On Mon, Apr 4, 2016 at 8:14 AM, Doug Smythies <dsmyth...@telus.net> wrote: > On 2016.03.04 22:14 Sedat Dilek wrote: >> On Sun, Apr 3, 2016 at 8:59 PM, Doug Smythies <dsmyth...@telus.net> wrote: >>> On 2016.04.02 11:21 Sedat Dilek wrote: >>>> On Sat, Apr 2, 2016 at 7:19 PM, Jörg Otte wrote: >>>>> 2016-04-02 17:28 GMT+02:00 Srinivas Pandruvada wrote: >>>>> > >> are you involved in the Ubuntu-OS? Developer for Canonical? > > I try to help with Ubuntu as a community volunteer. > I am not a developer with Canonical. > > ... [cut]... > >>> As far as I know the /etc/init.d/ondemand is working properly. It sets the >>> acpi-cpufreq >>> driver to use the "ondemand" governor and it sets the intel_pstate driver >>> to use the >>> "powersave" governor. >>> > >> I haven't looked at this exactly. >> The ondemand-script is not saying to fall back to "powersave" in case >> of intel_pstate-driver (here on Ubuntu/precise). > > It is likely that newer versions of /etc/init.d/ondemand script > were never backported to the older 12.04 precise release. > Why not? Well, because, as far as I know, that release never used the > intel_pstate driver by default and so never had to fall through > to the powersave alternative. > > Earlier on this thread, Srinivas correctly asked Jörg what distribution > was being used, so as to hopefully make it easier to reproduce the issue. > If we want to continue this distro specific conversation, perhaps > we should move it off-list or to some Ubuntu specific forum. >
Yes, it is getting off-topic. Sorry for this. I know I am here on my own and I think how to fix this. ( Honestly, I forgot about the initial issue. ) - Sedat -