On mer, 2006-12-20 at 17:55 +0100, Sven Arvidsson wrote: > Maybe a bug in the cpu frequency governor? There was a long discussion > on debian-devel in the beginning of this month about the difference > between the ondemand and the conservative governor.
I don't have any governor loaded when testing it, just the processor module, without speedstep-centrino and cpufreq-* modules. When running on AC there are 2 cstates : # cat /proc/acpi/processor/CPU1/power active state: C2 max_cstate: C8 bus master activity: 00000000 states: C1: type[C1] promotion[C2] demotion[--] latency[000] usage[00000010] duration[00000000000000000000] *C2: type[C2] promotion[--] demotion[C1] latency[001] usage[00005536] duration[00000000000041838680] and 3 on battery : # cat /proc/acpi/processor/CPU1/power active state: C2 max_cstate: C8 bus master activity: 20000010 states: C1: type[C1] promotion[C2] demotion[--] latency[000] usage[00000010] duration[00000000000000000000] *C2: type[C2] promotion[C3] demotion[C1] latency[001] usage[00007935] duration[00000000000049878469] C3: type[C3] promotion[--] demotion[C2] latency[001] usage[00008673] duration[00000000000069020648] Just with the processor module, frequency reported by x86info or gkrellm-x86info goes from ~10MHz to 800MHz or 1800MHz (depending on whether I booted on battery or on AC power). What is strange is that it seems that I'm the only one having this issue and only on my laptop. regards, strawks -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]