Yeah I ran fedora for a while when I first got this since that’s one of the official distros but it seems like it would really just be a function of the kernel itself and the laptop firmware.
Going back to fedora does not enable deep sleep by default and I’m way too afraid to manually switch it again after having to pull the battery 5 times already in pursuit of a solution.
I’ve been told this just doesn’t/can’t work.
So basically unless someone can say “I experienced the same exact problem and here’s how I fixed it” I’m just too afraid to try again haha.
Framework advises not to pull the battery and they are not wrong in that advisement. It’s sketchy as hell.
When I enable deep sleep it prevents me from even accessing bios, so I can’t do the firmware battery disconnect at that point.
Have you used one of the Officially-supported distros to check if sleep works, like Fedora 42 or Bazzite?
Yeah I ran fedora for a while when I first got this since that’s one of the official distros but it seems like it would really just be a function of the kernel itself and the laptop firmware.
Going back to fedora does not enable
deep
sleep by default and I’m way too afraid to manually switch it again after having to pull the battery 5 times already in pursuit of a solution.I’ve been told this just doesn’t/can’t work.
So basically unless someone can say “I experienced the same exact problem and here’s how I fixed it” I’m just too afraid to try again haha.
Framework advises not to pull the battery and they are not wrong in that advisement. It’s sketchy as hell.
When I enable
deep
sleep it prevents me from even accessing bios, so I can’t do the firmware battery disconnect at that point.