Here is more information on the C States from the Dell Senior Tech:

C3  Deep Sleep
Stops all CPU internal and external clocks

Pentium II and above, but not on Core 2 Duo E4000 and E6000; 
AMD Turion 64
 
http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/611/4

C4  Deeper Sleep
Reduces CPU voltage

Pentium M and above, but not on Core 2 Duo E4000 and E6000 series; 
AMD Turion 64

http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/611/5

When I read those hardwaresecrets articles, I didn't understand how a
normally running CPU could get into state C3, but the Dell Senior Tech
provided additional clarification and speculation:

C3 is different from S3 (suspend / standby).
 
C3 can be entered while the system is on and running the operating system 
(usually with no affect on system performance).
 
The next state, Sleep (C3), cuts all internal clock signals from the CPU, 
including the clocks from the bus interface unit and from the APIC. This means 
that when the CPU is in the Sleep mode it can’t answer to important requests 
coming from the CPU external bus nor interruptions.
 
That seems to mean that the CPU is not listening for interrupt requests over 
APIC which may be causing the HPET to malfunction.

C4 is reached after further "idle" conditions, and has to transition to
C3, then back up to C0, which could take longer for the APIC to allow
interrupts.

----

So I guess the question to ask the Linux HPET driver gurus is:  What do
you do when you've got a CPU that can stop listening to APIC interrupts
behind your back?

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Jaunty will not boot on Dell Optiplex 760 unless hpet=disable
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/348694
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