On Wednesday 17 January 2007 09:25, you wrote: > On Tue, 16 Jan 2007, Len Brown wrote: > > nobody else with a T60 noticed this since November? > > It might be a good idea to Cc linux-thinkpad@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx okay, added to cc:-) > OTOH, there are reports that the new BIOSes have removed functionality from > the DSDT that allowed multiple cores to work in different clock speeds, so > people may have overlooked the bug Ingo worked around... Intel's dual core products (used in Thinkpads) don't allow the cores to run at different speeds anyway. They use hardware coordination to set the package to the MAX of the requested frequencies. The reason is that there is a single voltage to the package, so if you have to keep it high to run one core fast -- you might as well run the other core fast also. Now there is some fine print to this... There is a bit the BIOS can set to disable HW coordination. But if it does so, then it needs to provide some ACPI info telling the kernel to coordination speeds in software. (ie. the last request from either core will set the P-state of the entire package -- so you want to do a MAX of the requests in software and then do a single request to either core to implement a change). So if HW coordination is erroneously disabled and the BIOS neglects to tell us, then the entire package P-state will flip around depending on the last request from either core. One example of a failure would be if core0 requests fast, and then core1 requests slow, then core0 runs slow when it wanted to run fast. I'm not aware of thinkpads having this bug -- but IIR a Sossaman server board from Intel actually had it -- so who knows who else may... cheers, -Len - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html