On Tuesday, May 15, 2012 10:18:04 AM Per Jessen wrote:
Felix Miata wrote:
On 2012/05/15 02:18 (GMT-0400) Cristian Rodríguez composed:
Felix Miata wrote:
Google also said try adding clock=tsc, so next I tried that instead of CPUFREQ=off, also resulting in speedy clock. Google also suggested clock=hpet, which seems to be a fix I'll have to confirm after some sleep.
booting with clocksource=hpet should do the trick.
Simply clock=hpet is working.
I wonder why the kernel is not marking the tsc as unreliable and switching to another clocksource automatically..hrmmm.
Sounds like a question for kernel people.
ps: you hardware is screwed up :-P
You think? Maybe fallout from a single core CPU pretending to be multi? Stupid/ignorant/broken BIOS? I probably already have the latest BIOS installed. I certainly downloaded the latest long ago, but don't know how to find out the BIOS version from a running Linux,
dmidecode.
Found the solution for finding out the bios version interessting. But with my machine I get: ----- No SMBIOS nor DMI entry point found, sorry. ----- Other solutions? -- Linux User 183145 using KDE4 on a Pentium IV , powered by openSUSE 12.1 (i586) Kernel: 3.3.5-23-desktop KDE Development Platform: 4.8.3 (4.8.3) "release 503") 16:57pm up 17:33, 3 users, load average: 2.63, 1.93, 1.68 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org