Differenza tra sonno, ibernazione, ecc

5

Recentemente ho cercato su Google un problema con il mio MB e sono diventato molto confuso dall'uso di questi termini sugli internet:

  • modalità sospensione
  • modalità di ibernazione
  • sonno sicuro
  • sonno inattivo
  • modalità standby
  • modalità di spegnimento ( autopoweroff impostazione in $ pmset -g )

Penso che alcuni di loro significano solo la stessa cosa, ma qualcuno potrebbe chiarire quali sono i termini corretti e qual è la differenza tra loro?

Ho El Capitan su MacBook Pro 2012

    
posta xaxa 10.11.2016 - 12:52
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1 risposta

5

Sospendi fa riferimento a quando la macchina sospende i processi e tale ma con la RAM ancora alimentata.

What happens when the Mac goes to sleep (not just into idle mode or display sleep)?

On all Macs:

  • The microprocessor goes into a low-power mode
  • Video output is turned off, and a connected display may turn off or enter its own idle state
  • Apple-supplied hard disks spin down; third-party hard disks may spin down

On portable Macs:

  • The Ethernet port turns off, if applicable (see note below)
  • Expansion card slots turn off
  • The built-in modem, if present, turns off (see note below)
  • An AirPort card, if present, turns off (see note below)
  • The USB ports only responds to the power key on an external keyboard (see below)
  • The optical media drive, if present, spins down
  • Audio input and output turns off
  • Keyboard illumination, if a feature of your portable computer, turns off

A computer uses considerably less power when in sleep mode than when awake. The computer will continue to power RAM in sleep mode, so that whatever was in RAM when the computer went to sleep will still be there when the computer wakes. This also means that computers with more RAM use slightly more power in sleep mode.

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La sospensione è definita Safe Sleep in macOS. Qui è dove il contenuto della RAM viene salvato su disco.

OS X includes a deep sleep mode known as safe sleep. Your Mac may enter safe sleep if your battery begins to run low, or your computer is left idle for a long time. Safe sleep copies the contents of memory to your startup drive, and powers down the computer. This helps you when your battery is depleted on Mac notebooks. All you have to do is connect your notebook to AC power again to pick up where you left off, without losing your work.

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Safe Sleep ensures that data stored in the main memory of your Mac isn't lost when the computer shuts down due to its battery being drained completely.

Before your Mac enters sleep, Safe Sleep automatically saves the contents of its main memory — like desktop settings, open applications, and other work in progress — to the hard drive.

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Sospensione inattiva non è una modalità di sospensione, ma piuttosto una descrizione di come è possibile attivare la modalità di sospensione: tramite la macchina inattiva per un determinato periodo.

When you leave your computer idle, OS X automatically turns off or powers down features that you aren't using. When the computer needs to perform a task, related components are powered back up.

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La modalità

Standby è simile a Safe Sleep ma viene utilizzata quando la tua macchina ha un SSD.

For Mac computers that are started from an solid-state drive, OS X includes a deep sleep mode known as Standby Mode. Mac computers manufactured in 2013 or later enter standby after one to three hours of regular sleep. A computer with a fully charged battery can remain in standby for up to thirty days without being plugged in to an AC power source.

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Mac notebook and desktop computers have a power standby feature that conserves energy. During standby, the state of your session is saved to flash storage (SSD). Then, the power turns off to some hardware systems such as RAM and USB buses.

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l'autopoweroff di pmset imposta il tempo necessario a partire dall'inizio del sonno fino all'avvio di Safe Sleep.

autopoweroff - Where supported, enabled per default as an implementation of Lot 6 to the European Energy-related Products Directive. After sleeping for <autopoweroffdelay> minutes, the system will write a hibernation image and go into a lower power chipset sleep. Wakeups from this state will take longer than wakeups from regular sleep. The system will not auto power off if any external devices are connected, if the system is on battery power, or if the system is bound to a network and wake for network access is enabled.

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risposta data 10.11.2016 - 13:16
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