this post was submitted on 04 Jun 2024
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So here's my situation:

I'm on Fedora 40 on a laptop and I've recently decided to add a Hibernate option to my own logout/powermenu script that I use. The script executes systemctl hibernate but there's a problem. It didn't seem to work. When I ran the above command in terminal, I got an error stating that there's not enough suitable swap space for that. Turns out that I'm using swap-to-zram hence why Hibernate doesn't work.

So, I decided to ask ChatGPT and it recommended creating a swapfile. I can do that no problem.

The thing is, if I'm using swap-to-zram, I concluded it is likely that if I'm making use of that swap-to-zram all the time, I will probably need a larger swapfile for the hibernation.

So I asked our AI overlords if there's a risk in that. It said there isn't any real risk, other than increased drive wear-and-tear and potential performance issues.

Dear Linux users of Lemmy, are there any issues or concerns I should be aware of before attempting something like this (running multiple types of swap simultaneously, excess swapfile space, etc.)? Thank you.

Edit: Not sure how relevant it is, seeing as I'm not asking about swap partitions, but I'll mention using BTRFS, just in case. And no, I don't know anything about it, I just know it has cool features I'm yet to start learning about.

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[–] [email protected] 26 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Can I suggest reading documentation instead of asking LLM's that are routinely known to just make shit up?

https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Power_management/Suspend_and_hibernate says it's possible with a swap file as the backing device but that swap to zram isn't supported. I haven't personally tried it though.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 months ago

So it IS possible, as I already found out. If the Arch wiki isn't saying things like "doing this can break your system" then it's fine by me.