On Thu, 2009-08-27 at 00:48 +0800, Frans Pop wrote: > On Wednesday 26 August 2009, Matthew Garrett wrote: > > On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 06:17:23PM +0200, Frans Pop wrote: > > > Values below 40000 milli-celsius (limit is somewhat arbitrary) > > > don't make sense and can cause the system to go into a thermal > > > heart attack: the actual temperature will always be lower and > > > thus the system will be throttled down to its lowest setting. > > > > Not keen on this - it's a pretty arbitrary cutoff, and there are some > > cases where someone might want this value. Policy belongs in userspace, > > and all that. > > What cases do you see? Testing? Or systems that might have to operate at > such a low temperature? I deliberately chose a value that's at a level > that's easy to reach. > > I agree it is arbitrary, but it will prevent major confusion when someone > like me echo's 95 directly in sysfs. this is a problem. how about something like: #define THERMAL_PASSIVE_WARNING_LEVEL 0x40000 if (state < THERMAL_PASSIVE_WARNING_LEVEL) printk(KERN_WARNING PREFIX "Passive trip point too low, this may" "slow down your laptop because processors are throttled " "whenever the temperature is higher than %dC\n", state/1000); thanks, rui > Would 1000 (1 °C) perhaps be more acceptable as a limit? I doubt there are > valid use-cases for below 0 temps :-) -- 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