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Super Cool! Does it support other formats like epub, cbz etc?
Roger Roger
I’ll try other kernels then, but I don’t know how to check if the system is actually powered off or not without waiting 8 hours and checking the battery drain XD perhaps the halt
could be the key
thanks!! I’ll update the thread if I’ll discover something new
how do I check this? This is probably the source of the issue (see this comment), but I have no idea on what to do to understand the actual cause
thanks for your time and help!
update: I tried but when off (or at least “apparently off”) the USB ports are off, my phone does not charge when plugged in
okay, I think we have some news: if I kill the pc by holding the power button, after a night the battery loses 0%! so I guess the problem is that it’s not shutting down properly. I tried to sudo halt --poweroff
and it drained the battery as usual. I then tried sudo halt -f
and something strange happened: the screen immediately turned off, but the red LED on the volume key indicating that the volume is muted stayed on, so the pc wasn’t completely off. what could be the problem? and why does this happen only when I force the halt
? could it be a kernel issue?
thanks for the help and for your time!!!
I checked and yes, there’s no cmos battery in it. Do you think this may have something to do with it?
I’ll try it as soon as I can, thanks for the suggestion! I don’t think the battery is dying, because while powered on the battery life is very good
As it should be, the battery life while in use it’s even better than my own pc
Probably there are problems with the report to the OS because the battery health is marked as 100%, which is a bit strange for a 4yo pc. Do you think this may have something to do with the battery drain?
The battery health is marked as 100%, which seems strange to me. However, the battery life while powered on is very good, so I don’t think the battery is old or exhausted. Do you think that changing the battery may be the solution?
As usual :|
I’ll have to check it out then, thanks for your help!
Thanks for sharing this kind stranger, I really needed this
Why isn’t this aligned?
What about Penix?
It worked, thank you very much for your help man! Now the only remaining problem is the snapshot 166, that snapper does not let me remove. I assume I should remove in a similar way as timeshift:
$ sudo btrfs subvolume delete /.snapshots/166/snapshot
WARNING: not deleting default subvolume id 2968 '/.snapshots/166/snapshot'
I think there’s something I’m missing about how these snapshot works
Thanks for the answer! I mounted it and removed all the timeshift-btrfs stuff. now, after a reboot, sudo btrfs subvolume list -t /
does not show timeshift stuffs anymore, but if I mount again sudo mount -o subvolid=5 /dev/nvme0n1p2 /mnt
and ls /mnt/
I get:
@ @cache @home @log timeshift-btrfs
how can I remove timeshift-btrfs
from there? can i just rm -rf
it?
In openSUSE
(sorry I forgot to mention, I’m running EndeavourOS)
“it’s already installed”