Martin Haug piratenpartei.de> writes:
> ...
> I may forgot to mention it, but this isn't my first install of Fedora 14
> on this machine: I had Fedora 14 before and it worked pretty well, then
> I accidently deleted the root-partition and after reinstallation I got
> the discussed Problem. So CP
On 12/27/2010 09:37 PM, JB wrote:
> Martin Haug piratenpartei.de> writes:
>
>> ...
>
> I would prefer that you make these entries manually and verify each step
> immediatelly (what you show here does not feel right ...).
I do that, the line "script has startet/ended, file is $whatever" comes
fro
On 28.12.2010, JB wrote:
> It may be a case of outdated or misconfigured BIOS, hardware related.
He might be affected by this phenomenon:
https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=19702
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JB gmail.com> writes:
> ...
There is a similar case on fedora.testers mailing list
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.redhat.fedora.testers/86733
It may be a case of outdated or misconfigured BIOS, hardware related.
Take a look at it.
JB
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Martin Haug piratenpartei.de> writes:
> ...
I would prefer that you make these entries manually and verify each step
immediatelly (what you show here does not feel right ...).
> [icehawk icehawk-laptop linuxhome]$ sudo /etc/init.d/cpuspeed stop
> [icehawk icehawk-laptop linuxhome]$ sudo lsmod
Hello,
Did most of this, attached output of your commands.
mfg
icehawk
Script started, file is infos.txt
[iceh...@icehawk-laptop linuxhome]$ sudo /etc/init.d/cpuspeed stop
[iceh...@icehawk-laptop linuxhome]$ sudo lsmod|grep -i cpu
cpufreq_ondemand7262 0
acpi_cpufreq6285 0
m
Martin Haug piratenpartei.de> writes:
> ...
> [icehawk icehawk-laptop linuxhome]$ sudo cpufreq-set -c 1 --g userspace
> -u 200
> [icehawk icehawk-laptop linuxhome]$ sudo cpufreq-set -c 0 --g userspace
> -u 200
> [icehawk icehawk-laptop linuxhome]$ sudo cpufreq-info
> ...
> current p
On 12/27/2010 02:08 PM, JB wrote:
> First, make sure your system is up-to-date.
It is.
Here the Infos you requested:
[iceh...@icehawk-laptop linuxhome]$ lsmod |grep -i freq
cpufreq_ondemand7262 0
acpi_cpufreq6285 0
mperf 1141 1 acpi_cpufreq
[iceh...@icehawk
JB gmail.com> writes:
> ...
Of course, make sure that your cpuspeed service
(this script enables/disables processor frequency scaling support, either using
the cpuspeed daemon or in-kernel frequency scaling support)
is enabled and running on your 2,3,4,5 runlevels.
You can do it manually (chkco
Martin Haug piratenpartei.de> writes:
> ...
First, make sure your system is up-to-date.
$ lsmod |grep -i freq
...
cpufreq_ondemand7262 2
acpi_cpufreq6285 1
mperf 1141 1 acpi_cpufreq
...
There are two packages I can choose from:
1.
$ yum info gnome-app
Hello,
I got a problem with my (more or less) fresh Fedora 14 installation: The
cpufrequency stays at 1Ghz all the time, even with high cpu usage. I'm
also not able to scale the frequency manually using the applet cpu
scaling inside gnome (If I try this, nothing happens).
The interessting thing abo
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