From MythTV Official Wiki

Introduction

Most users tend to leave their MythTV system running 24 by 7. This page describes the options you have in Linux to shut down and automatically wake up your machine before a recording. Doing so allows you to save energy, money and reduce your carbon footprint.

General Sequence

It is confusing how many places you need to look for to determine the sequence and details required to get things working. Here is a recommendation on the sequence to follow:

Ensure you know how to use your BIOS to initiate a wake up. Focus on using one of: RTC Real Time Clock alarm LAN Port based (USB or Serial) Once you know your wake-my-computer-up-from-a-dead-sleep is working, properly configure Myth From mythtv-setup , select General. Page to the Shutdown/Wakeup page. If you roll your own Command to set Wakeup Time, be sure to pay attention to the format of the $time argument sent in. It is controlled by the previous field, Wakeup time format (that cost me no small number of hours). If you are interacting with the RTC on your system, you will need to run the prior script with 'sudo' privileges. You will probably want to run without requiring a password, so see the blurb below about setting up the sudoers file. (I would not recommend ALL applications; just what is needed).

Your options

Hardware timer switch - a cheap power switch and a simple cron job to shutdown the machine can do the job

Wake on LAN - have another machine on your network wake your MythTV machine. (See the "Wake on LAN" MythTV HowTo)

Use the real time clock (RTC) - most machines (manufactured in 2000 or later) have the ability to use the RTC for time-controlled wakeup - this option is the subject of this HowTo





Use the RTC

MythTV has the ability to write the date and time of the next recording to the RTC. This allows your machine to automatically shutdown (or suspend) and turn on again a few minutes before it needs to record again. The Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) specification is an open industry standard first released in December 1996 developed by HP, Intel, Microsoft, Phoenix, and Toshiba that defines common interfaces for hardware recognition, motherboard and device configuration and power management.

The ACPI real time clock alarm function can be used by your MythTV system to wake up your machine at a certain date and time.





Required steps for using the RTC to access the ACPI alarm function

Configure your RTC with your BIOS setup Disable hwclock updates Configure MythTV

BIOS setup

If you want to use ACPI to wake up your MythTV system, you first need to ensure that your motherboard supports this functionality by looking at your BIOS setup. This information is stored in the FADT (Fixed ACPI Description Table). If your kernel version is 2.6.22 or later, you may find this information in your kernel log file:

$ grep -i rtc /var/log/kern.log RTC can wake from S4 ... rtc0: alarms up to one month

For Fedora 13 or Mandriva try (as root)

# grep -i rtc /var/log/messages

For Ubuntu try

# sudo grep -i rtc /var/log/dmesg

For modern Debian or other systemctl based systems try

# sudo journalctl | grep rtc

The above indicates this system can wake from state S4 and that the wakeup time can be set.

The ACPI specifications defines the following so-called "global states" -- from Wikipedia ACPI

G1 Sleeping subdivides into the four states S1 through S4. S1 : The CPU(s) stop(s) executing instructions. S2 : The CPU is powered off. S3 : Suspend to RAM . S4 : Suspend to disk or hibernate.

subdivides into the four states S1 through S4. G2 ( S5 ) Soft off Almost the same as G3 but computer can "wake" from input from the keyboard, clock, modem, LAN, or USB device.

( ) Almost the same as G3 but computer can "wake" from input from the keyboard, clock, modem, LAN, or USB device. G3 Mechanical off

Next, check your BIOS setup program for the wakeup alarm function. This setting is likely found under a submenu of "Power Management Setup," "APM," "ACPI," or "Advanced" - you just need to poke around to find it. It will likely be called something like Wake From Alarm, Power-on by Alarm, Wake from RTC, RTC Resume, etc.

UTC, local time and BIOS date format

If supported by your environment, set the time to UTC (Coordinated Universal Time); UTC is the most desirable option because translation to local time is not required and daylight saving time is automatically handled. If UTC is not supported in your environment you will need to recalculate the time before you write it to the RTC. You should be able to determine the time format on your machine by inspecting the output of the following command (there are an integer number of hours difference between UTC and local time).

cat /proc/driver/rtc

The reason for this recommendation is that most Linux distributions write the current system time back to the RTC when shutting down the machine. With most RTCs, the machine will not wake up if the hardware clock has been modified after the wakeup alarm has been set. To avoid this, it is necessary to disable the writing of the current system time to the RTC by the system shutdown scripts. This is distribution specific. Some examples:

(N.B.: on some mobo's disabling writing to the RTC will also disable waking up, so it can be just the other way around!)

Gentoo

Gentoo

Set clock_systohc to "NO" in /etc/conf.d/hwclock :

/etc/conf.d/hwclock

# Set CLOCK to "UTC" if your system clock is set to UTC (also known as # Greenwich Mean Time). If your clock is set to the local time, then # set CLOCK to "local". Note that if you dual boot with Windows, then # you should set it to "local". clock="UTC" # If you want to set the Hardware Clock to the current System Time # during shutdown, then say "YES" here. # You normally don't need to do this if you run a ntp daemon. clock_systohc="NO" # If you wish to pass any other arguments to hwclock during bootup, # you may do so here. Alpha users may wish to use --arc or --srm here. clock_args=""





openSuSE

openSUSE

Set SYSTOHC to "no" in /etc/sysconfig/clock

/etc/sysconfig/clock

# Set to "-u" if your system clock is set to UTC, and to "--localtime" # if your clock runs that way. # HWCLOCK="-u" SYSTOHC="no" # Is set to "yes" write back the system time to the hardware # clock at reboot or shutdown. Usefull if hardware clock is # much more inaccurate than system clock. Set to "no" if # system time does it wrong due e.g. missed timer interrupts. # If set to "no" the hardware clock adjust feature is also # skipped because it is rather useless without writing back # the system time to the hardware clock.

Debian

Debian (and Ubuntu 8.04 and earlier)

Set HWCLOCKACCESS to "no" in /etc/default/rcS



In recent versions of Debian, this is in /etc/default/hwclock

Uncomment #HWCLOCKACCESS=yes and set it to no like this:

sed -i 's/#HWCLOCKACCESS=yes/HWCLOCKACCESS=no/' /etc/default/hwclock





/etc/default/rcS

# # /etc/default/rcS # # Default settings for the scripts in /etc/rcS.d/ # # For information about these variables see the rcS(5) manual page. # # This file belongs to the "initscripts" package. TMPTIME=0 SULOGIN=no DELAYLOGIN=no UTC=no VERBOSE=no FSCKFIX=no HWCLOCKACCESS=no

Ubuntu

Ubuntu 9.10 and later

Ubuntu 9.10 and later (which uses Upstart instead of SysV init) does not mention HWCLOCKACCESS in the man pages of /etc/default/rcS . Do the following instead:

Modify /etc/init/hwclock-save.conf to save and restore the alarm setting:

/etc/init/hwclock-save.conf

# hwclock-save - save system clock to hardware clock # hwclock-save - save system clock to hardware clock # # This task saves the time from the system clock back to the hardware # clock on shutdown. description "save system clock to hardware clock" start on runlevel [06] task script . /etc/default/rcS [ "$UTC" = "yes" ] && tz="--utc" || tz="--localtime" [ "$BADYEAR" = "yes" ] && badyear="--badyear" ACPITIME=`cat /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm` exec hwclock --rtc=/dev/rtc0 --systohc $tz --noadjfile $badyear echo "$ACPITIME" > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm end script

Note - /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm was /proc/acpi/alarm in older Ubuntu version.

Ubuntu 15.04 and later

Disabling is not required.

Use rtcwake to set the RTC from BIOS. Since control of the system shutdown is managed by Myth (and whatever command is configured into the Server halt command (see Setup Wakeup Options), you will want to use the mode no. Example:

/usr/sbin/rtcwake --mode no

This will cause the RTC alarm to be set, but will not shut the system down.





Tip: Keep in mind that in general, you want to allow Myth to drive the actual shutdown sequence.

Fedora

Fedora Core 6 and later

modifying /etc/init.d/halt with the following will fix this problem:

/etc/init.d/halt

==> ACPITIME=`cat /proc/acpi/alarm` [ -x /sbin/hwclock ] && action $"Syncing hardware clock to system time" /sbin/hwclock $CLOCKFLAGS ==> echo "$ACPITIME" > /proc/acpi/alarm

Or FC13

/etc/init.d/halt

==> ACPITIME=`cat /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm` [ -x /sbin/hwclock ] && action $"Syncing hardware clock to system time" /sbin/hwclock --systohc ==> echo "$ACPITIME" > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm

For Fedora releases since Fedora 15, which use systemd, the hardware clock is not saved on shut down by default.

For other systemd based distributions that include a hwclock-save service, the service can be disabled by making /etc/systemd/system/hwclock-save.service a symlink to /dev/null:

ln -sf /dev/null /etc/systemd/system/hwclock-save.service

Removing the symlink will re-enable the service.

Which kernel are you using?

The ACPI interface in Linux changed with kernel 2.6.22 (released on 8 July 2007). You can determine your kernel version by entering the following command in a terminal window:

uname -a

Kernel versions 2.6.22 and newer use /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm - see "Using /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm", next

Kernel versions 2.6.21 and older use /proc/acpi/alarm - see "Archive: Using /proc/acpi/alarm" below

Kernels 2.6.22 and higher may be configured to use the legacy /proc/acpi/alarm instead of the new rtc wakealarm. See the notes about compiling your own kernel below.

Note that kernel version 2.6.26, included in the current Debian stable distribution, contains a bug that makes ACPI wakeup fail on at least some motherboards. If this affects you, either upgrade to 2.6.33-rc4 or patch 2.6.26 with this patch.

Using /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm

Kernel versions 2.6.22 and newer use /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm

ls /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm

format of the /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm

Instead of accepting a formatted time, wakealarm accepts the number of seconds since midnight on Jan 1, 1970 GMT (this is known as "unix time", "POSIX time" or "epoch time").

You must make sure that your RTC is set to UTC time - not local time - otherwise it will wakeup at the wrong time. However, it is still possible if the RTC is set to local time (likely if you also run MS Windows); see the section below for how to set the alarm correctly when the RTC is in local time.

If you want to change the wakealarm time, you will need to write the new wakealarm time to the RTC.

If you can't find /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm, and you're running a modular kernel, it might be the case that the correct module is not loaded. In that case, make sure the rtc module is unloaded, and then load the rtc-cmos module:

rmmod rtc modprobe rtc-cmos

Manually test wakealarm

First verify that your Linux kernel is 2.6.22 or newer and the hwclock update function has been disabled as described above.

Simple test to wake the machine 5 minutes from now

sudo bash -c "echo 0 > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm" sudo bash -c "echo `date '+%s' -d '+ 5 minutes'` > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm" cat /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm

Check

cat /proc/driver/rtc

This should return a list of parameters. Check the "alrm_time" is 5 minutes into the future and the "alrm_date" is appropriate (which could be but might not be "today," if now + 5 minutes is the next day UTC).





Tip: the "cat /proc/driver/rtc" command is a powerful debugging tool, allowing you to see the RTC parameters of interest.

Shut down your computer and see if it comes back up in ~5 minutes.

sudo shutdown -h now (in Ubuntu 10.4 "sudo shutdown -P now" (-h may cause system to restart))





Example to convert to epoch time and set date/time

echo 0 > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm date -u --date "Jul 1, 2008 10:32:00" +%s > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm





Example to convert from epoch time to readable date/time

date -d @1214908320 +%F" "%T 2008-07-01 12:32:00





Setting alarm when RTC is in localtime

The RTC is in local time, however wakealarm must be given a UTC time.

To get a UTC time in seconds since the epoch for a local time that we want MythTV to wake up we do the following. We pass the local time that we want to wake up as --date "2008-12-22 10:45:00", we indicate we want it reported as UTC time with -u, and we indicate we want it reported as seconds since epoch with the format string "+%s".

date -u --date "2008-12-22 10:45:00" +%s

So to set the alarm we can do the following.

SECS=`date -u --date "2008-12-22 10:45:00" +%s` echo 0 > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm echo $SECS > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm

Then we can confirm that the alarm is set with the following.

cat /proc/driver/rtc

If the alarm is set then you should see something like this. If so then shut down and see if it wakes up at the alarm date/time.

rtc_time : 13:40:26 rtc_date : 2008-12-21 alrm_time : 10:45:00 alrm_date : 2008-12-22 alarm_IRQ : yes alrm_pending : no 24hr : yes periodic_IRQ : no update_IRQ : no HPET_emulated : no DST_enable : no periodic_freq : 1024 batt_status : okay

If you see the alarm date similar to ****-12-21 then the alarm is set to a time in the past and it won't wake up.

rtc_time : 13:42:01 rtc_date : 2008-12-21 alrm_time : 13:46:59 alrm_date : ****-12-21 alarm_IRQ : no alrm_pending : no 24hr : yes periodic_IRQ : no update_IRQ : no HPET_emulated : no DST_enable : no periodic_freq : 1024 batt_status : okay

Integrate into MythTV

mythtv-setup settings for your script

(use these instructions for a dedicated backend system)

Select the backend's "General" options and on the "Shutdown/Wakeup Options" page, make the following settings:

Block shutdown before client connected: (checked, if you run frontend and backend on 1 machine. Do not check if you do not automatically start the frontend, and want the system to shut down after an automatic recording.)

Idle shutdown timeout (secs): 1200 (if you set this to 0, it will disable auto shutdown)

Max. wait for recording (min): 120

Startup before rec. (secs): 600 (If you have not disabled the occasional disk check on boot, make this time long enough to complete the boot & disk check before the recording should start)

Wakeup time format: time_t

Command to set Wakeup Time: sudo /usr/bin/setwakeup.sh $time

Server halt command: sudo shutdown -h now (some systems may need "sudo shutdown -P now" instead (-h may cause system to restart))

Pre Shutdown check-command: (leave this blank)





Write the startup script

You'll need to copy/paste the following into your editor:





setwakeup.sh

#!/bin/bash #$1 is the first argument to the script. It is the time in seconds since 1970 #this is defined in mythtv-setup with the time_t argument echo 0 > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm #this clears your alarm. echo $1 > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm #this writes your alarm LOG_FILE='/var/log/mythtv/hwclock-rebootTime.log' #log file # Now write the time the system is expected to come out of power save mode # so there is at least a small record of when if it was supposed to recover # Note:- Log file will just keep growing # date in Epoch format a="`date +%s`" # Subtract Current time from Future time let "b=$1-$a" # echo $b # echo "result of time subtraction `date -d @$b`" # Get Date and Subtract 1,.. as date starts from 1st Jan 1970 dte=`date -d @$b +%d` let "dte -= 1" echo "Current Time ->`date`" >> $LOG_FILE # Simple check to determine if to include days in output string if (dte=0) then echo "Shutting down for ->`date -d @$b +%Hhrs:%MMins`" >> $LOG_FILE else echo "Shutting down for ->$[dte]Days `date -d @$b +%Hhrs:%MMins`" >> $LOG_FILE fi echo "Wake up at approx.->`date -d @$1`" >> $LOG_FILE echo "------------------------------------------------------" >> $LOG_FILE

Change the permissions of the file so that it can execute

chmod +x /usr/bin/setwakeup.sh



You should check to make sure the user as whom mythbackend runs is able to run sudo without prompting for a password. Consult the documentation for sudo on how to set this up in the sudoers file, in particular the NOPASSWD tag. For example, you could add the following line to your /etc/sudoers by running "sudo visudo" and pasting the line at the end of the file.

%mythtv ALL = NOPASSWD: /sbin/shutdown, /usr/bin/setwakeup.sh

The above is probably preferable from a security perspective because it is very specific. Alternatively, uncomment the following line using "sudo visudo" in the /etc/sudoers file

%wheel ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL

Then add mythtv and any other uses you wish to the "wheel" group. That can be done using the GNOME user GUI. (Note, this line is already uncommented in Fedora 15. Adding users to the wheel group, including the "mythtv" user, may be sufficient).

Also, it may be necessary to use "sudo visudo" to modify the sudoers file by commenting out the following line with a "#" before "Defaults" as follows:

#Defaults requiretty

You may run mythbackend in "Terminal" to observe log message in real time. Or you may check the logs in /var/log/mythtv/ if the system shuts down with the test method above but not when integrated with the backend.

Desktop users

(For a system used as a desktop that is also used as a MythTV backend, or both a MythTV frontend and a MythTV backend, use the above instructions for a dedicated MythTV backend modified by the following instructions)

If you use your machine as a desktop and you do not want to keep the frontend running while you use your computer for other things, create the following script

/usr/bin/checklogin.sh

#!/bin/bash # Check to see if anyone is currently logged in or if the machine was recently switched on. # Echoed text appears in log file. It can be removed and --quiet added to the # grep command once you are satisfied that mythTV is working properly. # Exit codes:- # 2 - Machine recently switched on, don't shut down. # 1 - A user is logged in, don't shut down. # 0 - No user logged in, OK to shut down. # Customizable variables MIN_UPTIME=10 # Minimum up time in minutes # End of customizable variables # Get a date/time stamp to add to log output DATE=`date +%F\ %T\.%N` DATE=${DATE:0:23} UPTIME=`cat /proc/uptime | awk '{print int($1/60)}'` if [ "$UPTIME" -lt "$MIN_UPTIME" ]; then echo $DATE Machine uptime less than $MIN_UPTIME minutes, don\'t shut down. exit 2 fi # Some configurations ( at least lxdm + xfce4) do not report GUI-logged-on users # with "who" or "users". # pgrep tests if processes named xfce* exist XFCE_PROCS=`pgrep xfce` USERS=`who -q | tail -n 1 | sed 's/[a-z #]*=//'` if [ "$USERS" == "0" ] && [ "$XFCE_PROCS" == "" ]; then echo $DATE No users are logged in, ok to shut down. exit 0 else echo $DATE Someone is still logged in, don\'t shut down. exit 1 fi

Change its attributes to executable

sudo chmod +x /usr/bin/checklogin.sh

Change the Pre Shutdown check-command in MythTV Backend setup to:

Pre Shutdown check-command: /usr/bin/checklogin.sh

This will prevent myth from shutting down when someone is logged in

You must remember to log out rather than shut down when you are done with your session, allowing the mythTV backend to shut off the computer when it is idle. This is because the mythTV shutdown sequence writes the wakealarm time to the BIOS just before shutting down the system. If, instead, you shut the system down, the mythTV backend is not able to update the BIOS with the correct wakealarm time. Failure to follow this procedure could interrupt a recording, or prevent the system from powering on for a later recording.

Note that the Idle Timeout time is the time you have to type your username and password when logging in. It would be a good idea to make it long enough to log in before the system can shut itself off.

In the BIOS, set your system to power on when power is restored. This will allow the system to recover after a power outage. Some systems will disable the wakealarm after a power outage, but even if it doesn't, if the power is off at the programmed wake time, the wakealarm could be missed. Powering up after a power outage allows mythTV to reset the wakealarm so that future recordings are not missed.

Using ACPI & MythTV to run other applications





Mythwelcome users

Mythwelcome is useful if you run a combined frontend / backend machine and want to use ACPI Wakeup. It allows :-

Automatic startup of the frontend. If the system has been started due to a scheduled recording the mythwelcome status page will be shown instead to allow the system to shut itself back down.

Locking the machine to prevent shutdown, useful if you need to perform maintenance or other tasks on the system.

Pre defined wakeup/shutdown periods.



Configuration changes needed :-

Change the system so that mythwelcome is started instead of mythfrontend.

Tip: In Mythbuntu to start mythwelcome instead of mythfrontend you just need to uncomment the MYTHWELCOME line in /etc/mythtv/session-settings.

mythbackend Shutdown/Wakeup Options (mythtv-setup)





Block shutdown before client connected : unchecked Idle shutdown timeout (secs) : 900 (if using active EIT this may need to be set to a lower value) Max. wait for recording (min) : 15 (mythshutdown will ignore values less than 15. If less than 15 minutes to next scheduled recording or wakeup period the shutdown will always be blocked) Startup before rec. (secs) : 600 (make this time long enough to complete the boot & disk check before the recording should start) Wakeup time format : yyyy-MM-ddThh:mm:ss (Must be this format for mythshutdown) Command to set Wakeup Time : mythshutdown --setwakeup $time Server halt command : mythshutdown --shutdown Pre Shutdown check-command : mythshutdown --check



MythShutdown/MythWelcome Settings (mythwelcome --setup or F11 in mythwelcome)

Command to set wakeup time : sudo /usr/bin/setwakeup.sh $time Wakeup time format : time_t nvram-wakeup Restart command : (Must be blank) Command to shutdown : sudo shutdown -h now (some systems may need "sudo shutdown -P now" instead (-h may cause system to restart)) Command to start the frontend : /usr/bin/mythfrontend

setwakeup.sh with option for bios in UTC or local time. Updated Sep 2020 to use rtcwake if available.

setwakeup.sh

#!/bin/sh # # set ACPI Wakeup time # usage: setwakeup.sh seconds # seconds - number of seconds from epoch to UTC time (time_t time format) # # set UTCBIOS to true if bios is using UTC time # set UTCBIOS to false if bios is using local time UTCBIOS=true SECS=$1 if [ -x "$(command -v rtcwake)" ]; then if [ $UTCBIOS = true ]; then rtcwake -u -d rtc0 -t $SECS -m no else rtcwake -l -d rtc0 -t $SECS -m no fi else if ! [ $UTCBIOS = true ]; then #non utc bios - convert supplied seconds to seconds from #epoch to local time SECS=`date -u --date "\`date --date @$1 +%F" "%T\`" +%s` fi echo 0 > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm # clear alarm echo $SECS > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm # write the waketime fi



Setup your /etc/sudoers permissions by running "sudo visudo" and pasting the line at the end of the file.

%mythtv ALL = NOPASSWD: /sbin/shutdown, /sbin/rtcwake, /usr/bin/setwakeup.sh, /usr/bin/mythshutdown

It might be that sudo is configured to require a real tty to run commands as a user (i.e. mythtv). In this case add this line

Defaults:mythtv !requiretty

When you are finished using the frontend you should exit back to the mythwelcome screen to allow the system to shutdown.

Shutdown procedure when using this configuration :-

The backend 'Pre Shutdown check-command' will be called - if it returns 0 then

The backend 'Command to set Wakeup Time' (mythshutdown --setwakeup $time) will be called. This writes the time into the database which mythwelcome will then use to detect if the next start-up is manual or for a scheduled recording / daily wakeup period.

The backend 'Server halt command' (mythshutdown --shutdown) will be called. This runs the mythwelcome 'Command to set wakeup time' (sudo /usr/bin/setwakeup.sh $time). The $time variable here will either be the time of the next scheduled recording or the time of the next defined wakeup period. The mythwelcome 'Command to shutdown' will then be called (sudo shutdown -h now) to shutdown the system.

Troubleshooting /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm

Getting your PC to wakeup using the ACPI RTC can be challenging. Here are some tips on getting it working.





Consider updating your BIOS

Since this wakeup functionality utilizes your BIOS, you may need to update your BIOS to it's later version. But please understand the potential risks of updating your BIOS before doing so.

Check your hardware

Check if your BIOS supports ACPI/RTC You will need to have a motherboard that supports both ACPI and a Real Time Clock Alarm Functions in the BIOS. Check your BIOS and look for a tab similar to "Advanced Power management".

The wake-up function is provided on most modern boards by the ability to "wake from RTC alarm" - setting a date and time in BIOS will cause the computer to power itself on and boot at the set time. This setting is likely found under a sub-menu of "Power Management" "APM", or "Advanced" - you just need to poke around to find it. It will likely be called something like Wake from RTC, Wake From Alarm, RTC Resume, etc.

If you don't have an ACPI-compliant BIOS, you could use nvram-wakeup instead, which is a small program which modifies the BIOS settings memory (NVRAM) directly (this is no longer recommended). All modern BIOSes should support ACPI, however.





Manually test wakealarm

see the Manually test wakealarm above





Fussy BIOS

There are a lot of fussy BIOSes out there. In some cases you need to disable the RTC alarm function in the bios to make things work. After you have set the RTC alarm from Linux, you might not see the changes in the BIOS, but it still works. If things are still not working for you ... try the following:

Disable/Enable RTC in BIOS

In some cases you need to disable the RTC alarm function is the BIOS to make things work.

On many boards, when the RTC setting is enabled in the BIOS, it will wake only from a time set and saved from BIOS setup, and not from a time set outside of the BIOS setup environment - as we want. All of the boards the original author of this document needed this setting disabled to correctly wake with ACPI. This is the recommended starting point.





Time/Date not visible in BIOS

After you have set the RTC alarm from Linux, it could be that you not see changes in the BIOS but it still works.

Make use of the following command to determine if the relevant wakealarm BIOS contents are proper.

cat /proc/driver/rtc

HPET conflict

In some kernels (2.6.27 and possibly others) and on some hardware, wikipedia:HPET seems to conflict with ACPI wakeup capabilities: calls to /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm seem to behave normally but computer won't wake up. The solution is adding "hpet=disable" as kernel parameter at boot.

For more information, see upstream or Ubuntu bug.

Enable device wakeup

On some machines, it may be necessary to enable the RTC interrupt in /proc/acpi/wakeup. See Kodi for details.

SUSE_head | ACPI enabled

Check if ACPI is enabled in your kernel and working.

$powersave -S ACPI

If powersaved is not installed on your system, do not install it, it may break other things. Installing powersaved will uninstall powernow which will prevent some systems from controlling their processor speed, and bring up an unattributed message box on every boot telling you it is unable to control the processor clock.

Backend not shutting down when using EIT

Using EIT (program guide scanned directly from channels) you may find that your backend doesn't shut down after the time specified, even when it's idle. This seems to be caused by the EIT scanning resetting the backend idle counter. This can be prevented by going into mythtv-setup and setting the General->"EIT Scanner Options"->"Backend Idle Before EIT Crawl" time to the same as (or greater than) the General->"Shutdown/Wakeup Options"->"Idle shutdown timeout".

Troubleshooting Hardware

saa7164 Module

The saa7164 module does not support suspend to RAM or disk. This module is used by Hauppauge devices such as WinTV-HVR2200, WinTV-HVR2250, WinTV-HVR2255 and generally the Hauppauge WinTV-HVR22xx family. You can see if the module is in use from a terminal by entering the command: lsmod | grep saa7164

In order to allow suspend you need to remove the module, which cannot be done when the module is in use. This means you would normally need to shutdown the mythbackend first. You can automate this process.

S3 (Suspend to RAM)

First, see the BIOS setup section above to confirm which powerdown states your computer's ACPI supports. Some computers are unable to wake up from S5 (Soft Off) by an RTC alarm set through ACPI. For example some HP Compaq desktop computers allow you to set wakeup from BIOS at a specific time and at specific week days, however it is ignored ACPI alarm. In this case you may want to try to see if it does wake up from S3 (Suspend to RAM) instead.

The following check needs pm-utils package to work. You may also want to turn off X windows, as quite a few drivers don't like suspend to RAM.

# Set the alarm to five minutes in the future echo 0 > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm echo `date '+%s' -d '+ 5 minutes'` > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm /usr/sbin/pm-suspend

If the computer wakes up after 5 minutes, then congratulations.

Because "suspend to RAM" may not be very stable with the exotic hardware that a lot of mythTV users have, we want to reboot after we wake up from suspend. In fact we can add an init.d script that will suspend the computer just before it physically reboots, on wake up the computer will then do the actual reboot.

I have included an example script for Ubuntu below that will check for an /wakeup file in the root filesystem which contains the time to wakeup (seconds since epoch). You will have to change the mythtv shutdown scripts to create this file and use reboot instead of shutdown.





/etc/init.d/wakeup

#!/bin/sh ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: wakeup # Required-Start: # Required-Stop: # Default-Start: # Default-Stop: 0 6 # Short-Description: Start NTP daemon ### END INIT INFO PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin . /lib/lsb/init-functions NAME=wakeup case $1 in stop) if [ -f /wakeup ] then WAKETIME=`cat /wakeup` CURTIME=`date +%s` if [ "$WAKETIME" -gt "$CURTIME" ] then log_daemon_msg "suspending with wakeup" "wakup" # Make it wakeup from ethernet ethtool -s eth0 wol g echo PCI0 >/proc/acpi/wakeup # Make it wakeup from alarm. echo 0 >/sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm echo $WAKETIME >/sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm /usr/sbin/pm-suspend log_daemon_msg "continuing with wakeup" "wakup" fi rm -f /wakeup fi ;; *) echo "Usage: $0 {stop}" exit 2 ;; esac

This script is linked to from the /etc/rc0.d and /etc/rc6.d directories at a position just before the /proc, /sys and / get unmounted.

ln -s ../init.d/wakeup /etc/rc0.d/S50wakeup ln -s ../init.d/wakeup /etc/rc6.d/S50wakeup





Archive: Using /proc/acpi/alarm

This section is archival in nature and may not be up to date.

/proc/acpi/alarm

Kernels 2.6.21 and older use /proc/acpi/alarm

ls /proc/acpi/alarm

format of /proc/acpi/alarm

Year-month-day hour:min:sec - yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss - (e.g. 2005-12-29 10:10:04)

Before making complex scripts, do a simple test to ensure that a wakeup time can be written to the BIOS and that the computer correctly wakes up based on this time:

Initiate manually

The commands set the wakeup time to 5 minute from now, regardless of whether the RTC is in UTC or locatltime and then turns off the machine.



The following example will set the wakeup time to 5 minute from now, regardless of whether the RTC is in UTC or locatltime. You may not see the change in the bios, but it should still work.

if you are using the /proc/acpi/alarm interface

echo "+00-00-00 00:05:00" > /proc/acpi/alarm

Check that it was written, the format is YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS

cat /proc/acpi/alarm

If the year part looks like "0007" instead of "2007", change +00 with +2000; Shutdown your machine and wait for it to wakeup

shutdown -h now



Here are the commands to check that you have ACPI working.

$powersave -S ACPI

Check that you have the alarm function in /proc/acpi/alarm. This prints out the RTC Alarm clock from the BIOS.

$cat /proc/acpi/alarm 2005-**-29 10:10:04

Check that you can write a new time to the RTC Clock Alarm (you will need to be Root) Format is YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS

#echo "2005-12-29 10:10:04" >/proc/acpi/alarm

Check that it was written, shut down and wait for it to wakeup.

#cat /proc/acpi/alarm 2005-*12-29 10:10:04 #shutdown -h now



For example (Assuming bios is in localtime):

Wakeup time format: yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss Set wakeuptime command: sudo echo $time > /proc/acpi/alarm

Example for a bios configured for universal time, assuming mythshutdown is run as superuser:

Wakeup time format: time_t Command to Set Wakeup Time: date -u -d @$time +%F\ %T > /proc/acpi/alarm

Integrate into mythTV

Remember, your bios time might be in UTC rather than local time using:

# echo "+00-00-00 00:05:00" > /proc/acpi/alarm

will set the wakeup time to 5 minute from now, regardless of whether the RTC is in UTC or locatltime.

Since the wake-up time given by mythtv to the mythtv wakeup command is in local time, you need to do some bash handling of the obtained time to be able to setup the wakeup time in the bios in UTC (independent of daylight savings time and such). The following bash code might help here:

#!/bin/bash stamp_file=/home/mythtv/timestamp echo $1\ $2 > $stamp_file # If using mythwelcome you can try the next line instead on the one above. #echo $1 | sed "s/T/ /" >$stamp_file # Read the date in the locale time format and add the time-zone info to the stamp_file datum=$(/bin/date -f $stamp_file +%F\ %T\ %z) echo $datum > $stamp_file # reinterpret this in utc and write to alarm utcdatum=$(/bin/date -u -f $stamp_file +%F\ %T) echo $utcdatum > $stamp_file #rm -f $stamp_file #echo $utcdatum >/proc/acpi/alarm



As you noticed the echo to the acpi-alarm is commented out by default, because it is really better to check first if everything is working correctly (time format the same on your BIOS and such).

An alternative script to the above is the following:

#!/bin/bash stamp_file=/home/mythtv/timestamp #just log what we get as command line parameters echo $1 $2 $3> $stamp_file #I set mythtv to output the number of seconds since epoch #so I calculate the number of hours, minutes and seconds from #now the computer has to wakeup: sfn=$(($2 - `date +"%s"`)) # Offset from GMT as the awk function does timezone correction. tzone=3600 #and then send it to /proc/acpi/wakeup in the format we saw above y=`(echo $(($sfn - $tzone))|awk '{print strftime("+00-00-00 %H:%M:%S", $1)}')` echo "$y">/proc/acpi/alarm echo "$y">>$stamp_file echo "executed at `date`" >> $stamp_file exit

This works on a lot of different EPIA and ASUS Motherboards, and is not dependent on the timezone you use in the bios.





Another contributed script

This acpi-alarm script will function with the new sys wakealarm interface or the old acpi/alarm interface





sample.sh

#!/bin/sh # $1 is the --settime switch that nvram-wakeup normally expects # $2 is the date/time in seconds since 1970 DATE=`date -d "1970-01-01 $2 sec" "+%F %H:%M:%S" -u` SECS=`date -d "1970-01-01 $2 sec" "+%s" -u` # Save the wakeup time echo "$*" > /myth.wakeup.args echo $DATE > /myth.wakeup.time echo $SECS > /myth.wakeup.secs if [ -e /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm ]; then echo 0 > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm echo $SECS > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm fi if [ -e /proc/acpi/alarm ]; then echo $DATE > /proc/acpi/alarm fi

If leaving the RTC wakeup alarm on the BIOS worked with the old interface, you may need to disable it when migrating to the new interface.

Warning: The wakealarm interface is incompatible with the kernel's old "Enhanced Real Time Clock Support" and "Generic /dev/rtc emulation" options. If your kernel was built with these enabled your kernel log will contain messages such as rtc_cmos: probe of 00:03 failed with error -16 The solution is to rebuild your kernel with the above two options excluded (find them under Drivers -> Character Devices) and the various RTC interfaces (found under Drivers -> Real Time Clock) included. From a .config point of view CONFIG_RTC and CONFIG_GEN_RTC must be unset and, at a minimum, RTC_INTF_SYSFS must be set. The wakealarm interface is incompatible with the kernel's old "Enhanced Real Time Clock Support" and "Generic /dev/rtc emulation" options. If your kernel was built with these enabled your kernel log will contain messages such asThe solution is to rebuild your kernel with the above two options excluded (find them under Drivers -> Character Devices) and the various RTC interfaces (found under Drivers -> Real Time Clock) included. From a .config point of view CONFIG_RTC and CONFIG_GEN_RTC must be unset and, at a minimum, RTC_INTF_SYSFS must be set.





Troubleshooting /proc/acpi/alarm

First, check the Troubleshooting /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm section above. The following tips are for /proc/acpi/alarm and older systems.





Consider updating your BIOS

Since this wakeup functionality utilizes your BIOS, you may need to update your BIOS to it's latest version. But please understand the potential risks of updating your BIOS before doing so.

Check your hardware

If you don't have an ACPI-compliant BIOS, you could use nvram-wakeup instead, which is a small that modifies the BIOS settings memory (NVRAM) directly (no longer recommended). All modern BIOSes should support ACPI, however.

Initiate manually

see the "Initiate manually" Initiate manually section above.





Fussy BIOS

There are a lot of fussy BIOSes out there. If things are still not working for you... try the following:

Disable/Enable RTC in BIOS

Another possible glitch is, that the option "Resume By Alarm" (or whatever it is called) is set to Enabled but wake up using /proc/acpi/alarm only works if the option is set to Disabled. Sounds weird but works with some boards.

Required to write time/date two times

Some users reported that their BIOS is only updated after writing 2 times to the alarm file. (reported with proc/acpi/alarm)





Advanced: Compile your own kernel

To use /proc/acpi/alarm with kernel versions 2.6.22 and higher, disable Device Drivers / Real Time Clock

This maps to CONFIG_RTC_CLASS in the kernel .config

Helper script: TurnOff

TurnOff is a useful script for the scenario where your MythTV based HTPC acts as a MythBackend, as a MythFrontend (for viewing content) and for other server purposes (e.g. a NFS server) as well.

The script has several activity monitors (one of which monitors MythBackend recording activities) which together decide whether the computer can be shut off and when to wake it up the next time. In case the next "activity event" (e.g. a MythTV recording) happens far enough in the future, the script triggers the ACPI wakeup and shuts the computer down.

The script is mature without critical bugs found for a long while. I have used it for 3 years for shutdown purposes without major problems.

Download if from here:

Wikipedia ACPI article





User experience

Moosylog - March 2007: Works fine with MSI RS482M-IL and openSUSE 10.2 after I made the following change to /etc/sysconfig/clock.....SYSTOHC="yes" to SYSTOHC="no".

Turpie: Works great with the Asus M2NPV-VM. Rad: Yep, but needs a recent bios version

Murph - April 2007: Works also great with the Legend QDI Advance 5/133E.

mythwog: No problems with ECS PT890T-A. Simply wrote wake up time to /proc/acpi/alarm, halted, and system wakes up.

Fuchur - August 2007: Had to replace the wakeup script with the one from http://www.mythwiki.de/index.php?title=HOWTO_Mythwelcome as my mythshutdown produces another time format. Otherwise it seems to work so far.

Mattwire - September 2007: Works fine with MSI K8NGM2-FID and NC6120 laptop running Ubuntu Feisty and Gutsy. Both require modification to /etc/init.d/hwclock.sh to save the wakeup time.

Dumdideldum - September 2007: Works with Epox 8rda+ running Ubuntu Feisty. It is important to disable the wakeup on rtc in the Bios and editing the /etc/init.d/hwclock.sh as described in the Ubuntu guide linked in the section below.

Pkendall - September 2007: Works fine with MSI K9NBPM2-FID running Ubuntu Feisty. As above, edit the hwclock.sh file and make sure Bios RTC wakeup is disabled.

Jmwislez - September 2007: Problem with ASUS P5GD1 motherboard (BIOS v1.014). Writing 'echo "2007-09-09 14:15:00" > /proc/acpi/alarm' works perfectly, reading via 'cat /proc/acpi/alarm' yields the expected '2007-09-09 14:15:00', but the system doesn't start at the specified time. After a manually initiated boot, 'cat /proc/acpi/alarm' yields '2007-09-00 14:15:00', with '00' for the day.

Thewizzard - October 2007: Works with MSI K7N2 Delta-ILSR, be sure to use the hwclock.sh script and have it set the time two times.

Spitzbub - December 2007: Works with Biostar NF325-A7, be sure to modify your /etc/init.d/hwclock.sh script (or equivalent) to set the wake-up time again after the --systohc, as described above under Fussy Bios.

Per Olofsson - December 2007: Works very well with Asus P5GC-VM motherboard and Debian lenny with Linux 2.6.22. I don't use the "fussy BIOS" hack since I only suspend the system instead of shutting it down.

KIB - February 2008: Shuttle XPC model SS58G2 / SS58v10, motherboard FS58V10 works with Mythbuntu 7.10, kernel 2.6.22-14. Required BIOS settings - PM Wake Up Events -> IRQ8:enabled, PCIPME:enabled, Powerup by Alarm:disabled. I use /proc/acpi/alarm interface and the patch to hwclock.sh and hwclockfirst.sh is requred as above. Wake on LAN works as well - just add "ethtool -s eth0 wol umbg" to /etc/rc.local .

imcecil - April 2008: Work for Asus P5n-E SLI Gentoo 2.6.24 configured the Kernel as required above but used time_t as the wakeup time format (time since epoch) which seems to work when echoed straight to /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm.

Cymen - April 2008: Works great for PCChips P53G but be sure to only have the rtc-cmos module loaded (not the rtc module -- if rtc module is loaded, unload both rtc and rtc-cmos and then load rtc-cmos again and the device will appear in /sys...). Blacklist the rtc module or don't compile it in (the option in under "character drivers" is the one to be excluded).

Moosylog - June 2008: Works fine with MSI RS482M-IL and openSUSE 11.0

Chaup - July 2008: Works with /proc/acpi/alarm on mythbuntu 8.04 running on Lenovo M55E. Had to disable BIOS wakeup for it to work - another fuzzy BIOS. I did update /etc/init.d/hwclock.sh as suggested.

kja999 - July 2008: Worked fine for me using Fedora 9 on an Intel Mac Mini. Use the /sys/class/rtc method ...

piratebab - July 2008: Works fine with debian lenny, kernel 2.6.18 and /proc/acpi/alarm. But with kernel 2.6.25 it dos not work; no /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm available, only a /proc/driver/rtc .

bajjisw - August 2008: Wakeup works well with Mythdora 5 on Abit NF7S2, AMD AthlonXP, ATI AIW 9700 Pro for graphics and Aver A180 for tuner. 2.6.25.14-69.fc8 . Had to (1) Disable wakeup by alarm in bios. (2) patch /etc/init.d/halt, per instructions above. (3) Write wakeup time to /proc/acpi/alarm (4) Shutdown. The box wakes up per time set in (3) . October 2008: If you have ntpd running, Do the same changes to /etc/init.d/ntpd. Otherwise, wakeup happens, but BIOS time gets reset.

specto - September 2008: Works on Gentoo 2.6.24 kernel using /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm on an Asus M3N-HT Deluxe/HDMI. Did not change BIOS RTC wakeup setting from default of 'disable'. Had to do some time hacking in the wake-up script as system clock is in local time. You can tell if the system thinks it needs to wake up by looking at /proc/driver/rtc - if 'alarm_IRQ' is "yes" then the system should wake up as scheduled. yunosh - Asus M3N78 PRO works fine too.

ronny - works like a charm on Gigabyte GA-MA69GM-S2H using /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm on archlinux. Haven't changed any bios settings, neither had to override systohgstra. --Ronny 07:48, 20 November 2008 (UTC)

Gilles - works fine on a ASROCK K7VT2 using /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm on mythbuntu kernel 2.6.27. Disabled RTC BIOS settings (they don't seem to be useful unless you want to wakeup your PC on a particular hardcoded time). Had to customize setwakeup.sh so that the wakeup time stays on the same year. If the wakeup time is on the next year, the rtc timer doesn't seem to respond well. --Gilles 19:18, 30 December 2008 (UTC)

zapp - works fine with my FOXCONN A74MX usuing /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm on Ubuntu 8.10. RTC has to be disabled as well as HPET --zapp 13:27, 18 Jan 2009 (UTC)



Kroylar 02:03, 23 February 2009 (UTC) - I got this working on gentoo-sources-2.6.26-r3 on an Intel D865PERL motherboard only after applying the patch found on this linux-kernel mailing list entry. This patch has probably already been applied to newer kernels.

Pavol Zibrita 02:25, 21. March 2009 (UTC) - works fine with mythbuntu with kernel 2.6.27-11-generic on MSI's KT4AV-L mainboard. I'm using my machine as a storage server but I don't wanted to run it all the time. I configured the server to start using WOL when I turn on my notebook and I modyfied the check-command to check also if notebook is running or someone is logged in or at last mythshutdown --check is fine. Works great!

Henrik 13:30, 12. May 2009 (UTC) -Gigabyte GA-73PVM-S2H, works fine but needs HPET disabled in BIOS. ABIT I-N73HD works fine. Both boards tested with ubuntu 8.10.

joker4791 20:00, 20. July 2009 (UTC) -Asus P2B-DS Rev. 1.06 D03 works fine with Debian 4.0r3, kernel 2.6.27-6. Undo blacklist for ACPI is needed first, since older revisions of this board have bugs in ACPI-support.

prupert 19.10.09 I use an Intel D945GCLF2, the stuff here was useful, but confusing and didn't tell the full story, I found the most useful and succesful resource for me was: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1176528 I am however using MythBuntu so that might be why I needed to use that link. For the D945GCLF2 I had to use the settings under Setting alarm when bios clock is in localtime. Thus for the script mentioned in the post, I had to use: SECS=$(date -u --date "$1 $2" "+%s"). Also read through all the comments, as you need to use visudo to add the mythtv user to the sudoers group and also change the settings in mythwelcome from time_t to yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss.

Scary_jeff December 2009. Asus P5Q SE. Worked fine, Ubuntu 8.10.

Jamie S Jan 2010. Asus M2V MX SE. I upgraded from Mythdora 5 to Mythdora 10, which included changing from /proc/acpi/alarm to the new ACPI RTC driver. The new RTC driver did not think my system could wake from S5 using the RTC. After much pain, I built my own kernel with the legacy /proc/acpi/alarm, and now I am happy again...

Avelach January 2010. Asus P3-P5G43 (Intel Core 2 Duo (2x 1GB RAM), GMA X4500). Mythbuntu 9.10 amd64. All OK. No need tweaking BIOS nor hwclock.sh. Need to pull 2.6.33-rc4 kernel because HDMI resolution under Intel does not work under 2.6.31 and wakealarm does not work under 2.6.32!!!

rp_linux Aug 2010. Asus AT3N7A-I (Intel Atom, nvidia ion). Mythbuntu 10.04. Works good. Tried both shutdown and pm-hibernate on dedicated FE/BE using mythwelcome method and recommend using pm-hibernate. Didn't have to tweak BIOS or hwclock.sh.

wild-e Feb 2011. Gigabyte GA-MA78GM-S2H, everything seems to work once I disable HPET. I'm just wondering, what are downsides of disabling HPET, Or are there any. There is an (impropr) patch on the upstream bug link, also wondering i that has any side effects?

danellisuk Jun 2011. Gigabyte GA-MA78LMT-US2H with Ubuntu 11.04. Also fine once HPET disabled in BIOS.

Dschey Aug 2011. Foxconn MB-A7GM-S 785G AM2+ µATX with Mythbuntu 10.04. Have to set option hpet=disable to make wakeup work.

Televiscerator Sep 2012 This will never work with the very old Asus A7N8X mobos (circa 2003/4). The Bios ACPI is broken such that they will only ever wake up if they were put into "Soft-Off" mode from the hardware power button. Shutdown from any operating system (Linux or Windows) does not return them to this soft-off state although leds on the NIC and mobo would have you believe otherwise. Wake up from RTC (or LAN) is then totally disabled.

lwoggardner Jan 2013. Gigabyte GA-G33M-S2. rtc wakeup just works, some tricks required for suspend to ram - see User:Lwoggardner#Suspend_to_RAM_on_idle for details

numkem August 2013. MacPro 1,1 works just as any other computer. Tested using Arch Linux. Currently using it as backed only and having it sleep rather than shutdown completely but both works just as well.

Simon Waddington September 2015. Gigabyte GA-G33M-S2H with Mythbuntu 14.04. Disabled HPET in BIOS and in Grub with hpet=disable, also set UTC=yes in /etc/default/rcS and set BIOS clock to UTC. Modified the example hwclock-save.conf script because it appeared to be broken - exec in a script will end the script so the restore of the ACPI alarm never gets executed. Had to use

ACPITIME=`cat /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm` hwclock --rtc=/dev/rtc0 --systohc $tz --noadjfile $badyear echo 0 > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm echo "$ACPITIME" > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm

waynemcdougall February 2016: Asus P8H61 with Ubuntu 15.10. rtcwake works well after handling the saa7164 module used by the Hauppauge WinTV-HVR-22xx family of devices