hardware requirements
Kevin Oberman
oberman at es.net
Wed Mar 9 09:58:34 PST 2005
> From: Charles Swiger <cswiger at mac.com>
> Date: Wed, 9 Mar 2005 08:51:45 -0500
> Sender: owner-freebsd-current at freebsd.org
>
> On Mar 8, 2005, at 10:41 AM, Si wrote:
> > I just wanted to check that a Centrio processor is
> > fine to run BSD. couldn't see a note of it anywhere.
>
> "Centrino"? It's fine. :-)
>
> There have been some recent work done to really support the power
> management and CPU speed capabilities of that sort of hardware, too,
> but you might want to ask about potential machines on
> <freebsd-mobile at ...>
As has been pointed out before, "Centrino" is an Intel marketing term for
a system having several components and there is no "Centrino"
processor. Any "Centrino" labeled system has a Pentium-M CPU 9one of
about three different cores, I think, although I don't know if the Sonoma
core is shipping in volume. It's not a P4-M or a P3-M, although it is
generally believed to be closer in design to a P3-M.
As far as power management goes, the framework will be in 5.4, but the
drivers (ESST for a P-M) have not been imported nor has powerd. If you
want to play with them, they can be pulled from HEAD and built on a
5-Stable system. I suspect that Nate Lawson will MFC them to 5-Stable
pretty quickly after 5.4 is released and RELENG_5 is re-opened. The ICH
SpeedStep support in Current is working quite well on my laptop, but I am
not happy with powerd just yet. (I have been trying different tweaks in
the code this morning.) I understand the the Enhanced SpeedStep for P-Ms
is also working well. Since the power management is closely tied to
ACPI, it's discussed on acpi@ quite a bit and also on mobile at .
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)
Ernest O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab)
E-mail: oberman at es.net Phone: +1 510 486-8634
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