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How to prevent from automatic reboot after shutdown?


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I have a problem with shutting down my systems. When I shutdown my laptop everything looks normal but after few seconds it powers on by itself. I tried to shut it down through terminal with "shutdown -h now" and it worked but only on Arch in Ubuntu with "shutdown -hH now" or "shutdown -H now" it hangs on spash screen. I also looked for some "wake on LAN" BIOS entries (as those are mentioned to cause that problem) but I don't have those.



How can I fix my distros to be able to shutdown distros form DE's menu without using terminal ?










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  • That's typically a problem with ACPI tables. What exact model of laptop do you have? What kernels do you run on the working distribution and on the non-working one?

    – Gilles
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:31











  • It's kind of strange because it looks like shutdown works fine while the power cord in connected but on battery not so much. So what didn't fix it was this and this and what did (at least for the moment) was removing from GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT= something like this: "quiet resume=UUID=6gwe72ic-3alp..." (I've overriten grub file so I can't quote it exactly) and simply replaced it with "quiet splash"...

    – banuy
    Aug 10 '14 at 3:14











  • @banuy You broke hibernation and didn't even fix your problem really. Don't do that.

    – wizzwizz4
    Mar 26 at 18:17


















0















I have a problem with shutting down my systems. When I shutdown my laptop everything looks normal but after few seconds it powers on by itself. I tried to shut it down through terminal with "shutdown -h now" and it worked but only on Arch in Ubuntu with "shutdown -hH now" or "shutdown -H now" it hangs on spash screen. I also looked for some "wake on LAN" BIOS entries (as those are mentioned to cause that problem) but I don't have those.



How can I fix my distros to be able to shutdown distros form DE's menu without using terminal ?










share|improve this question














bumped to the homepage by Community 1 hour ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
















  • That's typically a problem with ACPI tables. What exact model of laptop do you have? What kernels do you run on the working distribution and on the non-working one?

    – Gilles
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:31











  • It's kind of strange because it looks like shutdown works fine while the power cord in connected but on battery not so much. So what didn't fix it was this and this and what did (at least for the moment) was removing from GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT= something like this: "quiet resume=UUID=6gwe72ic-3alp..." (I've overriten grub file so I can't quote it exactly) and simply replaced it with "quiet splash"...

    – banuy
    Aug 10 '14 at 3:14











  • @banuy You broke hibernation and didn't even fix your problem really. Don't do that.

    – wizzwizz4
    Mar 26 at 18:17














0












0








0








I have a problem with shutting down my systems. When I shutdown my laptop everything looks normal but after few seconds it powers on by itself. I tried to shut it down through terminal with "shutdown -h now" and it worked but only on Arch in Ubuntu with "shutdown -hH now" or "shutdown -H now" it hangs on spash screen. I also looked for some "wake on LAN" BIOS entries (as those are mentioned to cause that problem) but I don't have those.



How can I fix my distros to be able to shutdown distros form DE's menu without using terminal ?










share|improve this question














I have a problem with shutting down my systems. When I shutdown my laptop everything looks normal but after few seconds it powers on by itself. I tried to shut it down through terminal with "shutdown -h now" and it worked but only on Arch in Ubuntu with "shutdown -hH now" or "shutdown -H now" it hangs on spash screen. I also looked for some "wake on LAN" BIOS entries (as those are mentioned to cause that problem) but I don't have those.



How can I fix my distros to be able to shutdown distros form DE's menu without using terminal ?







shutdown reboot






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Aug 9 '14 at 14:27









banuybanuy

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3071 gold badge3 silver badges8 bronze badges





bumped to the homepage by Community 1 hour ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community 1 hour ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.















  • That's typically a problem with ACPI tables. What exact model of laptop do you have? What kernels do you run on the working distribution and on the non-working one?

    – Gilles
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:31











  • It's kind of strange because it looks like shutdown works fine while the power cord in connected but on battery not so much. So what didn't fix it was this and this and what did (at least for the moment) was removing from GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT= something like this: "quiet resume=UUID=6gwe72ic-3alp..." (I've overriten grub file so I can't quote it exactly) and simply replaced it with "quiet splash"...

    – banuy
    Aug 10 '14 at 3:14











  • @banuy You broke hibernation and didn't even fix your problem really. Don't do that.

    – wizzwizz4
    Mar 26 at 18:17



















  • That's typically a problem with ACPI tables. What exact model of laptop do you have? What kernels do you run on the working distribution and on the non-working one?

    – Gilles
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:31











  • It's kind of strange because it looks like shutdown works fine while the power cord in connected but on battery not so much. So what didn't fix it was this and this and what did (at least for the moment) was removing from GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT= something like this: "quiet resume=UUID=6gwe72ic-3alp..." (I've overriten grub file so I can't quote it exactly) and simply replaced it with "quiet splash"...

    – banuy
    Aug 10 '14 at 3:14











  • @banuy You broke hibernation and didn't even fix your problem really. Don't do that.

    – wizzwizz4
    Mar 26 at 18:17

















That's typically a problem with ACPI tables. What exact model of laptop do you have? What kernels do you run on the working distribution and on the non-working one?

– Gilles
Aug 9 '14 at 22:31





That's typically a problem with ACPI tables. What exact model of laptop do you have? What kernels do you run on the working distribution and on the non-working one?

– Gilles
Aug 9 '14 at 22:31













It's kind of strange because it looks like shutdown works fine while the power cord in connected but on battery not so much. So what didn't fix it was this and this and what did (at least for the moment) was removing from GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT= something like this: "quiet resume=UUID=6gwe72ic-3alp..." (I've overriten grub file so I can't quote it exactly) and simply replaced it with "quiet splash"...

– banuy
Aug 10 '14 at 3:14





It's kind of strange because it looks like shutdown works fine while the power cord in connected but on battery not so much. So what didn't fix it was this and this and what did (at least for the moment) was removing from GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT= something like this: "quiet resume=UUID=6gwe72ic-3alp..." (I've overriten grub file so I can't quote it exactly) and simply replaced it with "quiet splash"...

– banuy
Aug 10 '14 at 3:14













@banuy You broke hibernation and didn't even fix your problem really. Don't do that.

– wizzwizz4
Mar 26 at 18:17





@banuy You broke hibernation and didn't even fix your problem really. Don't do that.

– wizzwizz4
Mar 26 at 18:17










1 Answer
1






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oldest

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0














On your hardware, it is possible that this is not supported via an OS interface. THus when you shutdown it reboots. I have run into this many times.



BTW, have you tried 'init 0' instead of shutdown?



The other thing I'd be looking is a BIOS option addressing this. All the BIOS makers are a little different, so I cannot provide a canned answer.






share|improve this answer
























  • depending on distro, you might have to use telinit 0 instead of init 0.

    – Dani_l
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:21











  • init 0 does the same thing as shutdown -h now.

    – Gilles
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:30














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active

oldest

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On your hardware, it is possible that this is not supported via an OS interface. THus when you shutdown it reboots. I have run into this many times.



BTW, have you tried 'init 0' instead of shutdown?



The other thing I'd be looking is a BIOS option addressing this. All the BIOS makers are a little different, so I cannot provide a canned answer.






share|improve this answer
























  • depending on distro, you might have to use telinit 0 instead of init 0.

    – Dani_l
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:21











  • init 0 does the same thing as shutdown -h now.

    – Gilles
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:30
















0














On your hardware, it is possible that this is not supported via an OS interface. THus when you shutdown it reboots. I have run into this many times.



BTW, have you tried 'init 0' instead of shutdown?



The other thing I'd be looking is a BIOS option addressing this. All the BIOS makers are a little different, so I cannot provide a canned answer.






share|improve this answer
























  • depending on distro, you might have to use telinit 0 instead of init 0.

    – Dani_l
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:21











  • init 0 does the same thing as shutdown -h now.

    – Gilles
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:30














0












0








0







On your hardware, it is possible that this is not supported via an OS interface. THus when you shutdown it reboots. I have run into this many times.



BTW, have you tried 'init 0' instead of shutdown?



The other thing I'd be looking is a BIOS option addressing this. All the BIOS makers are a little different, so I cannot provide a canned answer.






share|improve this answer













On your hardware, it is possible that this is not supported via an OS interface. THus when you shutdown it reboots. I have run into this many times.



BTW, have you tried 'init 0' instead of shutdown?



The other thing I'd be looking is a BIOS option addressing this. All the BIOS makers are a little different, so I cannot provide a canned answer.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Aug 9 '14 at 16:46









mdpcmdpc

5,1912 gold badges18 silver badges38 bronze badges




5,1912 gold badges18 silver badges38 bronze badges













  • depending on distro, you might have to use telinit 0 instead of init 0.

    – Dani_l
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:21











  • init 0 does the same thing as shutdown -h now.

    – Gilles
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:30



















  • depending on distro, you might have to use telinit 0 instead of init 0.

    – Dani_l
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:21











  • init 0 does the same thing as shutdown -h now.

    – Gilles
    Aug 9 '14 at 22:30

















depending on distro, you might have to use telinit 0 instead of init 0.

– Dani_l
Aug 9 '14 at 22:21





depending on distro, you might have to use telinit 0 instead of init 0.

– Dani_l
Aug 9 '14 at 22:21













init 0 does the same thing as shutdown -h now.

– Gilles
Aug 9 '14 at 22:30





init 0 does the same thing as shutdown -h now.

– Gilles
Aug 9 '14 at 22:30


















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