xref: /freebsd/usr.sbin/apmd/apmd.8 (revision 3c4ba5f55438f7afd4f4b0b56f88f2bb505fd6a6)
1.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Mitsuru IWASAKI <iwasaki@FreeBSD.org>
2.\" Copyright (c) 1999 KOIE Hidetaka <koie@suri.co.jp>
3.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Yoshihiko SARUMARU <mistral@imasy.or.jp>
4.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Norihiro Kumagai <kuma@nk.rim.or.jp>
5.\" All rights reserved.
6.\"
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8.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
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14.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
15.\"
16.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
17.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
18.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
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28.\"     @(#)apmd.8	1.1 (FreeBSD) 6/28/99
29.\" $FreeBSD$
30.\"
31.Dd June 28, 1999
32.Dt APMD 8 i386
33.Os
34.Sh NAME
35.Nm apmd
36.Nd Advanced Power Management monitor daemon
37.Sh SYNOPSIS
38.Nm
39.Op Fl d
40.Op Fl f file
41.Op Fl s
42.Op Fl v
43.Sh DESCRIPTION
44The
45.Nm
46utility
47monitors the occurrence of the specified Advanced Power Management
48.Pq Tn APM
49events and, if one of the events occurs, it executes the sequence of
50commands corresponding to the event.
51Only the events specified in the
52configuration file are notified to
53.Nm ;
54all other events are ignored.
55For each event posted by the APM BIOS,
56.Nm
57invokes the sequence of commands specified in the configuration file.
58When
59.Nm
60is running with monitoring suspend/standby requests,
61the kernel will not process those requests.
62Therefore, if you wish action to be taken when these events
63occur, you need to explicitly configure the appropriate commands or
64built-in functions in the configuration file.
65.Pp
66The
67.Nm
68utility recognizes the following runtime options:
69.Bl -tag -width f_file
70.It Fl d
71Starts in debug mode.
72This causes
73.Nm
74to execute in the foreground instead of in daemon mode.
75.It Fl f Ar file
76Specifies a different configuration file
77.Ar file
78to be used in place of the default
79.Pa /etc/apmd.conf .
80.It Fl s
81Causes
82.Nm
83to simulate a POWERSTATECHANGE event when a power state change is detected
84(AC_POWER_STATE) but the bios of the laptop does not report it.
85This enables you to do things like dimming the LCD backlight when you unplug
86the power cord.
87.It Fl v
88Verbose mode.
89.El
90.Pp
91When
92.Nm
93starts, it reads the configuration file
94.Pa ( /etc/apmd.conf
95as default)
96and notifies the set of events to be monitored to the APM device driver.
97When it terminates, the APM device driver automatically cancels
98monitored events.
99.Pp
100If the
101.Nm
102process receives a
103.Dv SIGHUP ,
104it will reread its configuration file and
105notify the APM device driver of any changes to its configuration.
106.Pp
107The
108.Nm
109utility uses the device
110.Pa /dev/apmctl
111to issue
112.Xr ioctl 2
113requests for monitoring events and for controlling the APM system.
114This device file is opened exclusively, so only a single
115.Nm
116process can be running at any time.
117.Pp
118When
119.Nm
120receives an APM event, it forks a child process to execute the
121commands specified in the configuration file and then continues
122listening for more events.
123The child process executes the commands
124specified, one at a time and in the order that they are listed.
125.Pp
126While
127.Nm
128is processing the command list for SUSPEND/STANDBY requests, the APM kernel
129device driver issues notifications to APM BIOS once per second so that the
130BIOS knows that there are still some commands pending, and that it should not
131complete the request just yet.
132.Pp
133The
134.Nm
135utility creates the file
136.Pa /var/run/apmd.pid ,
137and stores its process
138id there.
139This can be used to kill or reconfigure
140.Nm .
141.Sh CONFIGURATION FILE
142The structure of the
143.Nm
144configuration file is quite simple.
145For example:
146.Bd -literal
147apm_event SUSPENDREQ {
148       exec "sync && sync && sync";
149       exec "sleep 1";
150       exec "zzz";
151}
152.Ed
153.Pp
154will cause
155.Nm
156to receive the APM event
157.Ql SUSPENDREQ
158(which may be posted by an LCD close), run the
159.Ql sync
160command 3 times and wait for a while, then execute
161.Nm zzz ( Ns Nm apm Fl z )
162to put the system in the suspend state.
163.Bl -bullet
164.It
165The apm_event keyword
166.Bd -ragged -offset indent
167.Ql apm_event
168is the keyword which indicates the start of configuration for
169each event.
170.Ed
171.It
172APM events
173.Bd -ragged -offset indent
174If you wish to execute the same commands for different events, the
175event names should be delimited by a comma.
176The following are
177valid event names:
178.Bl -item
179.It
180- Events ignored by the kernel if
181.Nm
182is running:
183.Pp
184.Bl -tag -width USERSUSPENDREQ -compact -offset indent
185.It STANDBYREQ
186.It USERSTANDBYREQ
187.It SUSPENDREQ
188should include sync in the command list,
189.It USERSUSPENDREQ
190should include sync in the command list,
191.It BATTERYLOW
192only zzz should be specified in the command list.
193.El
194.It
195- Events passed to
196.Nm
197after kernel handling:
198.Pp
199.Bl -tag -width USERSUSPENDREQ -compact -offset indent
200.It NORMRESUME
201.It CRITRESUME
202.It STANDBYRESUME
203.It POWERSTATECHANGE
204.It UPDATETIME
205.It CAPABILITIESCHANGE
206.El
207.Pp
208Other events will not be sent to
209.Nm .
210.El
211.Ed
212.It
213command line syntax
214.Bd -ragged -offset indent
215In the example above, the three lines beginning with
216.Ql exec
217are commands for the event.
218Each line should be terminated with a semicolon.
219The command list for the event should be enclosed by
220.Ql {
221and
222.Ql } .
223The
224.Nm
225utility uses
226.Pa /bin/sh
227for double-quotation enclosed command execution, just as with
228.Xr system 3 .
229Each command is executed in order until the end of
230the list is reached or a command finishes with a non-zero status code.
231The
232.Nm
233utility will report any failed command's status code via
234.Xr syslog 3
235and will then reject the request event posted by the APM BIOS.
236.Ed
237.It
238Built-in functions
239.Bd -ragged -offset indent
240You can also specify
241.Nm
242built-in functions instead of command lines.
243A built-in function name should be terminated with a semicolon,
244just as with a command line.
245The following built-in functions are currently supported:
246.Bl -item
247.It
248.Bl -tag -width ".It - reject"
249.It - reject
250Reject last request posted by APM BIOS.
251This can be used to reject
252a SUSPEND request when the LCD is closed and put the system in a
253STANDBY state instead.
254.El
255.El
256.Ed
257.El
258.Sh FILES
259.Bl -tag -width /etc/apmd.conf -compact
260.It Pa /etc/apmd.conf
261.It Pa /dev/apmctl
262.It Pa /var/run/apmd.pid
263.El
264.Sh EXAMPLES
265Sample configuration commands include:
266.Bd -literal
267apm_event SUSPENDREQ {
268        exec "/etc/rc.suspend apm suspend";
269}
270
271apm_event USERSUSPENDREQ {
272        exec "sync && sync && sync";
273        exec "sleep 1";
274        exec "apm -z";
275}
276
277apm_event NORMRESUME {
278        exec "/etc/rc.resume apm suspend";
279}
280
281apm_event STANDBYRESUME {
282        exec "/etc/rc.resume apm standby";
283}
284
285# resume event configuration for serial mouse users by
286# reinitializing a moused(8) connected to a serial port.
287#
288#apm_event NORMRESUME {
289#       exec "kill -HUP `cat /var/run/moused.pid`";
290#}
291#
292# suspend request event configuration for ATA HDD users:
293# execute standby instead of suspend.
294#
295#apm_event SUSPENDREQ {
296#       reject;
297#       exec "sync && sync && sync";
298#       exec "sleep 1";
299#       exec "apm -Z";
300#}
301.Ed
302.Sh SEE ALSO
303.Xr apm 4 ,
304.Xr apm 8
305.Sh HISTORY
306The
307.Nm
308utility appeared in
309.Fx 3.3 .
310.Sh AUTHORS
311.An Mitsuru IWASAKI Aq Mt iwasaki@FreeBSD.org
312.An KOIE Hidetaka Aq Mt koie@suri.co.jp
313.Pp
314.An -nosplit
315Some contributions made by
316.An Warner Losh Aq Mt imp@FreeBSD.org ,
317.An Hiroshi Yamashita Aq Mt bluemoon@msj.biglobe.ne.jp ,
318.An Yoshihiko SARUMARU Aq Mt mistral@imasy.or.jp ,
319.An Norihiro Kumagai Aq Mt kuma@nk.rim.or.jp ,
320.An NAKAGAWA Yoshihisa Aq Mt nakagawa@jp.FreeBSD.org ,
321and
322.An Nick Hilliard Aq Mt nick@foobar.org .
323