
Hibernation (also known as suspend to disk, or Safe Sleep on Macintosh computers) in computing is powering down a computer while retaining its state. When hibernation begins, the computer saves the contents of its random access memory (RAM) to a hard disk or other non-volatile storage. When the computer is turned on the RAM is restored and the computer is exactly as it was before entering hibernation. Hibernation was first implemented in 1992 and patented by Compaq Computer Corporation in Houston, Texas.
Microsoft's Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10 and Windows 11 employ a type of hibernation (Fast Startup) by default when shutting down.
Uses
After hibernating, the hardware is powered down like a regular shutdown. The system can have a total loss of power for an indefinite length of time and then resume to the original state. Hibernation is mostly used in laptops, which have limited battery power available. It can be set to happen automatically on a low battery alarm. Most desktops also support hibernation, mainly as a general energy saving measure and allows for replacement of a removable battery quickly. Google and Apple mobile hardware (Android, Chromebooks, iOS) do not support hibernation. Apple hardware using macOS calls hibernation Safe Sleep.
A real-time clock alarm can be scheduled to wake the machine after hibernation.
Comparison to sleep mode
Many systems support a low-power sleep mode in which the processing functions of the machine are lowered, using a trickle of power to preserve the contents of RAM and support waking up. Instantaneous resumption is one of the advantages of sleep mode over hibernation. A hibernated system must start up and read data from permanent storage and then transfer that back to RAM, which takes longer and depends on the speed of the permanent storage device, often much slower than RAM. A system in sleep mode only needs to power up the CPU and display, which is almost instantaneous. On the other hand, a system in sleep mode still consumes power to keep the data in the RAM, and thus cannot last indefinitely, as hibernation can. Detaching power from a system in sleep mode results in data loss, while cutting the power of a system in hibernation has no risk; the hibernated system can resume when and if the power is restored. Both shut down and hibernated systems may consume standby power unless they are unplugged.
Hibernation is a means of avoiding the burden of saving unsaved data before shutting down and restoring all running programs and re-opening documents and browser tabs. Both hibernation and sleep preserve memory fragmentation and atrophy that lead to mobile devices working poorer the longer they run without a full reboot. This is why many experts[who?] recommend a frequent shut down or reboot of electronic devices.
First implementation
The first working retail hibernation was in 1992 on the Compaq LTE Lite 386 as noted in its sales material. It is made possible in part due to the sleep and protected mode opcodes in the Intel 386 CPU. It was implemented in ROM and worked independently of the operating system with no drivers needed. The LTE would sense low battery and prevented data loss by making use of a hidden partition. It preserved and restored the system in the midst of disk writes and operations with a math co-processor. It could also be controlled using an optional software GUI or a customized keyboard shortcut. It was tested on DOS, Windows 3.1, Banyan Vines, and Novell Netware. Compaq's hibernation is also noted in an IBM patent from 1993.
Operating system support
Early implementations of hibernation used the BIOS as noted above, but modern operating systems usually handle hibernation themselves. Hibernation is defined as sleeping mode S4 in the ACPI specification.
Microsoft Windows
On Windows computers, hibernation is available only if all hardware and device drivers are ACPI and plug-and-play–compliant. This allows some desktop computers to hibernate quickly to SSD in the event of a power failure and power supplied to even a lightweight or aging UPS. Hibernation can be invoked from the Start menu or the command line.
Windows 95 supports hibernation through hardware manufacturer-supplied drivers and only if compatible hardware and BIOS are present. Since Windows 95 supports only Advanced Power Management (APM), hibernation is called Suspend-to-Disk. Windows 98 and later support ACPI. However, hibernation often caused problems since most hardware was not fully ACPI 1.0 compliant or did not have WDM drivers. There were also issues with the FAT32 file system, making hibernation problematic and unreliable.
Windows 2000 is the first Windows to support hibernation at the operating system level (OS-controlled ACPI S4 sleep state) without special drivers from the hardware manufacturer. A hidden system file named "hiberfil.sys" in the root of the boot partition is used to store the contents of RAM when the computer hibernates. In Windows 2000, this file is as big as the total RAM installed.
Windows Me, the last release in the Windows 9x family, also supports OS-controlled hibernation like Windows 2000 and requires disk space equal to that of the computer's RAM.
Windows XP further improved support for hibernation. Hibernation and resumption are much faster as memory pages are compressed using an improved algorithm; compression is overlapped with disk writes, unused memory pages are freed and DMA transfers are used during I/O.hiberfil.sys contains further information including processor state. This file was documented by security researcher Matthieu Suiche during Black Hat Briefings 2008 who also provided a computer forensics framework to manage and convert this file into a readable memory dump. The compression feature was later documented by Microsoft as well.
Although Windows XP added support for more than 4 gigabytes of memory (through Windows XP 64-bit Edition and Windows XP Professional x64 Edition), this operating system, as well as Windows Server 2003, Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008 do not support hibernation when this amount of memory is installed because of performance issues associated with saving such a large pool of data from RAM to disk. This would later be resolved by Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2.
Windows Vista introduced a hybrid sleep feature, which saves the contents of memory to hard disk but instead of powering down, enters sleep mode. If the power is lost, the computer can resume as if hibernated.
Windows 7 introduced compression to the hibernation file and set the default size to 75% of the total physical memory. Microsoft also recommends that the size be increased using the powercfg.exe
tool in some rare workloads where the memory footprint exceeds that amount. It can be set from anywhere between 50% and 100%, although decreasing it is not recommended.
Windows 8 also introduces a Fast startup feature. When users select the Shut Down option, it hibernates the computer, but closes all programs and logs out the user session before hibernating. According to Microsoft, a regular hibernation includes more data in memory pages which takes longer to be written to disk. In comparison, when the user session is closed, the hibernation data is much smaller and therefore takes less time to write to disk and resume. Users have the option of performing a traditional shutdown by holding down the Shift key while clicking Shut Down and it is also possible to shut down a computer in the traditional way by disabling Fast Startup in the system settings.
Windows 10 mirrors Windows 8 as noted by Microsoft. Windows 10's hibernation algorithm is solid-state drive optimized. This behavior is carried over to Windows 11.
Hibernation is often underused in business environments as it is difficult to enable it on a large network of computers without resorting to third-party PC power management software. This omission by Microsoft has been criticized as having led to a huge waste in energy.
It is possible to disable hibernation and delete hiberfil.sys
.
Third-party PC power management software offers features beyond those present in Windows. Most products offer Active Directory integration and per-user or per-machine settings with more advanced power plans, scheduled power plans, anti-insomnia features and enterprise power usage reporting.
macOS
On Macs, a feature known as Safe Sleep saves the contents of volatile memory to the system hard disk each time the Mac enters Sleep mode. The Mac can instantaneously wake from sleep mode if power to the RAM has not been lost. However, if the power supply was interrupted, such as when removing batteries without an AC power connection, the Mac would wake from Safe Sleep instead, restoring memory contents from the hard drive. Because Safe Sleep's hibernation process occurs during regular Sleep, the Apple menu does not have a "hibernate" option.
Safe Sleep capability was added in Mac models starting with the October 2005 PowerBook G4 (Double-Layer SD). Safe Sleep requires Mac OS X v10.4 or higher.
Shortly after Apple started supporting Safe Sleep, Mac enthusiasts released a hack to enable this feature for much older Mac computers running Mac OS X v10.4. The classic Mac OS once also supported hibernation, but this feature was dropped by Apple.
Linux
In the Linux kernel, hibernation is implemented by swsusp which is built into the 2.6 series. An alternative implementation is TuxOnIce which is available as patches for the kernel version 3.4. TuxOnIce provides advantages such as support for symmetric multiprocessing and preemption. Another alternative implementation is uswsusp. All three refer to it as "suspend-to-disk". systemd, if deployed, manages hibernation itself.
Hybrid sleep
Sleep mode and hibernation can be combined: the contents of RAM are copied to the non-volatile storage and the computer enters sleep mode. This approach combines the benefits of sleep mode and hibernation: The machine can resume instantaneously, and its state, including open and unsaved files, survives a power outage. Hybrid sleep consumes as much power as sleep mode, whereas hibernation powers down the computer.
See also
- Green computing
- PC power management
References
- "What is safe sleep on Mac?". Apple Support. Retrieved 2021-01-24.
- "Hibernation Patent" (PDF). Patents.google.com. 1998. Archived (PDF) from the original on 25 January 2021. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
- windows-driver-content. "Delivering a great startup and shutdown experience". docs.microsoft.com. Retrieved 2021-01-24.
- "Sleep and hibernation: frequently asked questions". Windows 7 Online Help. Microsoft Corporation. Retrieved 15 October 2011.
- "systemd.timer". freedesktop.org. Retrieved 12 June 2024.
- "Shut down, sleep, or hibernate your PC". support.microsoft.com. Retrieved 2021-01-15.
- "Sales Material from Compaq Computer Corp" (PDF). 10000 Bit. 1992. Archived from the original on 2017-01-02. Retrieved 2021-01-24.
- [1], "Hibernation file creation device and method", issued 1993-07-26
- "ACPI Specification Rev 3.0b" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-12-30. Retrieved 2008-11-09.
- "Microsoft Help and Support – How To Put the System into hibernation or Standby from Run menu". Archived from the original on 2009-02-11. Retrieved 2009-02-11.
- BIOS and Hibernate Issues for FAT32 File System
- "Interview with Nicolas Coudière, Chief Product Manager: Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition (Me)". Activewin.com. Retrieved 2010-08-26.
- "Windows Power Management". Microsoft.com. 2001-12-04. Archived from the original on 2004-07-13. Retrieved 2010-08-26.
- Windows Power Management: Instant PC availability and energy savings
- Kernel Enhancements for Windows XP
- "BlackHat USA 2008 – Windows hibernation file for fun and profit" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-11-19. Retrieved 2008-08-18.
- "SandMan Computer Forensics Framework". Archived from the original on 2018-12-29. Retrieved 2022-03-08.
- "Reducing the Disk Footprint for Windows 7 Hibernation". Retrieved 2012-10-25.
- "You cannot put a computer that has more than 4 GB of memory into hibernation in Windows XP, in Windows Server 2003, in Windows Vista, or in Windows Server 2008". Support (9.0 ed.). Microsoft. 23 September 2011. Archived from the original on 23 March 2014. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
- "Delivering fast boot times in Windows 8". Archived from the original on 2011-11-08. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
- "Windows 8 / Windows Server 2012: Faster Boot Process | Ask the Performance Team Blog". Archived from the original on 2018-05-24. Retrieved 2018-05-24.
- Enable hibernate using group policy
- "EcoGeek – How Windows XP Wasted $25 Billion of Energy". Archived from the original on 2006-11-27. Retrieved 2009-01-14.
- How to disable and re-enable hibernation on a computer that is running Windows; Microsoft; August 12, 2010.
- "Power Management Software for Windows Workstations". Archived from the original on 2012-04-26. Retrieved 2011-04-19.
- "Energy Star Commercial Packages List". Archived from the original on 2008-11-02. Retrieved 2011-04-19.
- The Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference. "HMC: A Practical Guide to Sustainable Building for Schools". Archived from the original on 2012-03-15. Retrieved 2011-04-19.
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Hibernation also known as suspend to disk or Safe Sleep on Macintosh computers in computing is powering down a computer while retaining its state When hibernation begins the computer saves the contents of its random access memory RAM to a hard disk or other non volatile storage When the computer is turned on the RAM is restored and the computer is exactly as it was before entering hibernation Hibernation was first implemented in 1992 and patented by Compaq Computer Corporation in Houston Texas Microsoft s Windows 8 Windows 8 1 Windows 10 and Windows 11 employ a type of hibernation Fast Startup by default when shutting down UsesAfter hibernating the hardware is powered down like a regular shutdown The system can have a total loss of power for an indefinite length of time and then resume to the original state Hibernation is mostly used in laptops which have limited battery power available It can be set to happen automatically on a low battery alarm Most desktops also support hibernation mainly as a general energy saving measure and allows for replacement of a removable battery quickly Google and Apple mobile hardware Android Chromebooks iOS do not support hibernation Apple hardware using macOS calls hibernation Safe Sleep A real time clock alarm can be scheduled to wake the machine after hibernation Comparison to sleep modeMany systems support a low power sleep mode in which the processing functions of the machine are lowered using a trickle of power to preserve the contents of RAM and support waking up Instantaneous resumption is one of the advantages of sleep mode over hibernation A hibernated system must start up and read data from permanent storage and then transfer that back to RAM which takes longer and depends on the speed of the permanent storage device often much slower than RAM A system in sleep mode only needs to power up the CPU and display which is almost instantaneous On the other hand a system in sleep mode still consumes power to keep the data in the RAM and thus cannot last indefinitely as hibernation can Detaching power from a system in sleep mode results in data loss while cutting the power of a system in hibernation has no risk the hibernated system can resume when and if the power is restored Both shut down and hibernated systems may consume standby power unless they are unplugged Hibernation is a means of avoiding the burden of saving unsaved data before shutting down and restoring all running programs and re opening documents and browser tabs Both hibernation and sleep preserve memory fragmentation and atrophy that lead to mobile devices working poorer the longer they run without a full reboot This is why many experts who recommend a frequent shut down or reboot of electronic devices First implementationThe first working retail hibernation was in 1992 on the Compaq LTE Lite 386 as noted in its sales material It is made possible in part due to the sleep and protected mode opcodes in the Intel 386 CPU It was implemented in ROM and worked independently of the operating system with no drivers needed The LTE would sense low battery and prevented data loss by making use of a hidden partition It preserved and restored the system in the midst of disk writes and operations with a math co processor It could also be controlled using an optional software GUI or a customized keyboard shortcut It was tested on DOS Windows 3 1 Banyan Vines and Novell Netware Compaq s hibernation is also noted in an IBM patent from 1993 Operating system supportFast startup and hibernate mode Early implementations of hibernation used the BIOS as noted above but modern operating systems usually handle hibernation themselves Hibernation is defined as sleeping mode S4 in the ACPI specification Microsoft Windows On Windows computers hibernation is available only if all hardware and device drivers are ACPI and plug and play compliant This allows some desktop computers to hibernate quickly to SSD in the event of a power failure and power supplied to even a lightweight or aging UPS Hibernation can be invoked from the Start menu or the command line Windows 95 supports hibernation through hardware manufacturer supplied drivers and only if compatible hardware and BIOS are present Since Windows 95 supports only Advanced Power Management APM hibernation is called Suspend to Disk Windows 98 and later support ACPI However hibernation often caused problems since most hardware was not fully ACPI 1 0 compliant or did not have WDM drivers There were also issues with the FAT32 file system making hibernation problematic and unreliable Windows 2000 is the first Windows to support hibernation at the operating system level OS controlled ACPI S4 sleep state without special drivers from the hardware manufacturer A hidden system file named hiberfil sys in the root of the boot partition is used to store the contents of RAM when the computer hibernates In Windows 2000 this file is as big as the total RAM installed Windows Me the last release in the Windows 9x family also supports OS controlled hibernation like Windows 2000 and requires disk space equal to that of the computer s RAM Windows XP further improved support for hibernation Hibernation and resumption are much faster as memory pages are compressed using an improved algorithm compression is overlapped with disk writes unused memory pages are freed and DMA transfers are used during I O hiberfil sys contains further information including processor state This file was documented by security researcher Matthieu Suiche during Black Hat Briefings 2008 who also provided a computer forensics framework to manage and convert this file into a readable memory dump The compression feature was later documented by Microsoft as well Although Windows XP added support for more than 4 gigabytes of memory through Windows XP 64 bit Edition and Windows XP Professional x64 Edition this operating system as well as Windows Server 2003 Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008 do not support hibernation when this amount of memory is installed because of performance issues associated with saving such a large pool of data from RAM to disk This would later be resolved by Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 Windows Vista introduced a hybrid sleep feature which saves the contents of memory to hard disk but instead of powering down enters sleep mode If the power is lost the computer can resume as if hibernated Windows 7 introduced compression to the hibernation file and set the default size to 75 of the total physical memory Microsoft also recommends that the size be increased using the powercfg exe tool in some rare workloads where the memory footprint exceeds that amount It can be set from anywhere between 50 and 100 although decreasing it is not recommended Windows 8 also introduces a Fast startup feature When users select the Shut Down option it hibernates the computer but closes all programs and logs out the user session before hibernating According to Microsoft a regular hibernation includes more data in memory pages which takes longer to be written to disk In comparison when the user session is closed the hibernation data is much smaller and therefore takes less time to write to disk and resume Users have the option of performing a traditional shutdown by holding down the Shift key while clicking Shut Down and it is also possible to shut down a computer in the traditional way by disabling Fast Startup in the system settings Windows 10 mirrors Windows 8 as noted by Microsoft Windows 10 s hibernation algorithm is solid state drive optimized This behavior is carried over to Windows 11 Hibernation is often underused in business environments as it is difficult to enable it on a large network of computers without resorting to third party PC power management software This omission by Microsoft has been criticized as having led to a huge waste in energy It is possible to disable hibernation and delete hiberfil sys Third party PC power management software offers features beyond those present in Windows Most products offer Active Directory integration and per user or per machine settings with more advanced power plans scheduled power plans anti insomnia features and enterprise power usage reporting macOS On Macs a feature known as Safe Sleep saves the contents of volatile memory to the system hard disk each time the Mac enters Sleep mode The Mac can instantaneously wake from sleep mode if power to the RAM has not been lost However if the power supply was interrupted such as when removing batteries without an AC power connection the Mac would wake from Safe Sleep instead restoring memory contents from the hard drive Because Safe Sleep s hibernation process occurs during regular Sleep the Apple menu does not have a hibernate option Safe Sleep capability was added in Mac models starting with the October 2005 PowerBook G4 Double Layer SD Safe Sleep requires Mac OS X v10 4 or higher Shortly after Apple started supporting Safe Sleep Mac enthusiasts released a hack to enable this feature for much older Mac computers running Mac OS X v10 4 The classic Mac OS once also supported hibernation but this feature was dropped by Apple Linux In the Linux kernel hibernation is implemented by swsusp which is built into the 2 6 series An alternative implementation is TuxOnIce which is available as patches for the kernel version 3 4 TuxOnIce provides advantages such as support for symmetric multiprocessing and preemption Another alternative implementation is uswsusp All three refer to it as suspend to disk systemd if deployed manages hibernation itself Hybrid sleepSleep mode and hibernation can be combined the contents of RAM are copied to the non volatile storage and the computer enters sleep mode This approach combines the benefits of sleep mode and hibernation The machine can resume instantaneously and its state including open and unsaved files survives a power outage Hybrid sleep consumes as much power as sleep mode whereas hibernation powers down the computer See alsoGreen computing PC power managementReferences What is safe sleep on Mac Apple Support Retrieved 2021 01 24 Hibernation Patent PDF Patents google com 1998 Archived PDF from the original on 25 January 2021 Retrieved 24 January 2021 windows driver content Delivering a great startup and shutdown experience docs microsoft com Retrieved 2021 01 24 Sleep and hibernation frequently asked questions Windows 7 Online Help Microsoft Corporation Retrieved 15 October 2011 systemd timer freedesktop org Retrieved 12 June 2024 Shut down sleep or hibernate your PC support microsoft com Retrieved 2021 01 15 Sales Material from Compaq Computer Corp PDF 10000 Bit 1992 Archived from the original on 2017 01 02 Retrieved 2021 01 24 1 Hibernation file creation device and method issued 1993 07 26 ACPI Specification Rev 3 0b PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 12 30 Retrieved 2008 11 09 Microsoft Help and Support How To Put the System into hibernation or Standby from Run menu Archived from the original on 2009 02 11 Retrieved 2009 02 11 BIOS and Hibernate Issues for FAT32 File System Interview with Nicolas Coudiere Chief Product Manager Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition Me Activewin com Retrieved 2010 08 26 Windows Power Management Microsoft com 2001 12 04 Archived from the original on 2004 07 13 Retrieved 2010 08 26 Windows Power Management Instant PC availability and energy savings Kernel Enhancements for Windows XP BlackHat USA 2008 Windows hibernation file for fun and profit PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 11 19 Retrieved 2008 08 18 SandMan Computer Forensics Framework Archived from the original on 2018 12 29 Retrieved 2022 03 08 Reducing the Disk Footprint for Windows 7 Hibernation Retrieved 2012 10 25 You cannot put a computer that has more than 4 GB of memory into hibernation in Windows XP in Windows Server 2003 in Windows Vista or in Windows Server 2008 Support 9 0 ed Microsoft 23 September 2011 Archived from the original on 23 March 2014 Retrieved 23 March 2014 Delivering fast boot times in Windows 8 Archived from the original on 2011 11 08 Retrieved 2011 11 09 Windows 8 Windows Server 2012 Faster Boot Process Ask the Performance Team Blog Archived from the original on 2018 05 24 Retrieved 2018 05 24 Enable hibernate using group policy EcoGeek How Windows XP Wasted 25 Billion of Energy Archived from the original on 2006 11 27 Retrieved 2009 01 14 How to disable and re enable hibernation on a computer that is running Windows Microsoft August 12 2010 Power Management Software for Windows Workstations Archived from the original on 2012 04 26 Retrieved 2011 04 19 Energy Star Commercial Packages List Archived from the original on 2008 11 02 Retrieved 2011 04 19 The Headmasters and Headmistresses Conference HMC A Practical Guide to Sustainable Building for Schools Archived from the original on 2012 03 15 Retrieved 2011 04 19 Apple Support Progress bar appears after waking from sleep February 20 2006 Archived from the original on March 12 2008 How to Safe Sleep Hibernate Your Mac AndrewEscobar com Archived from the original on 2008 01 05 Sleep Memory Extension 1 0 Document and Software Archived from the original on August 19 2007 Turn off a computer frequently asked questions Windows Vista Online Help Microsoft Corporation Archived from the original on 10 October 2011 Retrieved 15 October 2011