Re: Disk access just before shutdown power off.

From: Robert Hancock
Date: Mon Jul 20 2009 - 11:04:55 EST


On 07/20/2009 07:34 AM, James Courtier-Dutton wrote:
Hi,

When I shutdown my Linux laptop, it does an orderly shutdown with quite
a lot of HD activity during shutdown which eventually stops when the
screen goes blank. Then there is some delay (5-10 seconds) and then a
quick flurry of HD access just before it powers itself off.
Why is this last bit of HD access needed?
Surely, if the system is shut down enough to not use the screen any
more, why does it need the HD?
I am asking, because it would be nice to disable this need of the HD
just before it powers itself off. This would allow me to lift up the
laptop just a bit earlier and place it in my backpack when the screen
blanks without having to worry about HD failure due to shock.
I think it would be nicer if the HD would shut itself down just before
the screen goes blank.

It's not clear exactly what point in the shutdown process the screen going blank corresponds to. Do you have the kernel output going to the console during the shutdown process? If not, enabling that might be useful to tell what's going on.

The last thing the kernel does with the disk before power-off is flush the cache and tell it to go into standby mode. It seems like some disks are dumb enough to spin up as a result even if there's nothing to flush and it was already spun down. Also, in some cases the BIOS decides to issue its own such commands after the OS tells it to power down, which can have similar results. I believe there's a blacklist of system models that are set to skip the kernel standby issuing to avoid the double spin-down.

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