[opensuse] "Critical trip point"
Sometimes my Notebook HP nx6110 with OpenSuse10.2 decides to shut down. Last time I found for example this system message: Apr 25 17:19:38 duro kernel: ACPI: Critical trip point Apr 25 17:19:38 duro kernel: Critical temperature reached (178 C), shutting down. Apr 25 17:19:38 duro shutdown[7434]: shutting down for system halt Apr 25 17:19:38 duro init: Switching to runlevel: 0 Computer was cool because it was turned on for abou one minute. No 178 C. It happens sometimes and I do not like this behauviour. Is there any way how to stop it? juraj -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Quoting Juraj Trenkler <trenkler@hagy.sk>:
Sometimes my Notebook HP nx6110 with OpenSuse10.2 decides to shut down. Last time I found for example this system message:
Apr 25 17:19:38 duro kernel: ACPI: Critical trip point Apr 25 17:19:38 duro kernel: Critical temperature reached (178 C), shutting down. Apr 25 17:19:38 duro shutdown[7434]: shutting down for system halt Apr 25 17:19:38 duro init: Switching to runlevel: 0
Computer was cool because it was turned on for abou one minute. No 178 C. It happens sometimes and I do not like this behauviour.
I saw something similar (don't remember the exact temperature, but improbably high) on a system. Postmortem suggests that the BIOS PROM failed and the temperature value went to all 1s. I would guess that something connected with the temperature sensor is failing intermittently. Short term is to turn off the shutdown on temperature alert behavior of ACPI and/or the kernel. Long term, get the sensor fixed/replaced. HTH, Jeffrey -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Dňa St 25. Apríl 2007 18:59 Jeffrey Taylor napísal:
Quoting Juraj Trenkler <trenkler@hagy.sk>:
I saw something similar (don't remember the exact temperature, but improbably high) on a system. Postmortem suggests that the BIOS PROM failed and the temperature value went to all 1s. I would guess that something connected with the temperature sensor is failing intermittently. Short term is to turn off the shutdown on temperature alert behavior of ACPI and/or the kernel.
Maybe but how to do it? I am not an expert. Any command or rebuild kernel?
Long term, get the sensor fixed/replaced.
No problem with windows (dual boot notebook). I know that OpenSuse (or kernel) has some problem with setting fan on and off. But this is about temperature sensoring. juraj -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
On Wednesday 25 April 2007 12:48, Juraj Trenkler wrote:
Dňa St 25. Apríl 2007 18:59 Jeffrey Taylor napísal:
Quoting Juraj Trenkler <trenkler@hagy.sk>:
I saw something similar (don't remember the exact temperature, but improbably high) on a system. Postmortem suggests that the BIOS PROM failed and the temperature value went to all 1s. I would guess that something connected with the temperature sensor is failing intermittently. Short term is to turn off the shutdown on temperature alert behavior of ACPI and/or the kernel.
Maybe but how to do it? I am not an expert. Any command or rebuild kernel?
Long term, get the sensor fixed/replaced.
No problem with windows (dual boot notebook). I know that OpenSuse (or kernel) has some problem with setting fan on and off. But this is about temperature sensoring.
Hi Juraj, It might be just wrong reading. The 178 C suggests that. It has to be much lower, for instance Athlon XP 2000+ is extremely hot and it's nominal temperature is 90 C. When it is ran as XP 1500+ the temperature is 65 C. I guess you never used program "sensors" before. I would try it to see what it has to say. Be aware that some hardware support is not configured well. I had to change mine to fit specifications. Please see: /usr/share/doc/packages/sensors for documentation. In /usr/share/doc/packages/ you can also find information on "powersave" and "acpid". The acpid is messenger that listen kernel events, and powersaved is performer it executes actions. -- Regards, Rajko. http://en.opensuse.org/Portal -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
St 25. Apríl 2007 18:59 Jeffrey Taylor wrote:
Quoting Juraj Trenkler <trenkler@hagy.sk>:
Sometimes my Notebook HP nx6110 with OpenSuse10.2 decides to shut down. Last time I found for example this system message:
Apr 25 17:19:38 duro kernel: ACPI: Critical trip point Apr 25 17:19:38 duro kernel: Critical temperature reached (178 C), shutting down. Apr 25 17:19:38 duro shutdown[7434]: shutting down for system halt Apr 25 17:19:38 duro init: Switching to runlevel: 0
Computer was cool because it was turned on for abou one minute. No 178 C. It happens sometimes and I do not like this behauviour.
I saw something similar (don't remember the exact temperature, but improbably high) on a system. Postmortem suggests that the BIOS PROM failed and the temperature value went to all 1s. I would guess that something connected with the temperature sensor is failing intermittently. Short term is to turn off the shutdown on temperature alert behavior of ACPI and/or the kernel. Long term, get the sensor fixed/replaced.
Today my Notebook decided to shut down because of critical temperatures as 31 C every time I started it. The days before it happened very rarely. The problem is in OpenSUSE because Windows or live distributions of other linuxes work well. The only way to stop this behauviour is to start with ACPI=off. But then my USB ports are terribly slow. Mouse is unusable because very slow and my EDGE connection throught USB port has fallen down from 15-20 kB/s to 1-3 kB/s. Starting with ACPI=noirq did not help. Again "critical" temperatures about 30 C and shutting down. Is there any way how to solve this problem? juraj -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
participants (4)
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Jeffrey Taylor
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Juraj Trenkler
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Juraj Trenkler
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Rajko M.