From: Alexey Starikovskiy <aystarik@gmail.com>
To: Ron Rechenmacher <ron@fnal.gov>
Cc: linux-acpi@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: 2.6.24 Temperature/speed _not_ normal - no thermal throttling?
Date: Wed, 20 Feb 2008 12:27:25 +0300 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <47BBF27D.7040701@gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <47BBC627.8020907@fnal.gov>
Hi Ron,
Throttling is meant as a last line of defense before powering-off
machine, and not a thermal regulation feature.
Please check if you have cpufreq compiled in and able to change frequency.
Please open a bug report at bugzilla.kernel.org against ACPI/Thermal.
Please attach dmesg output and 'grep . /proc/acpi/thermal/*/*'
Thanks,
Alex.
Ron Rechenmacher wrote:
> Hi,
> I believe I am having a critical thermal problem. I do not know if it
> is limited to the 2.6.24.2 kernel which I am running. I do see there
> has been some discussion about thermal zones and throttling on the
> list, but I can not tell if it means that thermal throttling is not
> working in 2.6.24.2
>
> When I try to build several kernel source rpms, my dell d830 laptop
> seems to over heat and hang. It's happened 3 times now and I would
> like to learn what's going on and not let it happen again.
>
> I'm a newbie (and have had problems trying to post :), so I do
> apologize if I've missing something relatively simple or if this is
> post is not appropriate in any way.
>
> I'm running a Scientific Linux 5 (based on RHEL5) distribution and am
> just running a cpuspeed user space utility --- and therefor do not
> believe I have any user space process watching temperature. However,
> in the earlier kernels, I use to be able to (manually) write to
> /proc/acpi/processor/CPU0/throttling and see a change when read back,
> but now the write does not seem to do anything. This might be OK as I
> 'm thinking the kernel and/or the hardware itself might now suppose to
> be doing the throttling?
>
> Anyway, in 3 windows, I run:
> win1: stress --cpu 8 --io 4 --vm 2 --vm-bytes 128M --timeout 180s
> win2: while sleep 1;do cat /proc/acpi/thermal_zone/THM/temperature;done
> win3: tail -f /var/log/messages
> win4; while sleep 1;do cat /proc/acpi/processor/CPU0/throttling;done
>
> In win2, I see the temperature go from 50 C to over 86 C.
> In win3, before, the temp in win2 reaches 70 C, I see "kernel: CPU0:
> Temperature/speed normal" (and also CPU1) and "kernel: Machine check
> events logged"
> The temperature would probably just continue to climb if I ran the
> test for longer that 180 seconds (the kernel rpms take much longer and
> do not complete before the system hangs :(
>
> In /var/log/mcelog, (running mcelog-0.8pre), I only see "Processor
> core below trip temperature. Throttling disabled" messages. This is
> strange because it seems to be being disabling after never being
> enabled. (Is there a newer mcelog I should be running?)
>
> The fan speed does increase, but the throttling state indication never
> changes (it's always "T0: 100%"). It seems that when I build the
> kernel rpms, the increased fan speed is not enough to keep the
> temperature form running away. It seems that thermal throttling would
> be required and is not happening.
> Should I be doing something from user space? Can I do something from
> user space?
>
> Thanks,
> Ron
>
>
> -
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2008-02-20 9:27 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2008-02-20 6:18 2.6.24 Temperature/speed _not_ normal - no thermal throttling? Ron Rechenmacher
2008-02-20 9:27 ` Alexey Starikovskiy [this message]
2008-02-23 4:33 ` Len Brown
2008-02-25 19:36 ` Chuck Ebbert
2008-02-26 12:31 ` Thomas Renninger
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