On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 15:10:07 +0200, Derek Broughton wrote: > On September 27, 2004 05:06 pm, Sebastian Tennant wrote: >> You're starting to worry me! I am using 2.6.7 which was installed by >> sarge-i386-netinst-daily-build.iso (04/08/04). I wish it were >> otherwise but I haven't knowingly changed any of those settings :-/ > Unfortunately, I haven't a clue how to change them either. None of them > are things I would normally bother with - it just points to there being > more of a change than just adding or removing udev.
Noted. >> On the whole it's working well. A few things are bugging me, like the >> fan only coming on with a reboot, and sleep/suspend functionality >> entirely lacking. (This may simply be because I haven't figured out how >> to get them working yet, beyond passing acpi=force as a kernel >> boot-parameter to enable acpi). > Dell ACPI is buggy - and you seem to have two errors in yours. Make > sure you have Dell's latest BIOS for your machine. You know what I'm going to ask now don't you, and I've got a horrible feeling that you're going to tell me that you can't upgrade your BIOS without booting into a Windows/DOS install. I've taken the MacOSX route into Linux and am somewhat perversely proud of the fact that I know virtually nothing at all about Windows/DOS. The first thing I did when I got this laptop was remove all traces of ... the organisation whose name we will not mention, and as a result I only have Debian installed and no spare partition. (I'm debating whether to 're-brand' the key that comes between Alt and Fn. Let me see now, a cigarette should do it!). > Most of my ACPI problems went away with "relaxed AML" checking, but that > used to be a kernel config option, right after "Toshiba Laptop Extras", > and I don't see it any more (in 2.6.7). I suspect that means it's now > automatic. I still haven't got suspend functionality (S4), but I do > have sleep (S1). Ah. So we have two out of four/five? S0 ? S1 Sleep (Suspend-To-Ram?) S2 ? S3 ? S4 Suspend (Suspend-To-Disk?) and the article I read re: Sleep not supported must have been out-of-date or something... > The fans work right. One thing to note is that very often the fans > don't come on just because they really shouldn't. If you run the same > machine w/ Windows, you get used to them being on a lot, then when you > run in Linux you start to worry. I've seen many posts here, to that > effect, and it always turns out that the fans don't really need to be on > because the CPU temperature hasn't reached the trip point. Fair enough, I have come to expect GNU/Linux to out-perform Windows in virtually every way, but my fan behaviour can't be right. It doesn't come on until a reboot, and then it doesn't go off, which suggests its temperature is being checked once only at boot-time (I suspect by the BIOS) and doen't come on until a reboot because it has had sufficient time to cool after a halt, i.e., over night. >> P.S What are bogomips by the way? > LOL. It's just a rating of how fast your machine is operating > (mips=million instructions / second). Mine seems to be consistent, but > a difference of 4 bogomips on any modern PC is inconsequential. > > derek Ok, but what does the bogo bit stand for? (And don't look it up. Anyone can do that! :-) sebyte -- CC me by all means but a follow-up will usually suffice.