Greg Wallace wrote:
Well, that didn't quite do the trick. Powersaved was running in 2 runlevels (5 and, I think, 3). Running chkconfig -d powersaved turned it off for all levels. I rebooted and got the following --
Error Kpowersave X The powersave daemon is not running Starting it will improve performance. /usr/bin/powersaved start
So now how do I get rid of this message?
I don't have kpowersave installed, so I cannot give a ready answer. Is this a system service (i.e., is kpowersave listed in chkconfig -l)? Then it can be turned off with chkconfig -d, too. Or is this a KDE service? Then the KDE control center might have a method to turn it off. Maybe one can also de-install kpowersave. I don't know which dependencies this might disturb; maybe someone else can elaborate on that. If that doesn't help, you might want to try another road: Turn on powersave again (with chkconfig -a), and enter CPUFREQD_MODULE="off" in /etc/sysconfig/powersave/cpufreq. But I don't know if that would get rid of all startup error messages of powersafe, therefore I just shut it down on my non-laptop systems. Cheers, Joachim -- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Joachim Schrod Email: jschrod@acm.org Roedermark, Germany