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This has nothing to do w/ SDDM, you're suspending from a lxqt/x11 session.
Please adjust the subject, restarting sddm only "helps" because it kills the X11 server and the session and everything.
The problem is likely some compositor (picom? try to kill that intead) and the cause likely
Feb 19 17:59:33 exe0 suspend[5540]: nvidia-suspend.service
Feb 19 17:59:33 exe0 logger[5540]: <13>Feb 19 17:59:33 suspend: nvidia-suspend.service
Feb 19 17:59:34 exe0 systemd[1]: nvidia-suspend.service: Deactivated successfully.
Feb 19 17:59:34 exe0 systemd[1]: nvidia-suspend.service: Consumed 365ms CPU time, 347.7M memory peak.
Feb 19 20:02:09 exe0 systemd[1]: systemd-suspend.service: Deactivated successfully.
Feb 19 20:02:09 exe0 suspend[5645]: nvidia-resume.service
Feb 19 20:02:09 exe0 logger[5645]: <13>Feb 19 20:02:09 suspend: nvidia-resume.service
Feb 19 20:02:09 exe0 systemd[1]: nvidia-resume.service: Deactivated successfully. some VRAM decay and this service not properly working.
Try to use a permanent storage (disk, not ram) to preserve the VRAM.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/NVIDIA … er_suspend
On top of that you're mounting ntfs, so standard disclaimer: 3rd link below. Mandatory.
Disable it (it's NOT the BIOS setting!) and reboot windows and linux twice for voodo reasons.
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It's picom
Try to use a permanent storage (disk, not ram) to preserve the VRAM.
On top of that you're mounting ntfs, so standard disclaimer: 3rd link below. Mandatory.
Already did that ever since I installed Arch Linux
reboot windows and linux twice for voodo reasons.
I don't use hibernation ever, so it's kinda unnecessary
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So does killing/restarting picom help?
(You could also just establish a sleep hook intead of dealing w/ the VRAM preservation)
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So does killing/restarting picom help?
Killing it does help
(You could also just establish a sleep hook intead of dealing w/ the VRAM preservation)
Will do, does that mean VRAM preservation is bad?
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It means it likely doesn't work (as expected)
The default storage location is in your RAM, if you're short on (free) RAM but have plenty of VRAM, you're gonna run into the limitations of that approach.
If you don't run into further roadblocks and please always remember to mark resolved threads by editing your initial posts subject - so others will know that there's no task left, but maybe a solution to find.
Thanks.
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