apmd
— Advanced
Power Management monitor daemon
apmd |
[-d ] [-f
-file ] [-s ]
[-v ] |
The apmd
utility monitors the occurrence
of the specified Advanced Power Management (APM) events and, if one of the
events occurs, it executes the sequence of commands corresponding to the
event. Only the events specified in the configuration file are notified to
apmd
; all other events are ignored. For each event
posted by the APM BIOS, apmd
invokes the sequence of
commands specified in the configuration file. When
apmd
is running with monitoring suspend/standby
requests, the kernel will not process those requests. Therefore, if you wish
action to be taken when these events occur, you need to explicitly configure
the appropriate commands or built-in functions in the configuration
file.
The apmd
utility recognizes the following
runtime options:
-d
- Starts in debug mode. This causes
apmd
to execute
in the foreground instead of in daemon mode.
-f
file
- Specifies a different configuration file file to be
used in place of the default /etc/apmd.conf.
-s
- Causes
apmd
to simulate a POWERSTATECHANGE event
when a power state change is detected (AC_POWER_STATE) but the bios of the
laptop does not report it. This enables you to do things like dimming the
LCD backlight when you unplug the power cord.
-v
- Verbose mode.
When apmd
starts, it reads the
configuration file (/etc/apmd.conf as default) and
notifies the set of events to be monitored to the APM device driver. When it
terminates, the APM device driver automatically cancels monitored
events.
If the apmd
process receives a
SIGHUP
, it will reread its configuration file and
notify the APM device driver of any changes to its configuration.
The apmd
utility uses the device
/dev/apmctl to issue
ioctl(2)
requests for monitoring events and for controlling the APM system. This
device file is opened exclusively, so only a single
apmd
process can be running at any time.
When apmd
receives an APM event, it forks
a child process to execute the commands specified in the configuration file
and then continues listening for more events. The child process executes the
commands specified, one at a time and in the order that they are listed.
While apmd
is processing the command list
for SUSPEND/STANDBY requests, the APM kernel device driver issues
notifications to APM BIOS once per second so that the BIOS knows that there
are still some commands pending, and that it should not complete the request
just yet.
The apmd
utility creates the file
/var/run/apmd.pid, and stores its process id there.
This can be used to kill or reconfigure apmd
.
The structure of the apmd
configuration
file is quite simple. For example:
apm_event SUSPENDREQ {
exec "sync && sync && sync";
exec "sleep 1";
exec "zzz";
}
will cause apmd
to receive the APM event
‘SUSPENDREQ
’ (which may be posted by
an LCD close), run the ‘sync
’ command
3 times and wait for a while, then execute zzz
(apm
-z
) to put the system
in the suspend state.
- /etc/apmd.conf
-
- /dev/apmctl
-
- /var/run/apmd.pid
-
Sample configuration commands include:
apm_event SUSPENDREQ {
exec "/etc/rc.suspend apm suspend";
}
apm_event USERSUSPENDREQ {
exec "sync && sync && sync";
exec "sleep 1";
exec "apm -z";
}
apm_event NORMRESUME {
exec "/etc/rc.resume apm suspend";
}
apm_event STANDBYRESUME {
exec "/etc/rc.resume apm standby";
}
# resume event configuration for serial mouse users by
# reinitializing a moused(8) connected to a serial port.
#
#apm_event NORMRESUME {
# exec "kill -HUP `cat /var/run/moused.pid`";
#}
#
# suspend request event configuration for ATA HDD users:
# execute standby instead of suspend.
#
#apm_event SUSPENDREQ {
# reject;
# exec "sync && sync && sync";
# exec "sleep 1";
# exec "apm -Z";
#}
The apmd
utility appeared in
FreeBSD 3.3.