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    #16
    Originally posted by oshunluvr View Post
    Well Nick. I was hopeful that Arch (via Chakra) would help me but no good - battery still only charges when powered off. I also tried a Gentoo based live distro but no different. Maybe I'll try Fedora next?
    Chakra isn't Arch. It uses pacman and is a half rolling release distro but does not use Arch repositories or AUR.
    Info from their (Chakra's) web site
    History

    Chakra was born on the net, in a small shady corner of the Freenode network, where the KDEmod developers met one day and decided to create an awesome little liveCD based on Arch Linux. Of course these goals had to be emphasized a little bit more, and soon after the initial thoughts and discussions we started to write up plans, schedules and of course develop like there is no tomorrow, while not forgetting the fun and keeping it relaxed. Chakra is our baby. A lot of efforts, time and countless hours of writing code and testing stuff have been put into it so far, but that was just the beginning... Currently Chakra has started his own path becoming an indenpendent distribution, with own repositories, packages and Kernel, an innovative half/rolling release cycle, a brigde between the stability to the latest applications, a bundle system that provides system integrated click'n'run applications and a source code based community repo.
    Did you install Chakra or just run it from a live disk?

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      #17
      Hmmm, I could have sworn it was an Arch base so I assumed it used their kernels. I did install it, but it didn't allow charging either. I also ran a live NST (Network Security Toolkit) which is Gentoo based (I think ) with no difference. I'll try pure Arch today.

      Please Read Me

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        #18
        I've been looking at ways of downloading the source code for Ubuntu Linux Kernel and it appears you can only get the source code if you have installed Ubuntu, so I'm now going to re-install Linux Mint 17 (as that was the last one I had installed where I noticed the battery wouldn't charge) and then once installed will download and examine the code to see if I can spot anything which is causing the issue.

        Or would it be easier to report it as a bug to Ubuntu and let them solve it?

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          #19
          Now this I found interesting. Whilst looking on Linux Mint forums I found someone else with the same issue when installed Linux Mint. The consensus seems to be that it is a problem with the Dell hardware but that does not explain in my case why the battery will charge and function properly is using something like Arch but doesn't when using Ubuntu / Debian / Linux Mint.

          The link to the forum post is here http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=49&t=186919

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            #20
            Here's something I noticed today after playing with this issue again:

            sudo cat /proc/acpi/battery/BAT0/state

            reports:
            Code:
            present:                 yes
            capacity state:          ok
            charging state:          charged
            present rate:            0 mA
            remaining capacity:      1470 mAh
            present voltage:         11943 mV
            so the system thinks it's charged. That's why it won't charge unless it's off. acpi reports unknown and upower reports charging, acpitool reports charged.

            Frikin' annoying
            Last edited by oshunluvr; Feb 02, 2015, 02:41 PM.

            Please Read Me

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              #21
              Originally posted by oshunluvr View Post
              Here's something I noticed today after playing with this issue again:

              sudo cat /proc/acpi/battery/BAT0/state

              reports:
              Code:
              present:                 yes
              capacity state:          ok
              charging state:          charged
              present rate:            0 mA
              remaining capacity:      1470 mAh
              present voltage:         11943 mV
              so the system thinks it's charged. That's why it won't charge unless it's off. acpi reports unknown and upower reports charging, acpitool reports charged.

              Frikin' annoying
              Have you looked at this -> http://en.community.dell.com/support...518/t/19248256 ?

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                #22
                Nothing on that thread looks like it applies to me: Charges fine when powered off - doesn't charge when powered on.

                But thanks anyway

                Please Read Me

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                  #23
                  How about upgrading or downgrading the firmware of the BIOS / battery controller?
                  http://linux.dell.com/repo/hardware/firmware_tools.html

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                    #24
                    Only one BIOS available for this laptop. It worked fine until (I think) the upgrade to 11.04.

                    Please Read Me

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                      #25
                      I'm not sure how old that Dell page is, but the software repo is off-line.

                      I just make my wife shut it down completely every couple of days...

                      Please Read Me

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                        #26
                        The Acer 773G which I got back from my grandson (in exchange for my Acer with the i7 CPU and fast GPU) ran fine for the last couple of months. Last week, and since then, during power up I got a msg which stated that the battery was at 49% charge, which it claimed meant that the battery was "broken". It is always plugged in and when I unplug it the battery widget gives me a 100% charge level, which decreases normally with use. I suspect the kernel upgrade installed prior to the msg appearance.
                        "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
                        – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

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