@Synoc
Here is the output you asked for:
command: swapon
Code:
Usage:
swapon -a [-e] [-v] [-f] enable all swaps from /etc/fstab
swapon [-p priority] [-d] [-v] [-f] <special> enable given swap
swapon -s display swap usage summary
swapon -h display help
swapon -V display version
The <special> parameter:
{-L label | LABEL=label} LABEL of device to be used
{-U uuid | UUID=uuid} UUID of device to be used
<device> name of device to be used
<file> name of file to be used
command: ls /proc
Code:
1 1346 1427 16 24 816 975 ioports self
10 1351 1443 1642 25 819 978 irq slabinfo
1030 1352 1445 1685 251 820 acpi kallsyms softirqs
1031 1354 1447 17 259 821 asound kcore stat
11 1358 1450 1705 26 824 buddyinfo key-users swaps
1101 1360 1453 1716 260 860 bus kmsg sys
1108 1365 1458 1755 3 865 cgroups kpagecount sysrq-trigger
1111 1366 1488 1761 323 874 cmdline kpageflags sysvipc
1184 1367 1491 1765 328 875 consoles latency_stats timer_list
12 1368 1493 1789 34 878 cpuinfo loadavg timer_stats
1221 1369 1496 1797 35 880 crypto locks tty
1224 1371 1498 1798 4 883 devices mdstat uptime
1225 1375 15 18 456 884 device-tree meminfo version
1227 1381 1500 1852 457 885 diskstats misc version_signature
1232 1389 1501 196 5 887 dma modules vmallocinfo
1243 1391 1507 2 524 889 dri mounts vmstat
1246 1392 1508 20 6 892 driver mtrr zoneinfo
1256 14 1517 201 648 9 execdomains net
13 1400 1520 21 695 928 fb pagetypeinfo
1327 1403 1572 22 7 936 filesystems partitions
1338 1421 1578 227 780 956 fs sched_debug
1343 1424 1580 228 8 957 interrupts schedstat
1345 1425 1582 23 807 970 iomem scsi
Hope this helps!
@Frogs Hair
Originally Posted by
Frogs Hair
I don't know if simply increasing swap space alone will allow you to hibernate .
Then, how can I hibernate?
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