Configuring Power Management |
An Introduction to Power Management and its FeaturesPower management is a component of system performance that affects how Windows makes use of power when the computer is running under normal conditions. You can use the Power management settings to preserve energy. This in turn extends the life of hardware components of the system because they are powered down during periods when there is no user activity. The power management feature is extremely beneficial for laptop users. Microsoft Windows XP and OnNow capable computers can manage the power of a computer in a manner where the consumption of power is minimized when not needed. Windows XP is able to immediately move the computer and any needed peripherals to an available state when they are needed. What this means is that the computer operates in a low power usage when it is not required. Windows XP can shift to different modes that actually simulate system shutdown. When it moves into one of these states; no data, applications, or programs currently loaded is lost. Windows XP Professional offers a few attractive power management capabilities for desktop users and mobile users. The OS supports the Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) specification. It is ACPI that offers reliable power management and system configurations. A system is typically shifted from the low power usage state when it receives wake events from a modem or other device, application, or network connection. Because of Windows XP Professional's advanced power management features, it provides for the following situations:
As mentioned earlier, Windows XP supports the ACPI specification. For the above mentioned features to work, the computer has to be ACPI compliant. When the computer is ACPI compliant, Windows XP can manage power efficiently. It can ensure that the computer is using minimal power when the computer is not functioning fully. Windows XP also ensures that the computer and all its peripherals are immediately available when users or a network connection requires it. This is possible because applications and devices that are ACPI compliant function together with the OS to respond to switches in power mode. The features provided by power management are summarized below:
How Power Policy worksThe power policy manager operates together with devices and applications to enforce those settings that specify the manner in which power should be preserved. The components which power polices are based on are listed below:
A device connected to the computer has a power policy owner. The power policy owner is responsible for controlling power for that particular piece of hardware. The policy owner and the policy of the OS operate together to shift the computer to the low power usage state. The policy owner of a device sends a message to the power policy manager to move the device to a low power usage state when it determines that the computer's state can change. When power usage changes for a particular device, this change is communicated to the drivers as well. Device drivers save their device settings if changing to the low power state. They restore the device driver settings if a changeover occurs from the low power state to the available/active state. Understanding the Differences between ACPI and APM Power ManagementYou can configure power management options irrespective of whether the computer is enabled for ACPI, or APM. The following section takes a look at ACPI power management.The computer must have an ACPI compliant BIOS which is Windows XP Professional compatible, for it to use the features of power management in Windows XP Professional. Windows XP Professional decides on the hardware abstraction layer (HAL) that should be installed at Setup. The ACPI hardware abstraction layer (HAL) is installed if Windows XP determines that the computer has an ACPI compliant BIOS. If not, a non ACPI HAL is installed. When this occurs, the ACPI power management features cannot be used. Windows XP Professional Setup uses the procedure explained in the following section to decide on the HAL that should be installed. At startup, Windows XP Professional examines the ACPI BIOS tables. The ACPI BIOS tables contain information on the devices and its associated power management features that are installed on the computer. A non ACPI HAL is installed if the ACPI BIOS tables cannot be located. If the ACPI BIOS tables are incorrect, a non ACPI HAL is also installed. When Windows XP Professional concludes that the ACPI BIOS tables are correct, Setup proceeds to check whether the BIOS of the computer appear on the Incompatible list. It installs a non ACPI HAL when the computer's BIOS appear on this list. Setup proceeds to check the BIOS date when the computer's BIOS is not noted on the Incompatible list. An ACPI HAL is installed when the BIOS date is older than 01/01/1999. When the date of the BIOS is prior to 01/01/1999, Setup checks whether the BIOS is verified to be compatible with Windows XP Professional. If it is, an ACPI HAL is installed. If not, a non ACPI HAL is installed. How to verify whether a computer is running in ACPI mode
The following section takes a look at APM power management. Windows XP Professional includes support for APM power management as well. APM power management cannot be used for desktop computers because of its limited capabilities. Windows XP Professional's support for APM power management is for providing compatibility with legacy notebook computers. A system has to meet the following requirements to use APM power management
At setup, Windows XP Professional checks whether the BIOS is APM compliant. It checks whether the BIOS of the computer is included in the Auto-enable APM list. If it is, Ntapm.sys and Apmbatt.ys is installed, and APM is enabled. When the BIOS is on the Disable APM list, setup does not install any AMP components, nor does it enable APM. How to determine whether APM support in included on the portable computer
How to enable APM
Power SchemesPower schemes are used to set the following:
Power schemes operate by using the Standby and Hibernation features in the following manners:
Windows XP Professional includes the preconfigured power schemes listed below:
How to set/enable a power scheme
How to modify an existing power scheme or create a new power scheme
How to disable HibernationThe Hibernation feature is enabled by default. You must have the same amount of available disk space as memory for hibernation, because the data and programs currently in the computer's memory are written to the hard disk. To disable this feature,
How to disable password protection for computers for the Standby featureWhen a computer shifts from Standby or Hibernation, the user has to by default provide a user name and password to log on to the computer. This is the default configuration setting. If you want to disable password protection, use the following steps:
How to configure a mobile computer's battery for monitoring and managementYou can use the Power Meter feature to monitor and manage the battery of a mobile computer. The battery status icon is displayed on the taskbar when the computer is running on batteries. This is the default setting. The battery status icon is used to access Power Meter. Use the steps below to add the battery status icon to the taskbar.
With mobile computers, you can configure alarms to alert when low-battery and critical-battery levels are reached, and you can specify the manner in which the alarm notification (visual/audible) should be raised. Use the steps below to set alarms.
When computers use more than one battery, you can also specify that the status of each battery be shown. Use the steps below to enable this view.
How to enable a device to wake the computerThe following events are supported to wake a computer from a low power state:
These capabilities are only supported on ACPI based computers. Use the steps below to configure the computer to be activated by a device:
How to set up button and lid switch functionality to control system powerIf you have an ACPI based computer, you can configure the following functionality to administer the power of the system:
A button can be associated with one of the following actions:
Use the steps below to set up a power button:
Using Group Policy settings to configure the Refresh Interval, and to hide Power OptionsThe refresh interval administers the frequency at which polices are applied to the computer. The default refresh interval setting is 90 minutes. You can use Group Policy refresh settings to configure the refresh interval setting to a value between 0 and 64,800 minutes. An interval offset can also be configured for a refresh interval. The interval offset stops clients that have the identical refresh interval value from simultaneously requesting policy updates. This ensures that an excessive load is not placed on the server. The default interval offset setting is 30 minutes. This value can be changed to a value between 0 and 30 minutes. Group Policy refresh settings can stop a computer from moving into Hibernation or Standby. This occurs because a policy update actually resets the hibernation or standby timer in the same manner as pressing a key does. You can prevent this from happening by setting the value of the Group Policy refresh interval to a value that is greater than the setting of Hibernation or Standby configured under Power Options of Control Panel. You can use the Group Policy Control Panel settings to hide Power Options from users, thereby preventing them from specifying any power options. You can use the Group Policy Control Panel settings to show only particular Control Panel tools and options, and to even hide Control Panel. How to change the Group Policy refresh interval and the interval offset settings for User Configuration settings
How to change the Group Policy refresh interval and the interval offset settings for Computer Configuration settings
How to disable policy updates when the computer is running
How to hide Power Options
How to completely hide Control Panel
|
Discuss Configuring Power Management in the forums.
You need to login or register to post comments.


