Tried 2.4.1-ac10 (this includes 2.4.2-pre3 so the latest ACPI updates ar
in). Acpi-idle slowdown is still there, acpi=no-idle helps. Via KT133
chipset, Soltek 75KV motherboard, Duron 600.
ACPI info from dmesg:
ACPI: Core Subsystem version [20010208]
ACPI: Subsystem enabled
ACPI: System firmware supports: C2 C3
ACPI: plvl2lat=90 plvl3lat=900
ACPI: C2 enter=1288 C2 exit=322
ACPI: C3 enter=38653 C3 exit=3221
ACPI: Not using ACPI idle
ACPI: System firmware supports: S0 S1 S5
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Meelis Roos <[email protected]>
Hi
On Mon, 12 Feb 2001, Meelis Roos wrote:
I also tried 2.4.1-ac10, but without acpi=no-idle, my machine crashes.
Part of the output is bellow:
ACPI: Core Subsystem Version [20010208]
ACPI: Subsystem enabled
ACPI: System firmware supports: C2 C3
ACPI: plvl2lat=10 plvl3lat=20
ACPI: C2 enter=143 C2 exit=35
ACPI: C3 enter=858 C3 exit=71
ACPI: Using ACPI idle
ACPI: If experiencing system slowness, try adding "acpi=no-idle" to cmdline
ACPI: System firmware supports: S0 S1 S5
VFS: Mounted root (ex2 filesystem) readonly.
Freeing unused kernel memory: 184k freed
Warning: unable to open an initial console.
Kernel panic: No init found. Try passing init= option to kernel.
Until 2.4.1-ac3(than I skipped directyl to ac10), I had no problem with
acpi support(no slowness or anything else).
If I use acpi=no-idle, the system boots and works fine.
And another thing: I've noticed kacpid in the processlist. I tried
strace -p `pidof kacpid`, and kacpid died. Should I worry ?
I use an Intel PIII 550Mhz, MB: Intel with 440BX chipset(SE440BX-2).
Andrei Ivanov ([email protected])