try:
cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/*/trip_points
to see what temperature the computer will turn off at and
cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/*/temperature
to see the temperature the computer is currently at...
That's interesting, I didn't know about those, though I do have a
temp
Is the heat sink properly seated on the processor?
I removed a heatsink to clean the blanket of fluff the fan had forced
in, then replaced it but had not locked down all the catches properly.
It ran for a while then just shut down like the plug was pulled. Restart
immediately and it would shut
What type of cpu does your laptop have?
On Thursday 04 January 2007 05:17, Howard Lowndes wrote:
Sadly I now discover that my lappy is not capable of cpu speed
control :(
Joseph Goncalves wrote:
try:
cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/*/trip_points
to see what temperature the computer will
Have a look at the modules
in /lib/modules/2.6.18-1.2849.fc6/kernel/arch/i386/kernel/cpu/cpufreq.
One of these are bound to expose control of your cpu's speed
over /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/. cpuspeed, powernowd,
cpufreqd, etc all pretty much do the same thing in this sys folder to
Hi,
I'm using xubuntu via SSH and the computer keeps turning itself off.
Sometimes, /var/log/syslog contains a message about terminating on signal
15, but usually nothing.
I don't have any genuine clues as to what is causing the problem. Could
this be related to power management? How do I
On 03/01/07, Adelle Hartley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I'm using xubuntu via SSH and the computer keeps turning itself off.
Sometimes, /var/log/syslog contains a message about terminating on signal
15, but usually nothing.
My first suspicion in such cases is the hardware - is the computer
Adelle Hartley wrote:
Hi,
I'm using xubuntu via SSH and the computer keeps turning itself off.
Sometimes, /var/log/syslog contains a message about terminating on signal
15, but usually nothing.
My first question would be: Does it just switch off or do you see some
sort of shutdown sequence?
Penedo wrote:
Did the computer work well before and just started to act or
is it a new computer/installation?
It was working well for more than a month before the problem developed. I
tried reinstalling xubuntu from scratch, and it worked for about a week
before developing the problem again.
Carlo Sogono wrote:
My first question would be: Does it just switch off or do you
see some sort of shutdown sequence?
My money's on cooling if it just switches off.
That seems to be the widespread consensus, and it does just switch off.
The amount of time between being switched on and
On 03/01/07, Adelle Hartley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
That seems to be the widespread consensus, and it does just switch off.
The amount of time between being switched on and switching itself off
ranges
from minutes to hours.
It's a P3, and isn't supposed to need a fan. The main fan is
On Wednesday 03 January 2007 14:32, Penedo wrote:
On 03/01/07, Adelle Hartley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I'm using xubuntu via SSH and the computer keeps turning itself
off. Sometimes, /var/log/syslog contains a message about
terminating on signal 15, but usually nothing.
My first
Hi Adelle,
Could be just a dud power supply...
Also sometimes when bits heat up they expand and a connection is broken,
power stops, seen it before.
Also (might be a bit obvious but hey...) check that the power cable in
the power supply is in properly. Might be only just connecting. Try
Howard Lowndes wrote:
It's a P3, and isn't supposed to need a fan. The main fan
is working
though.
P3s do have a fan on the CPU.
You're right. The main fan is the cpu fan. The power supply is external,
so there is no fan for it.
Anyway, it's not hot.
Adelle.
--
SLUG - Sydney
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