On 01/07/2011 01:39 PM, R. Mattes wrote: > On Fri, 07 Jan 2011 13:27:41 +0100, rosea.grammostola wrote >> On 01/07/2011 01:25 PM, Jeremy Jongepier wrote: >>> On 01/07/2011 01:04 PM, Martin Homuth-Rosemann wrote: >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> on my aptosid (based upon debian sid) I've changed this file to get >>>> "conservative" gov.: >>>> >>>> --- /etc/init.d/cpufrequtils.orig 2009-11-21 23:39:25.000000000 +0100 >>>> +++ /etc/init.d/cpufrequtils 2010-12-19 16:34:13.000000000 +0100 >>>> @@ -40,7 +40,8 @@ >>>> # MIN_SPEED=500 >>>> >>>> ENABLE="true" >>>> -GOVERNOR="ondemand" >>>> +#GOVERNOR="ondemand" >>>> +GOVERNOR="conservative" >>>> MAX_SPEED="0" >>>> MIN_SPEED="0" >>>> >>>> Ciao, Martin >>> >>> On Ubuntu you could change the governor in /etc/init.d/ondemand too if >>> you don't have cpufrequtils installed. >> Aren't these two files conflicting with each other? > > I guess the OP just used two files to provide you with a convenient diff that > you can apply. > No, these two files won't conflict. You can put whatever you want into > /etc/init.d - nothing > will happen. >Quiz: what files _do_ get executed? :-) Those configured for the runlevel (usually "2" these days) in /etc/rc?.d/ - read `man 8 init`. `ls -l /etc/rc?.d/` Instead of creating symlinks in /etc/rc2.d/ manually one usually configures those with `update-rc.d` (`man update-rc.d`). There's also some GUI's to configure the system-V init scripts, but I don't know what they're called these days.. HTH, robin _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user