From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Johan Vromans Subject: Re: Centrino speedstep Date: Wed, 29 Dec 2004 19:49:19 +0100 Message-ID: References: <20041228212653.GA8436@dominikbrodowski.de> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Return-path: In-Reply-To: <20041228212653.GA8436-X3ehHDuj6sIIGcDfoQAp7BvVK+yQ3ZXh@public.gmane.org> (Dominik Brodowski's message of "Tue, 28 Dec 2004 22:26:53 +0100") Sender: acpi-devel-admin-5NWGOfrQmneRv+LV9MX5uipxlwaOVQ5f@public.gmane.org Errors-To: acpi-devel-admin-5NWGOfrQmneRv+LV9MX5uipxlwaOVQ5f@public.gmane.org List-Unsubscribe: , List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , List-Archive: To: acpi-devel-5NWGOfrQmneRv+LV9MX5uipxlwaOVQ5f@public.gmane.org Cc: Dominik Brodowski List-Id: linux-acpi@vger.kernel.org Dominik Brodowski writes: > It looks like your notebook's BIOS does not report sufficient data to the > speedstep-centrino cpufreq driver. Does the acpi-cpufreq driver work > instead? The acpi-cpufreq driver loads, and the cpufreq tools seem to do something. But do they actually work? E.g. cpufreq-info reports that the limits are 1.6G - 600M, and cpufreq-set accepts 1.6G (confirmed by /proc/cpuinfo) but my CPU is only 1.5G... -- Johan ------------------------------------------------------- SF email is sponsored by - The IT Product Guide Read honest & candid reviews on hundreds of IT Products from real users. Discover which products truly live up to the hype. Start reading now. http://productguide.itmanagersjournal.com/