On Sun, Nov 27, 2005 at 08:53:44PM -0500, Scott Bigham wrote:
> Is there a way to disable ACPI? [searches kernel source docs] Ah, yes,
> just have to use the 'acpi=off' kernel boot parameter.
And my preliminary tests appear to confirm that with this parameter in
place, good old apm -s works just
On Fri, Nov 25, 2005 at 12:52:38AM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Have you checked the problem is not there when you reboot? Cause
> others have had similar symptoms and it appeared to be a dirty fan,
> with lots of dust collected over the years. That way the processor
> simply did not got enoug
Scott Bigham wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 23, 2005 at 10:38:25AM -0800, Ian Greenhoe wrote:
> > Is there evidence of a lot of processes being created? (If you run
> > ps twice in a row, are the PIDs relatively close to each other?
> > Relatively close == within about 4 on a lightly loaded machine.)
>
>
Hi Scott,
I saw you emails come by a few times; to recaptulate, hot processor but your
processor does not run 100% (?)
Have you checked the problem is not there when you reboot? Cause others have
had similar symptoms and it appeared to be a dirty fan, with lots of dust
collected over the year
On Thu, Nov 24, 2005 at 09:26:38AM -0500, I wrote:
> [...] I've attached the output of dmesg, with the suspend/resume point
> marked.
D'oh! *This* time I've attached it. We Apologize for the
Inconvenience.(TM)
-sbigham
1-4)) #1 Tue Aug 16 21:50:54
On Wed, Nov 23, 2005 at 10:38:25AM -0800, Ian Greenhoe wrote:
> Is there evidence of a lot of processes being created? (If you run ps
> twice in a row, are the PIDs relatively close to each other? Relatively
> close == within about 4 on a lightly loaded machine.)
Almost identical.
> Another tho
On Tue, 2005-11-22 at 23:57 -0500, Scott Bigham wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 22, 2005 at 03:59:04PM -0800, Ian Greenhoe wrote:
> > What does the top command show?
>
> I've attached the output of top -bc -n 1 from shortly after resume; by
> this point the CPU was hot enough for the first fan to have kicke
Hello,
the load average above 2 doesn't seem to agree with the machine been
idle. Do you have kernel panics (dmesg)? Have you tried to remove some
of the modules (wireless usb ...) to see if they print errors?
Just a guess ...
graziano
On Tue, 2005-11-22 at 23:57 -0500, Scott Bigham wrote:
>
On Tue, Nov 22, 2005 at 03:59:04PM -0800, Ian Greenhoe wrote:
> What does the top command show?
I've attached the output of top -bc -n 1 from shortly after resume; by
this point the CPU was hot enough for the first fan to have kicked in.
As you can see, it's running mostly idle, or at least it cla
On Mon, 2005-11-21 at 22:05 -0500, Scott Bigham wrote:
> Let's see, information you'll want...
What does the top command show?
-Ian
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I'm trying to get the hibernate package working on my Dell Inspiron
4100. So far, everything appears to be working fine, with one
exception: after resuming from hibernate, the system shows all the
signs of high CPU load --- the CPU temperature keeps creeping up until
both fans are running. This
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