In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you wrote:
>> and does the right thing wrt udelay / bogomips etc..
>> I can dig it out if you want.. sounds like this should be a more generic
>> thing.
> Can you dig that out? I'd like to take a look.
> [Of course, problem is *not* solved: you still have short tim
Hi
> > on my Elan410 based System it is very easy to change the CPU clock speed by
> > means od two outb commands.
> >
> > I was wondering, if it does some harm to the Kernel if the CPU is
> > reprogrammed using a different CPU clock speed, while the system is up and
> > running.
>
> I have a m
Arjan van de Ven wrote:
>
> Sven Geggus wrote:
> >
> > Hi there,
> >
> > on my Elan410 based System it is very easy to change the CPU clock
> > speed by means od two outb commands.
> >
> > I was wondering, if it does some harm to the Kernel if the CPU is
> > reprogrammed using a different CPU cloc
On Wed, 13 Jun 2001, Magnus Sandberg wrote:
> I have a brand new Dell Inspiron 8000, laptop. It can run in 700 MHz or
> 850 MHz. The manual says that the machine/BIOS switches speed dependent on
> CPU load. I have not installed Linux yet, but it works with Win2000.
Intel Speedstep iirc. My Vaio
Hi,
I have a brand new Dell Inspiron 8000, laptop. It can run in 700 MHz or
850 MHz. The manual says that the machine/BIOS switches speed dependent on
CPU load. I have not installed Linux yet, but it works with Win2000.
It is also possible to force the BIOS to one speed if the OS don't like
sp
Sven Geggus wrote:
>
> Hi there,
>
> on my Elan410 based System it is very easy to change the CPU clock speed by
> means od two outb commands.
>
> I was wondering, if it does some harm to the Kernel if the CPU is
> reprogrammed using a different CPU clock speed, while the system is up and
> run
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