Hey guys,
Kind of a weird one...
I have no problems with video playback when watching things inside of XBMCbuntu.
However, I set up Advanced Launcher (per this guide) to launch a full-screen Chromium browser window so I can watch flash-based streaming sites (ESPN3, SPEED2, etc) that don't have great plugin support in XBMC. Everything works fluidly, except that after about 10 minutes my receiver loses its HDMI connection with the HTPC. At first, I only noticed this happening while watching full-screen video, and I found that if I hit ESC to exit the full-screen video mode, the HDMI connection was immediately re-established.
Then, I left the Chromium window open on a random website, with no video playing, and walked away. About 10 minutes later, it lost its HDMI connection again. So, I'm assuming this has nothing to do with video playback and is instead some general setting somewhere in LXDE.
Anyone have any ideas as to what might be causing it?
[SOLVED] Preventing system sleep when using Advanced Launcher
deadwolfbones
Senior Member Posts: 138 Joined: Aug 2007 Reputation: 0 |
2012-05-12 19:32
Post: #1
(This post was last modified: 2012-05-14 00:02 by deadwolfbones.)
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wsnipex
Team-XBMC packaging monkey Posts: 1,792 Joined: Jun 2011 Reputation: 48 |
2012-05-12 20:20
Post: #2
maybe xbmcs screensaver/powersaving?
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deadwolfbones
Senior Member Posts: 138 Joined: Aug 2007 Reputation: 0 |
2012-05-12 20:27
Post: #3
I have XBMC set to turn off the display after 60 minutes idle, but this is definitely happening much, much sooner. Could be the screensaver, I'll look into that.
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Angelscry
Skilled Python Coder Joined: Sep 2010 Reputation: 37 Location: MTL, Canada |
2012-05-12 21:02
Post: #4
(2012-05-12 20:27)deadwolfbones Wrote: I have XBMC set to turn off the display after 60 minutes idle, but this is definitely happening much, much sooner. Could be the screensaver, I'll look into that.You will found here a way to disable system sleep : http://forum.xbmc.org/showthread.php?tid...pid1073943 |
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deadwolfbones
Senior Member Posts: 138 Joined: Aug 2007 Reputation: 0 |
2012-05-12 21:31
Post: #5
Thanks, that's potentially quite helpful.
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Plaguester
Senior Member Posts: 262 Joined: May 2010 Reputation: 7 |
2012-05-13 01:45
Post: #6
It's actually better to just turn it off in your script that launches your application: See this post. That way the screensaver or screenblank and other DPMS functions will behave normally when your script finishes.
HTPC - Core 2 Duo | NVidia ION | 2GB Ram | 80GB HDD | XBMCbuntu 11.0 | Aeon MQ 3 HTPC 2 - Zotac ZBOX ID41U | 4GB RAM | 60GB SSD | Openelec | Confluence Server - unRAID Server | 3 x 2TB WD Green HDD, 1TB WD Black HDD (Cache) | Sabnzbd | CouchPotato | Sickbeard |
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deadwolfbones
Senior Member Posts: 138 Joined: Aug 2007 Reputation: 0 |
2012-05-13 02:01
Post: #7
Thanks, I'll give it a try.
Does your solution have exactly the same effect for my purposes (preventing X from going to sleep)? |
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Plaguester
Senior Member Posts: 262 Joined: May 2010 Reputation: 7 |
2012-05-13 02:08
Post: #8
Yup. "xset s off" turns the screensaver off and "xset -dpms" prevents X from going into any of the power saving modes (standby, suspend, hibernate, etc). I use it for SNES emulation because X doesn't count gamepad input as input. Just put the rest of your launch script in place of the zsnes line in the example.
HTPC - Core 2 Duo | NVidia ION | 2GB Ram | 80GB HDD | XBMCbuntu 11.0 | Aeon MQ 3 HTPC 2 - Zotac ZBOX ID41U | 4GB RAM | 60GB SSD | Openelec | Confluence Server - unRAID Server | 3 x 2TB WD Green HDD, 1TB WD Black HDD (Cache) | Sabnzbd | CouchPotato | Sickbeard |
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deadwolfbones
Senior Member Posts: 138 Joined: Aug 2007 Reputation: 0 |
2012-05-13 23:20
Post: #9
Yep, this worked great. Thanks so much!
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