Some desktop environments include power managers which inhibit (temporarily turn off) some or all of the systemd ACPI settings. If such a power manager is running, then the actions for ACPI events can be configured in the power manager alone. Changes to /etc/systemd/logind.conf or /etc/systemd/logind.conf.d/*.conf need be made only if you wish to configure behaviour for a particular event that is not inhibited by the power manager.
Note that if the power manager does not inhibit systemd for the appropriate events you can end up with a situation where systemd suspends your system and then when the system is woken up the other power manager suspends it again. The power managers of KDE, GNOME, Xfce and MATE issue the necessary inhibited commands. If the inhibited commands are not being issued, such as when using acpid or others to handle ACPI events, set the Handle options to ignore. See also systemd-inhibit(1).
I'm using HP Elitebook 840 G5 and recently got Dell Docking station, so thought enabling the power management option "Maximize Battery Health" through power control option in BIOS and HP Power manager.
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The policies included in the Dell Power Manager package.exe include admx files which can be imported into your Group Policy to control the dell power manger settings so they get automatically adjusted.
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