Well I don't know really well and there is not much documentation (easily accessible via google) but you can check /etc/acpi/events In theory you can execute a script when a given acpi event occurs, this includes power button press, closing laptop lid, etc. You can look up at the proc interfaces for acpi for some clues too: /proc/acpi As events seems to be closely related to them, maybe you can catch an event from thermal_zone and the execute an script to let you know that your laptop is getting too hot, I'll check on this as it may be useful for me too. Good Luck! On 7/14/07, Robert Moskowitz <rgm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
My notebook has a habit of getting hot, and Centos just shuts down. Just did it again: Jul 15 01:35:12 nc4010 kernel: ACPI: Critical trip point Jul 15 01:35:12 nc4010 kernel: Critical temperature reached (113 C), shutting down. Jul 15 01:35:12 nc4010 kernel: Critical temperature reached (55 C), shutting down. Jul 15 01:35:13 nc4010 shutdown[9847]: shutting down for system halt Jul 15 01:35:13 nc4010 gconfd (rgm-2904): Received signal 15, shutting down cleanly Jul 15 01:35:13 nc4010 gconfd (rgm-2904): Exiting What I would like to know is where are the threshholds stored? It would be nice if some alarm went off (like with low battery), giving me time to grab the blue-ice block out of the freezer (or at least saving some work and pointers!). _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
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