# defaults file for hd-idle # start hd-idle automatically? START_HD_IDLE=true HD_IDLE_OPTS="-i 0 -s 1 -a /dev/disk/by-uuid/1f2719c5-e32c-429d-83c8-9a38921fde5a -i 1200" # hd-idle command line options # Options are: # -a Set device name of disks for subsequent idle-time # parameters (-i). This parameter is optional in the # sense that there's a default entry for all disks # which are not named otherwise by using this # parameter. This can also be a symlink # (e.g. /dev/disk/by-uuid/...) # -i Idle time in seconds. # -c Api call to stop the device. Possible values are "scsi" # (default value) and "ata". # -s symlink_policy Set the policy to resolve symlinks for devices. # If set to "0", symlinks are resolve only on start. # If set to "1", symlinks are also resolved on runtime # until success. By default symlinks are only resolve on start. # If the symlink doesn't resolve to a device, the default # configuration will be applied. # -l Name of logfile (written only after a disk has spun # up). Please note that this option might cause the # disk which holds the logfile to spin up just because # another disk had some activity. This option should # not be used on systems with more than one disk # except for tuning purposes. On single-disk systems, # this option should not cause any additional spinups. # # Options not exactly useful here: # -t Spin-down the specified disk immediately and exit. # -d Debug mode. It will print debugging info to # stdout/stderr (/var/log/syslog if started as with systemctl) # -h Print usage information. #HD_IDLE_OPTS="-i 180 -l /var/log/hd-idle.log"