That fixed it. Thanks a bunch. :)
-Patrick
John Baldwin wrote:
On 23-Jan-2003 Patrick Hartling wrote:
I just updated a 4.7-STABLE system (last rebuilt using sources from
Jan 7, 2003) to 5.0-RELEASE, and now the system clock is going nuts.
I had the same problem when I updated from 3-STABLE to 4-STABLE quite
a while back. To solve the problem then, I added the following to my
kernel configuration file:
device apm0 at nexus? disable flags 0x20
For my 5.0 kernel configuration, I have:
device apm
In /boot/device.hints, I have:
hint.apm.0.disabled="1"
hint.apm.0.flags="0x20"
Unfortunately, this isn't working. Is there something different I need
to do for 5.0? Looking in NOTES for information about APM, I see a
reference to a sysctl variable kern.timecounter.method, but that doesn't
seem to be a valid oid in 5.0. I don't think this system (a cheap, old
Cyrix MediaGX-based computer) supports ACPI. At the very least, ACPI
isn't enabled by default at boot time as it is on my Athlon system.
The sysctl is now kern.timecounter.hardware. For example:
sysctl kern.timecounter.hardware
kern.timecounter.hardware: ACPI-safe
If it is currently set to 'tsc', try changing it to 'i8254' and see if
it works better. If so, you can stick that in /etc/sysctl.conf.
--
Patrick L. Hartling | Research Assistant, VRAC
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | 2274 Howe Hall Room 2624
PGP: http://www.137.org/patrick/pgp.txt | T: +1.515.294.4916
http://www.137.org/patrick/ | http://www.vrac.iastate.edu/
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message