CPU Temperature Indicator

2013-02-02 Thread Lawrence Graves
There is an error with the cpu temperature indicator in Fedora 18. Is anyone or has anyone experienced this problem and if so please give some advice on how to fix. Thanks -- All things are workable but don't all things work. Prov. 3:5 6 -- test mailing list test@lists.fedoraproject.org

Re: CPU Temperature Indicator

2013-02-02 Thread Per Bothner
On 02/02/2013 12:24 PM, Lawrence Graves wrote: There is an error with the cpu temperature indicator in Fedora 18. Is anyone or has anyone experienced this problem and if so please give some advice on how to fix. Thanks My laptop keeps shutting down, so I haven't been able to run F18 for more

Re: CPU Temperature Indicator

2013-02-02 Thread Adam Williamson
On Sat, 2013-02-02 at 13:24 -0700, Lawrence Graves wrote: There is an error with the cpu temperature indicator in Fedora 18. Is anyone or has anyone experienced this problem and if so please give some advice on how to fix. Thanks That's way, way too vague for anyone to help you. What CPU

Re: CPU Temperature Indicator

2013-02-02 Thread Adam Williamson
On Sat, 2013-02-02 at 16:42 -0700, Lawrence Graves wrote: On 02/02/2013 04:01 PM, Adam Williamson wrote: On Sat, 2013-02-02 at 12:39 -0800, Per Bothner wrote: On 02/02/2013 12:24 PM, Lawrence Graves wrote: There is an error with the cpu temperature indicator in Fedora 18. Is anyone or has

Re: CPU Temperature Indicator

2013-02-02 Thread Per Bothner
On 02/02/2013 03:01 PM, Adam Williamson wrote: The OS is not involved in over-temp shutdown logic. It happens at the ACPI level. The firmware lets the kernel know, so you can at least see a message in your /var/log/messages to let you know that you hit the thermal cutoff, but the logic to

Re: CPU Temperature Indicator

2013-02-02 Thread Adam Williamson
On Sat, 2013-02-02 at 20:09 -0800, Per Bothner wrote: On 02/02/2013 03:01 PM, Adam Williamson wrote: The OS is not involved in over-temp shutdown logic. It happens at the ACPI level. The firmware lets the kernel know, so you can at least see a message in your /var/log/messages to let you