On Sunday, July 29, 2012 09:26:48 Larry Finger wrote:
Why are you complaining about the issue here? First of all, I do not recall
it did and the cooling system had been cleaned, I would report the symptoms Can we please stop with constantly referring to the cooling system of the laptop itself. I have been stating already a couple of times that this unless
I guess that you never read my first email, but that you are reacting on my last post. In the first email I wrote about this issue, I indicated that I wanted to validate if I was the only one with this issue or that others also see the same. Also I mentioned that I already filled two bug reports for the issue, so that if other people see the same issue, then they could add to these bug reports. Today I tested further and it has clearly to do with the acpi_cpufreq driver. Using the kernel-vanilla from Kernel:HEAD the issue does not occur, however the acpi_cpufreq driver is also not loaded. If I load the acpi_cpufreq driver, then the cpu is shut down the notebook very shortly after the high load. Maybe you should validate which kernel you are using. I have a Lenovo T410 with an Intel I5 CPU (dual-core with hyperthreading). the kernel itself has influence on the amount of dust there, that this has nothing to do with the issue itself. As indicated before kernel 3.3.x runs fine without any issues and also kernel-vanilla 3.5.x (without the acpi_cpufreq module) runs fine. The temperature of my laptop on 100% cpu load doesn't even reach 70 degrees, but as soon as I load the acpi_cpufreq module the temperature reaches 101 degrees within a matter of seconds. Still convinced that it is an issue of a dirty fan ?? Raymond -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org