    + gpm_networkmanager_wake ();
    + }
    +
    sync_dpms_policy (manager);
    diff -Naur gnome-power-manager-2.16.1/src/gpm-prefs.h gnome-power-manager-2.16.1-new/src/gpm-prefs.h
    --- gnome-power-manager-2.16.1/src/gpm-prefs.h 2006-07-30 14:51:54.000000000 +0200
    +++ gnome-power-manager-2.16.1-new/src/gpm-prefs.h 2006-10-05 12:05:15.000000000 +0200
    @@ -55,6 +55,9 @@
    #define GPM_PREF_CAN_HIBERNATE GPM_PREF_DIR "/can_hibernate"
    #define GPM_PREF_LOCK_USE_SCREENSAVER GPM_PREF_DIR "/lock_use_screensaver_settings"
    +
    +#define GPM_PREF_NETWORKMANAGER_SLEEP GPM_PREF_DIR "/networkmanager_sleep"
    +
    /* These are only effective if the system default is turned off. See bug #331164 */
    #define GPM_PREF_LOCK_ON_BLANK_SCREEN GPM_PREF_DIR "/lock_on_blank_screen"
    #define GPM_PREF_LOCK_ON_SUSPEND GPM_PREF_DIR "/lock_on_suspend"
    It would be great if this could be added to the official package, but I'm not expecting it

    Have a look in gconf-editor to see if there's a setting for that? (I can't check now, I'm using XFCE.) Also, check that you didn't keep the default "put computer to sleep when the lid is closed", but I suppose you've done it already...

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