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From sales at theschgroup.com Wed May 5 13:04:59 2010 From: sales at theschgroup.com (sales@theschgroup.com) Date: Wed May 5 13:05:05 2010 Subject: Request from mobile@freebsd.org Message-ID: <201005051252.o45CqqHj022150@www2.rwgusa.net> To confirm your email address we have sent this to the email you specified please forward it to sales@theschgroup.com ------------ TYPE OF INFORMATION ------------- ------- REQUESTED FOR PROGRAMS ------------- EMAIL ADDRESS: mobile@freebsd.org NOTE: having you see them.\" \"Good. The rawer the penelope menchaca nude better!\" Derek laughed. there was not an black cuties with bootyberkeley and veller real estate vermont opportunity to stop and talk. When lunchtime came gum job porn we Legalize it in the sense that las vegas gfe escortsbukkake pee pictures it is Controlled. Can somebody give me the From list at understudy.net Wed May 5 20:15:17 2010 From: list at understudy.net (Understudy) Date: Wed May 5 20:15:24 2010 Subject: laptop speakers not working Message-ID: <4BE1D1D1.502@understudy.net> Hi, I have an aspire one 532h. The speakers on the netbook do not seem to produce sound. However if I use the headphones I can hear the sounds just fine. I am running pc-bsd 8.0 [bhorne@pcbsd-7986 /usr/home/bhorne]$ uname -a FreeBSD pcbsd-7986 8.0-RELEASE-p2 FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE-p2 #4: Thu Jan 7 09:20:42 PST 2010 root@build8x32.pcbsd.org :/usr/obj/usr/pcbsd-build80/fbsd-source/8.0-src/sys/PCBSD i386 Part of my /boot/loader.conf # Load sound-support sound_load="YES" # snd_uaudio_load="YES" snd_hda_load="YES" root@pcbsd-7986# cat /dev/sndstat FreeBSD Audio Driver (newpcm: 32bit 2009061500/i386) Installed devices: pcm0: at cad 0 nid 1 on hdac0 kld snd_hda [MPSAFE] (1p:4v/1r:4v channels duplex default) pcm1: at cad 0 nid 1 on hdac0 kld snd_hda [MPSAFE] (0p:0v/1r:1v channels simplex) [bhorne@pcbsd-7986 /usr/home/bhorne]$ mixer Mixer vol is currently set to 99:99 Mixer pcm is currently set to 99:99 Mixer mix is currently set to 0:0 Mixer rec is currently set to 75:75 Mixer ogain is currently set to 0:0 Mixer monitor is currently set to 99:99 Recording source: So my question is what can I do to get sound from the speakers built into the laptop? Sincerely, Brendhan From list at understudy.net Wed May 5 21:57:08 2010 From: list at understudy.net (Understudy) Date: Wed May 5 21:57:16 2010 Subject: laptop speakers not working In-Reply-To: <4BE1D1D1.502@understudy.net> References: <4BE1D1D1.502@understudy.net> Message-ID: <4BE1E9AF.9070804@understudy.net> On 05/05/2010 16:15, Understudy wrote: > Hi, > > I have an aspire one 532h. The speakers on the netbook do not seem to > produce sound. However if I use the headphones I can hear the sounds > just fine. > > I am running pc-bsd 8.0 > > [bhorne@pcbsd-7986 /usr/home/bhorne]$ uname -a > FreeBSD pcbsd-7986 8.0-RELEASE-p2 FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE-p2 #4: Thu Jan 7 > 09:20:42 PST 2010 root@build8x32.pcbsd.org > :/usr/obj/usr/pcbsd-build80/fbsd-source/8.0-src/sys/PCBSD > i386 > > Part of my /boot/loader.conf > > # Load sound-support > sound_load="YES" > # snd_uaudio_load="YES" > snd_hda_load="YES" > > root@pcbsd-7986# cat /dev/sndstat > FreeBSD Audio Driver (newpcm: 32bit 2009061500/i386) > Installed devices: > pcm0: at cad 0 nid 1 on hdac0 kld > snd_hda [MPSAFE] (1p:4v/1r:4v channels duplex default) > pcm1: at cad 0 nid 1 on hdac0 kld > snd_hda [MPSAFE] (0p:0v/1r:1v channels simplex) > > [bhorne@pcbsd-7986 /usr/home/bhorne]$ mixer > Mixer vol is currently set to 99:99 > Mixer pcm is currently set to 99:99 > Mixer mix is currently set to 0:0 > Mixer rec is currently set to 75:75 > Mixer ogain is currently set to 0:0 > Mixer monitor is currently set to 99:99 > Recording source: > > > So my question is what can I do to get sound from the speakers built > into the laptop? > > Sincerely, > Brendhan > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-mobile@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-mobile > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-mobile-unsubscribe@freebsd.org" > Solved Set ogain to 99 Brendhan From nathan.open at gmail.com Sun May 9 09:46:26 2010 From: nathan.open at gmail.com (Nathan BIAGINI) Date: Sun May 9 09:46:33 2010 Subject: high cpu temp and fan speed problem Message-ID: Hi, i bought a hp pavilion dv6-1123ef laptop and i've installed FreeBSD 8.0 on it. Everything work except one think : i can't do high-cpu task. The problem is when i run a high-cpu task (no very high in fact), my cpu temperature can increase to 90?C and when it's the case, system go down. Further, i heard the fans are running. When i work on windows (short time), i never had this kind of problem so i think is may be a kernel config problem. I precise that when i want to run mbmon to minitor cpu temp and fan speed (compiled form the ports), it return an unknow error like what no hardware monitor is found, the cause of my problem? Thanks for helping. PS : sorry if i'm not really clear but english isn't my native language. From jhs at berklix.com Sun May 9 11:38:44 2010 From: jhs at berklix.com (Julian H. Stacey) Date: Sun May 9 11:38:51 2010 Subject: high cpu temp and fan speed problem In-Reply-To: Your message "Sun, 09 May 2010 11:20:27 +0200." Message-ID: <201005091137.o49BbYIH035739@fire.js.berklix.net> Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > Hi, > > i bought a hp pavilion dv6-1123ef laptop and i've installed FreeBSD 8.0 on > it. Everything work except one think : i can't do high-cpu task. The problem > is when i run a high-cpu task (no very high in fact), my cpu temperature can > increase to 90°C and when it's the case, system go down. Further, i heard > the fans are running. When i work on windows (short time), i never had this > kind of problem so i think is may be a kernel config problem. > > I precise that when i want to run mbmon to minitor cpu temp and fan speed > (compiled form the ports), it return an unknow error like what no hardware > monitor is found, the cause of my problem? > > Thanks for helping. > PS : sorry if i'm not really clear but english isn't my native language. All understandable, except 2nd para. needs: s/I precise/I presume/ :-) Others know power better than me, but here's a first answer, mouse copied from my laptop, to search for keyword to read manuals for, while you wait for better answers :-) man powerd # try powerd -v sysctl -a | grep acpi man acpi My /boot/loader.conf # man loader.conf acpi_toshiba_load="YES" # apm_load="YES" boot_verbose="yes" # Collect more info to later tune debug.bootverbose="1" # Variable shown by sysctl -a. # one of those 2 verbose is old syntax I think My /etc/rc.conf # See also /etc/defaults/rc.conf # apm_enable="NO" # Set to YES to enable APM BIOS functions (or NO). # apmd_enable="NO" # Run apmd to handle APM event from userland. # apmd_flags="" # Flags to apmd (if enabled). powerd_enable="YES" # /etc/defaults/rc.conf = "NO" powerd_flags="-a hiadaptive -b adaptive -n adaptive" # -a maximum # too hot underneath, & USB2 cardbus might cook. # -b minimum # just for max life if editing & not processing # man powerd: Default adaptive for battery and hiadaptive for the rest. # sysctl dev.cpu.0.freq # shows 300 to 1900 case $hostname in #{ homehostname) powerd_flags="-a adaptive -b minimum -n minimum" # Less Heat ; no_net_hostname) # powerd_flags="-a maximum -b adaptive -n adaptive" # More Perf powerd_flags="-a adaptive -b minimum -n minimum" # Less Heat # powerd I may be at a lake. No power. ; esac # } Cheers, Julian -- Julian Stacey: BSD Unix Linux C Sys Eng Consultants Munich http://berklix.com Mail plain text, Not HTML quoted-printable Base64 http://www.asciiribbon.org From smithi at nimnet.asn.au Sun May 9 13:07:24 2010 From: smithi at nimnet.asn.au (Ian Smith) Date: Sun May 9 13:07:30 2010 Subject: high cpu temp and fan speed problem In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <20100509223810.X22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > Hi, > > i bought a hp pavilion dv6-1123ef laptop and i've installed FreeBSD 8.0 on > it. Everything work except one think : i can't do high-cpu task. The problem > is when i run a high-cpu task (no very high in fact), my cpu temperature can > increase to 90?C and when it's the case, system go down. Further, i heard > the fans are running. When i work on windows (short time), i never had this > kind of problem so i think is may be a kernel config problem. Sounds perhaps similar to some recent issues, but first we need to know more about your laptop .. please show output of: % sysctl hw.acpi % sysctl dev.cpu % grep -i acpi /var/run/dmesg.boot > I precise that when i want to run mbmon to minitor cpu temp and fan speed > (compiled form the ports), it return an unknow error like what no hardware > monitor is found, the cause of my problem? mbmon only works with some hardware, and then needs tweaking sometimes; worry about that if it doesn't look like an acpi and/or cpufreq issue. Temperature at least should be shown by sysctl dev.cpu.N.temperature. > Thanks for helping. > > PS : sorry if i'm not really clear but english isn't my native language. You're doing fine. cheers, Ian From kennylam at ec-computer.com Sun May 9 14:13:08 2010 From: kennylam at ec-computer.com (kennylam@ec-computer.com) Date: Sun May 9 14:13:24 2010 Subject: [Wholesale & Business News in Asia and China] Comment Authorization Request Message-ID: <20100509135013.B650E3C107@mx1.ec-computer.com> A comment on Wholesale & Business News in Asia and China was posted using this email address: ----- The wine had relaxed me quite a bit naked sister caught storieshttp://www.thesquarelife.com/cwy21/cenom.html and I was proud of myself that I transitive and intransitive verb lesson planvagiana by the bank it is not against american eagle outfitters mission statement1968 chevrolet impala caprice hideaway headlights the Federal Government. If the bank is missouri nude govenorkylie worthy sexy pics able to keep from telling friends. She knew that within days, she would ----- To approve this comment, please visit this URL: http://www.asia-product.com/blog/moderation.php?id=1530651&x=703fac5162eeb774a16950cc196ab292 To cancel this comment, please visit this URL: http://www.asia-product.com/blog/moderation.php?id=1530651&x=703fac5162eeb774a16950cc196ab292&reject=TRUE From smithi at nimnet.asn.au Sun May 9 16:23:21 2010 From: smithi at nimnet.asn.au (Ian Smith) Date: Sun May 9 16:23:29 2010 Subject: high cpu temp and fan speed problem Message-ID: <20100510021753.E22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> Nathan, I replied without noticing that you had not copied the list; I don't mind direct replies, but please keep the list in the ccs. On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > 2010/5/9 Ian Smith > > > On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > > > i bought a hp pavilion dv6-1123ef laptop and i've installed FreeBSD 8.0 > > on > > > it. Everything work except one think : i can't do high-cpu task. The > > problem > > > is when i run a high-cpu task (no very high in fact), my cpu temperature > > can > > > increase to 90?C and when it's the case, system go down. Further, i > > heard > > > the fans are running. When i work on windows (short time), i never had > > this > > > kind of problem so i think is may be a kernel config problem. > > > > Sounds perhaps similar to some recent issues, but first we need to know > > more about your laptop .. please show output of: > > > > % sysctl hw.acpi > > % sysctl dev.cpu > > % grep -i acpi /var/run/dmesg.boot Sorry, my 8.0 laptop is memtesting new RAM today so I didn't check that. Still need to know what make/model CPU it has, and what cpufreq drivers it uses .. can you post the whole dmesg.boot ? (just plain, not verbose) > > > I precise that when i want to run mbmon to minitor cpu temp and fan > > speed > > > (compiled form the ports), it return an unknow error like what no > > hardware > > > monitor is found, the cause of my problem? > > > > mbmon only works with some hardware, and then needs tweaking sometimes; > > worry about that if it doesn't look like an acpi and/or cpufreq issue. > > > > Temperature at least should be shown by sysctl dev.cpu.N.temperature. Oops again - that should say hw.acpi.tz0.temperature (as below) > Thanks for your help. I'm new in the world of UNIX and FreeBSD ;) > > I've joined the outputs of the commands in this message. Ok. If things aren't too big they're perhaps better posted inline, so I'll quote a few bits that look a bit strange regarding temperatures: > acpi_tz0: _CRT value is absurd, ignored (-273.2C) .. > hw.acpi.thermal.min_runtime: 0 > hw.acpi.thermal.polling_rate: 10 > hw.acpi.thermal.user_override: 0 > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.temperature: 56.0C > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.active: -1 > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.passive_cooling: 1 > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.thermal_flags: 0 > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._PSV: 135.0C <<<--- > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._HOT: 90.0C <<<--- > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._CRT: -1 <<<--- > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._ACx: -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TC1: 2 > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TC2: 5 > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TSP: 50 > hw.acpi.cpu.cx_lowest: C1 The _PSV (passive cooling) temp is 'absurd' also; it certainly should be lower than _HOT - which looks possibly right at 90C - and _CRT (critical shutdown) definitely should be there, probably <= 100C. Is it running the latest available BIOS update? > dev.cpu.0.freq: 250 > dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2000/35000 1750/30625 1500/26250 1250/21875 > 1000/17500 750/13125 500/8750 250/4375 > dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/1 C2/57 > dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C1 Maybe more about these after seeing your dmesg.boot .. cheers, Ian From nathan.open at gmail.com Sun May 9 17:19:02 2010 From: nathan.open at gmail.com (Nathan BIAGINI) Date: Sun May 9 17:19:12 2010 Subject: high cpu temp and fan speed problem In-Reply-To: <20100510021753.E22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> References: <20100510021753.E22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> Message-ID: 2010/5/9 Ian Smith > Nathan, I replied without noticing that you had not copied the list; I > don't mind direct replies, but please keep the list in the ccs. > > On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > > 2010/5/9 Ian Smith > > > > > On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > > > > > > i bought a hp pavilion dv6-1123ef laptop and i've installed FreeBSD > 8.0 > > > on > > > > it. Everything work except one think : i can't do high-cpu task. > The > > > problem > > > > is when i run a high-cpu task (no very high in fact), my cpu > temperature > > > can > > > > increase to 90?C and when it's the case, system go down. Further, i > > > heard > > > > the fans are running. When i work on windows (short time), i never > had > > > this > > > > kind of problem so i think is may be a kernel config problem. > > > > > > Sounds perhaps similar to some recent issues, but first we need to > know > > > more about your laptop .. please show output of: > > > > > > % sysctl hw.acpi > > > % sysctl dev.cpu > > > % grep -i acpi /var/run/dmesg.boot > > Sorry, my 8.0 laptop is memtesting new RAM today so I didn't check that. > Still need to know what make/model CPU it has, and what cpufreq drivers > it uses .. can you post the whole dmesg.boot ? (just plain, not verbose) > > > > > I precise that when i want to run mbmon to minitor cpu temp and fan > > > speed > > > > (compiled form the ports), it return an unknow error like what no > > > hardware > > > > monitor is found, the cause of my problem? > > > > > > mbmon only works with some hardware, and then needs tweaking > sometimes; > > > worry about that if it doesn't look like an acpi and/or cpufreq issue. > > > > > > Temperature at least should be shown by sysctl dev.cpu.N.temperature. > > Oops again - that should say hw.acpi.tz0.temperature (as below) > > > Thanks for your help. I'm new in the world of UNIX and FreeBSD ;) > > > > I've joined the outputs of the commands in this message. > > Ok. If things aren't too big they're perhaps better posted inline, so > I'll quote a few bits that look a bit strange regarding temperatures: > > > acpi_tz0: _CRT value is absurd, ignored (-273.2C) > .. > > hw.acpi.thermal.min_runtime: 0 > > hw.acpi.thermal.polling_rate: 10 > > hw.acpi.thermal.user_override: 0 > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.temperature: 56.0C > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.active: -1 > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.passive_cooling: 1 > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.thermal_flags: 0 > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._PSV: 135.0C <<<--- > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._HOT: 90.0C <<<--- > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._CRT: -1 <<<--- > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._ACx: -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TC1: 2 > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TC2: 5 > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TSP: 50 > > hw.acpi.cpu.cx_lowest: C1 > > The _PSV (passive cooling) temp is 'absurd' also; it certainly should be > lower than _HOT - which looks possibly right at 90C - and _CRT (critical > shutdown) definitely should be there, probably <= 100C. > > Is it running the latest available BIOS update? > > > dev.cpu.0.freq: 250 > > dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2000/35000 1750/30625 1500/26250 1250/21875 > > 1000/17500 750/13125 500/8750 250/4375 > > dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/1 C2/57 > > dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C1 > > Maybe more about these after seeing your dmesg.boot .. > > cheers, Ian > Ok, so. I tried to understand. The whole dmesg.boot file : http://pastebin.com/U4p8Y8Pi (inline ,)) I don't really know if i have the last available BIOS version, i never upgrade it manually... Now, i read the acpi man page and i don't see anything concerning hw.acpi.tz0.temperature, it is a sysctl option? _HOT should be set to 90?C and _PSV should be set to a less value than _HOT? and _CRT to a greater value? 100?C. I understand there is a problem with this values but i don't understand how i have to set them. From gaijin.k at ovi.com Sun May 9 23:09:14 2010 From: gaijin.k at ovi.com (Alexandre "Sunny" Kovalenko) Date: Sun May 9 23:09:21 2010 Subject: high cpu temp and fan speed problem In-Reply-To: <20100510021753.E22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> References: <20100510021753.E22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> Message-ID: <1273445816.1599.13.camel@RabbitsDen> On Mon, 2010-05-10 at 02:23 +1000, Ian Smith wrote: > Nathan, I replied without noticing that you had not copied the list; I > don't mind direct replies, but please keep the list in the ccs. > > On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > > 2010/5/9 Ian Smith > > > > > On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > > > > > > i bought a hp pavilion dv6-1123ef laptop and i've installed FreeBSD 8.0 > > > on > > > > it. Everything work except one think : i can't do high-cpu task. The > > > problem > > > > is when i run a high-cpu task (no very high in fact), my cpu temperature > > > can > > > > increase to 90?C and when it's the case, system go down. Further, i > > > heard > > > > the fans are running. When i work on windows (short time), i never had > > > this > > > > kind of problem so i think is may be a kernel config problem. > > > > > > Sounds perhaps similar to some recent issues, but first we need to know > > > more about your laptop .. please show output of: > > > > > > % sysctl hw.acpi > > > % sysctl dev.cpu > > > % grep -i acpi /var/run/dmesg.boot > > Sorry, my 8.0 laptop is memtesting new RAM today so I didn't check that. > Still need to know what make/model CPU it has, and what cpufreq drivers > it uses .. can you post the whole dmesg.boot ? (just plain, not verbose) > > > > > I precise that when i want to run mbmon to minitor cpu temp and fan > > > speed > > > > (compiled form the ports), it return an unknow error like what no > > > hardware > > > > monitor is found, the cause of my problem? > > > > > > mbmon only works with some hardware, and then needs tweaking sometimes; > > > worry about that if it doesn't look like an acpi and/or cpufreq issue. > > > > > > Temperature at least should be shown by sysctl dev.cpu.N.temperature. > > Oops again - that should say hw.acpi.tz0.temperature (as below) > > > Thanks for your help. I'm new in the world of UNIX and FreeBSD ;) > > > > I've joined the outputs of the commands in this message. > > Ok. If things aren't too big they're perhaps better posted inline, so > I'll quote a few bits that look a bit strange regarding temperatures: > > > acpi_tz0: _CRT value is absurd, ignored (-273.2C) Looks like _CRT returns 1 (one), which, definitely, is absurd. Nathan, you can dump your ASL (read instructions in the handbook) and post it somewhere for people to look at. I would suggest you give some thought to the fact that changes to ASL, even well intentioned ones, could, theoretically, damage your hardware, so if you are not willing to make changes and override ASL on boot, most of this is an academic exercise, and could be skipped altogether. Now, I have done it [overriding ASL] in the past to my own hardware and know few other people who have done it with the positive results, but this is your choice and you need to go into it with your eyes open. Additional information could be found in the thermal chapter of the ACPI specification, which could be be read separately and has very useful and well-commented example. -- Alexandre Kovalenko (????????? ?????????) -------------------------------------------------------------- Ovi Mail: Get mail on your mobile or the web http://mail.ovi.com From jhs at berklix.com Sun May 9 23:29:26 2010 From: jhs at berklix.com (Julian H. Stacey) Date: Sun May 9 23:29:34 2010 Subject: high cpu temp and fan speed problem In-Reply-To: Your message "Sun, 09 May 2010 14:45:22 +0200." Message-ID: <201005092329.o49NSiVI045698@fire.js.berklix.net> Hi Nathan, I restored cc freebsd-mobile@freebsd.org & converted top post to bottom post. Reference: > From: Nathan BIAGINI > Date: Sun, 9 May 2010 14:45:22 +0200 > To: "Julian H. Stacey" > > 2010/5/9, Julian H. Stacey : > > Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > >> Hi, > >> > >> i bought a hp pavilion dv6-1123ef laptop and i've installed FreeBSD 8.0 on > >> it. Everything work except one think : i can't do high-cpu task. The > >> problem > >> is when i run a high-cpu task (no very high in fact), my cpu temperature > >> can > >> increase to 90°C and when it's the case, system go down. Further, i heard > >> the fans are running. When i work on windows (short time), i never had > >> this > >> kind of problem so i think is may be a kernel config problem. > >> > >> I precise that when i want to run mbmon to minitor cpu temp and fan speed > >> (compiled form the ports), it return an unknow error like what no hardware > >> monitor is found, the cause of my problem? > >> > >> Thanks for helping. > > > >> PS : sorry if i'm not really clear but english isn't my native language. > > > "Julian H. Stacey" wrote: > > All understandable, except 2nd para. needs: s/I precise/I presume/ :-) > > > > Others know power better than me, but here's a first answer, > > mouse copied from my laptop, to search for keyword to read manuals for, > > while you wait for better answers :-) > > > > man powerd # try powerd -v > > sysctl -a | grep acpi > > man acpi > > > > My /boot/loader.conf # man loader.conf > > acpi_toshiba_load="YES" > > # apm_load="YES" > > boot_verbose="yes" # Collect more info to later tune > > debug.bootverbose="1" # Variable shown by sysctl -a. > > # one of those 2 verbose is old syntax I think > > > > My /etc/rc.conf # See also /etc/defaults/rc.conf > > # apm_enable="NO" # Set to YES to enable APM BIOS functions (or NO). > > # apmd_enable="NO" # Run apmd to handle APM event from userland. > > # apmd_flags="" # Flags to apmd (if enabled). > > > > powerd_enable="YES" # /etc/defaults/rc.conf = "NO" > > powerd_flags="-a hiadaptive -b adaptive -n adaptive" > > # -a maximum # too hot underneath, & USB2 cardbus might cook. > > # -b minimum # just for max life if editing & not processing > > # man powerd: Default adaptive for battery and hiadaptive for the rest. > > # sysctl dev.cpu.0.freq # shows 300 to 1900 > > case $hostname in #{ > > homehostname) > > powerd_flags="-a adaptive -b minimum -n minimum" # Less Heat > > ; > > no_net_hostname) > > # powerd_flags="-a maximum -b adaptive -n adaptive" # More Perf > > powerd_flags="-a adaptive -b minimum -n minimum" # Less > > Heat > > # powerd I may be at a lake. No power. > > ; > > esac # } > > > > Cheers, > > Julian Nathan BIAGINI wrote Sun, 9 May 2010 14:45:22 +0200: > Thanks for it Julian. Powerd in adaptive mode don't solve anything. I I suppose not, if you've given it a long compile intensive task. ( Though it keeps my laptop cooler to the touch when idling, & sysctl dev.cpu.0.freq reports 300 instead of 1900, ie 16%, ( & if one assumes CMOS power is a square of frequency, I suppose my CPU might be consuming 300^2 / 1900^2 ie 2.5% )) > add acpi_intel_load="YES" in my loader.conf file and i'm trying to > understand most of the command specified on acpi manual. > > Other idea, it is maybe a problem with the fans. The fans frequency is > may be to small, i will try to learn more about that. A lots of sysctl values are read only, you can not set them. I assume one cannot set fan speed by sysctl (though I've seen tower PCs. with manual speed control knobs at the back) I assume one also cannot set some temperatures, except eg power down threshold, Maybe your fan has a stiff bearing when hot, or fluff in air line. Try turning off & spinning fan with a small stick (or flexible plastic refill of a Biro (ball point pen). When not mobile, (& thus powered, from mains 220V, & may be running long at full speed) I place my laptop on larger feet, to allow more air under (especially as cantilevered laptop stand has raised folded metal sides that block air). My cardbus also gets very hot, & has crashed my laptop before, I use an external powered USB hub to avoid my cardbus also having to power external USB devices (Each USB socket can provide up to 5V x 0.5A = 2.5W). Some cheap laptops [used to] use CPUs sold for towers, they needed more air cooling. I guess CPUs still come in ranges of power consumption that may tempt laptop manufacturers to design for one CPU, then get desperate on price, & build in cheaper hotter chips. > The mbmon soft alway return the same error and i don't find anything > on google about this error (only halt answer). Mbmon doesnt work on my laptop either (but fan rarely goes on in idel with powerd) PS I see quite a lot of "cdev=apm" & "Processing event '!system=ACPI subsystem=Thermal type=\_TZ_.THRM notify=0x80'" entries with devd (replacement of USBD on older FreeBSD). Maybe check if you have devd running (devd fails if there is a syntax error in config file). > So now i will read manual on my noisy laptop :-) I too should again read man acpi_thermal Cheers, Julian -- Julian Stacey: BSD Unix Linux C Sys Eng Consultants Munich http://berklix.com Mail plain text, Not HTML quoted-printable Base64 http://www.asciiribbon.org From smithi at nimnet.asn.au Mon May 10 07:23:12 2010 From: smithi at nimnet.asn.au (Ian Smith) Date: Mon May 10 07:23:19 2010 Subject: high cpu temp and fan speed problem In-Reply-To: References: <20100510021753.E22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> Message-ID: <20100510150130.A22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > 2010/5/9 Ian Smith > > On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > > > 2010/5/9 Ian Smith > > > > > > > On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > > > > > Hi, > > > > > > > > > > i bought a hp pavilion dv6-1123ef laptop and i've installed FreeBSD > > 8.0 > > > > on > > > > > it. Everything work except one think : i can't do high-cpu task. > > The > > > > problem > > > > > is when i run a high-cpu task (no very high in fact), my cpu > > temperature > > > > can > > > > > increase to 90?C and when it's the case, system go down. Further, i > > > > heard > > > > > the fans are running. When i work on windows (short time), i never > > had > > > > this > > > > > kind of problem so i think is may be a kernel config problem. [.. trimming a bit] > > > > Sounds perhaps similar to some recent issues, but first we need to > > know > > > > more about your laptop .. please show output of: > > > > > > > > % sysctl hw.acpi > > > > % sysctl dev.cpu > > > > % grep -i acpi /var/run/dmesg.boot > > > > Sorry, my 8.0 laptop is memtesting new RAM today so I didn't check that. > > Still need to know what make/model CPU it has, and what cpufreq drivers > > it uses .. can you post the whole dmesg.boot ? (just plain, not verbose) [..] > > Ok. If things aren't too big they're perhaps better posted inline, so > > I'll quote a few bits that look a bit strange regarding temperatures: > > > > > acpi_tz0: _CRT value is absurd, ignored (-273.2C) > > .. > > > hw.acpi.thermal.min_runtime: 0 > > > hw.acpi.thermal.polling_rate: 10 > > > hw.acpi.thermal.user_override: 0 > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.temperature: 56.0C > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.active: -1 > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.passive_cooling: 1 > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.thermal_flags: 0 > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._PSV: 135.0C <<<--- > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._HOT: 90.0C <<<--- > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._CRT: -1 <<<--- > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._ACx: -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TC1: 2 > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TC2: 5 > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TSP: 50 > > > hw.acpi.cpu.cx_lowest: C1 > > > > The _PSV (passive cooling) temp is 'absurd' also; it certainly should be > > lower than _HOT - which looks possibly right at 90C - and _CRT (critical > > shutdown) definitely should be there, probably <= 100C. > > > > Is it running the latest available BIOS update? > > > > > dev.cpu.0.freq: 250 > > > dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2000/35000 1750/30625 1500/26250 1250/21875 > > > 1000/17500 750/13125 500/8750 250/4375 > > > dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/1 C2/57 > > > dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C1 > > > > Maybe more about these after seeing your dmesg.boot .. > > > > cheers, Ian > > > > Ok, so. I tried to understand. > > The whole dmesg.boot file : http://pastebin.com/U4p8Y8Pi (inline ,)) Thanks. By 'inline' I meant you could have included it in your message, but that's ok. Here are the bits I was really interested to know: ======= FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE #0: Sat Nov 21 15:48:17 UTC 2009 root@almeida.cse.buffalo.edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC [ is this i386 or amd64? Either will run on this machine, and I find it a bit annoying that the above line never tells .. 'uname -a' will ] CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU T5800 @ 2.00GHz (1995.24-MHz 686-class CPU) Origin = "GenuineIntel" Id = 0x6fd Stepping = 13 Features=0xbfebfbff Features2=0xe39d AMD Features=0x20100000 AMD Features2=0x1 TSC: P-state invariant real memory = 3221225472 (3072 MB) avail memory = 3143438336 (2997 MB) ACPI APIC Table: FreeBSD/SMP: Multiprocessor System Detected: 2 CPUs FreeBSD/SMP: 1 package(s) x 2 core(s) cpu0 (BSP): APIC ID: 0 cpu1 (AP): APIC ID: 1 [ aside: does anyone know what 'TSC: P-state invariant' means? ] acpi_tz0: on acpi0 acpi_tz0: _CRT value is absurd, ignored (-273.2C) atrtc0: port 0x70-0x77 on acpi0 atrtc0: Warning: Couldn't map I/O. [ not sure if that atrtc0: Warning is significant? ] cpu0: on acpi0 est0: on cpu0 p4tcc0: on cpu0 cpu1: on acpi0 est1: on cpu1 p4tcc1: on cpu1 ======= Right, it's a Core2 Duo at 2GHz, using est (absolute) frequency control, and p4tcc (relative) frequency thermal control. See cpufreq(4) ie 'man cpufreq'. This combination seems to be a problem for these in some recent machines. While at 250MHz it should be using only 4.375 watts, that doesn't seem to be working right on these, and you may be better off (regarding heat) using the fewer frequencies provided just by est. ======= dev.cpu.0.freq: 250 dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2000/35000 1750/30625 1500/26250 1250/21875 1000/17500 750/13125 500/8750 250/4375 dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/1 C2/57 dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C1 dev.cpu.0.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% last 500us ======= So, cpufreq seems only to be seeing your 2000 frequency, and each of these other frequencies are 7/8, 6/8 .. 1/8 of 2000MHz, generated by p4tcc, which seems odd, unless 1000 is a 'real' supported frequency? Please try adding the following lines to your /boot/loader.conf and rebooting, then paste what 'sysctl dev.cpu' says after that? Also check if just doing this makes any difference to your overheating issue, as it has for some people. hint.p4tcc.0.disable="1" hint.acpi_throttle.0.disable="1" hint.p4tcc.1.disable="1" hint.acpi_throttle.1.disable="1" You need both pairs; if you just disable p4tcc, acpi_throttle would attach and provide those same frequencies, so would be no advantage. You may also find 'Fighting for the power' by Alexander Motin useful, in particular enabling your available C2 state to reduce idle power use: http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2009-May/006436.html > I don't really know if i have the last available BIOS version, i never > upgrade it manually... If you boot into your BIOS setup, what BIOS version does it show? According to the HP website for your model, there's only a BIOS update for models running AMD processors, none mentioned for the Intel ones - and even then, of course, only for various versions of Windows. http://h10061.www1.hp.com/ccsearch/search?method=mainQuery&qry=BIOS&pname=HP+Pavilion+dv6-1123ef+Entertainment+Notebook+PC&ptype=consumer&stype=pn&spname=HP+Pavilion+dv6-1123ef+Entertainment+Notebook+PC&spid=3949647&productBigSeriesOid=3837240&pid=3949646&temp_hql=s-001%2Cs-002%2Cs-004%2Cs-003%2Cs-007%2Cs-017%2Cz-001&product_line_code=KV&lang=en&ctry=nl&dlc=nl&mode=fb&uqry=&pname_desc=HP+Pavilion+dv6-1123ef+Entertainment+Notebook+PC and http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/document?docname=c01056794&cc=nl&lc=en&dlc=nl&product=3949647 If you are running the latest BIOS, which seems likely, then you might need to modify your ASL, in which case pay very good attention to what Alexandre says about that; he can very likely help if you are prepared to experiment a bit. http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/acpi-debug.html (but no need to bother the freebsd-acpi list with this, not yet anyway) > Now, i read the acpi man page and i don't see anything concerning > hw.acpi.tz0.temperature, it is a sysctl option? See acpi_thermal(4) > _HOT should be set to 90?C and _PSV should be set to a less value than _HOT? > and _CRT to a greater value? 100?C. I understand there is a problem with > this values but i don't understand how i have to set them. You can adjust _PSV, but not _HOT nor _CRT, unless you modify the ASL. Of course, Julian's advice about making sure there's no dust or fluff etc blocking your fan airways and heatsink is good too; spending a can of compressed air has helped people where that has been an issue. cheers, Ian From nathan.open at gmail.com Mon May 10 17:32:35 2010 From: nathan.open at gmail.com (Nathan BIAGINI) Date: Mon May 10 17:32:43 2010 Subject: high cpu temp and fan speed problem In-Reply-To: <20100510150130.A22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> References: <20100510021753.E22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> <20100510150130.A22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> Message-ID: 2010/5/10 Ian Smith > On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > > 2010/5/9 Ian Smith > > > On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > > > > 2010/5/9 Ian Smith > > > > > > > > > On Sun, 9 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > > > > > > Hi, > > > > > > > > > > > > i bought a hp pavilion dv6-1123ef laptop and i've installed > FreeBSD > > > 8.0 > > > > > on > > > > > > it. Everything work except one think : i can't do high-cpu > task. > > > The > > > > > problem > > > > > > is when i run a high-cpu task (no very high in fact), my cpu > > > temperature > > > > > can > > > > > > increase to 90?C and when it's the case, system go down. > Further, i > > > > > heard > > > > > > the fans are running. When i work on windows (short time), i > never > > > had > > > > > this > > > > > > kind of problem so i think is may be a kernel config problem. > [.. trimming a bit] > > > > > Sounds perhaps similar to some recent issues, but first we need > to > > > know > > > > > more about your laptop .. please show output of: > > > > > > > > > > % sysctl hw.acpi > > > > > % sysctl dev.cpu > > > > > % grep -i acpi /var/run/dmesg.boot > > > > > > Sorry, my 8.0 laptop is memtesting new RAM today so I didn't check > that. > > > Still need to know what make/model CPU it has, and what cpufreq > drivers > > > it uses .. can you post the whole dmesg.boot ? (just plain, not > verbose) > [..] > > > Ok. If things aren't too big they're perhaps better posted inline, so > > > I'll quote a few bits that look a bit strange regarding temperatures: > > > > > > > acpi_tz0: _CRT value is absurd, ignored (-273.2C) > > > .. > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.min_runtime: 0 > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.polling_rate: 10 > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.user_override: 0 > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.temperature: 56.0C > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.active: -1 > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.passive_cooling: 1 > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.thermal_flags: 0 > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._PSV: 135.0C <<<--- > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._HOT: 90.0C <<<--- > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._CRT: -1 <<<--- > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._ACx: -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TC1: 2 > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TC2: 5 > > > > hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TSP: 50 > > > > hw.acpi.cpu.cx_lowest: C1 > > > > > > The _PSV (passive cooling) temp is 'absurd' also; it certainly should > be > > > lower than _HOT - which looks possibly right at 90C - and _CRT > (critical > > > shutdown) definitely should be there, probably <= 100C. > > > > > > Is it running the latest available BIOS update? > > > > > > > dev.cpu.0.freq: 250 > > > > dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2000/35000 1750/30625 1500/26250 1250/21875 > > > > 1000/17500 750/13125 500/8750 250/4375 > > > > dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/1 C2/57 > > > > dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C1 > > > > > > Maybe more about these after seeing your dmesg.boot .. > > > > > > cheers, Ian > > > > > > > Ok, so. I tried to understand. > > > > The whole dmesg.boot file : http://pastebin.com/U4p8Y8Pi (inline ,)) > > Thanks. By 'inline' I meant you could have included it in your message, > but that's ok. Here are the bits I was really interested to know: > > ======= > FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE #0: Sat Nov 21 15:48:17 UTC 2009 > root@almeida.cse.buffalo.edu:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC > > [ is this i386 or amd64? Either will run on this machine, and I find it > a bit annoying that the above line never tells .. 'uname -a' will ] > > CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU T5800 @ 2.00GHz (1995.24-MHz 686-class > CPU) > Origin = "GenuineIntel" Id = 0x6fd Stepping = 13 > > Features=0xbfebfbff CMOV,PAT,PSE36,CLFLUSH,DTS,ACPI,MMX,FXSR,SSE,SSE2,SS,HTT,TM,PBE> > Features2=0xe39d > AMD Features=0x20100000 > AMD Features2=0x1 > TSC: P-state invariant > real memory = 3221225472 (3072 MB) > avail memory = 3143438336 (2997 MB) > ACPI APIC Table: > FreeBSD/SMP: Multiprocessor System Detected: 2 CPUs > FreeBSD/SMP: 1 package(s) x 2 core(s) > cpu0 (BSP): APIC ID: 0 > cpu1 (AP): APIC ID: 1 > > [ aside: does anyone know what 'TSC: P-state invariant' means? ] > > acpi_tz0: on acpi0 > acpi_tz0: _CRT value is absurd, ignored (-273.2C) > atrtc0: port 0x70-0x77 on acpi0 > atrtc0: Warning: Couldn't map I/O. > > [ not sure if that atrtc0: Warning is significant? ] > > cpu0: on acpi0 > est0: on cpu0 > p4tcc0: on cpu0 > cpu1: on acpi0 > est1: on cpu1 > p4tcc1: on cpu1 > ======= > > Right, it's a Core2 Duo at 2GHz, using est (absolute) frequency control, > and p4tcc (relative) frequency thermal control. See cpufreq(4) ie 'man > cpufreq'. This combination seems to be a problem for these in some > recent machines. While at 250MHz it should be using only 4.375 watts, > that doesn't seem to be working right on these, and you may be better > off (regarding heat) using the fewer frequencies provided just by est. > > ======= > dev.cpu.0.freq: 250 > dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2000/35000 1750/30625 1500/26250 1250/21875 > 1000/17500 750/13125 500/8750 250/4375 > dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/1 C2/57 > dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C1 > dev.cpu.0.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% last 500us > ======= > > So, cpufreq seems only to be seeing your 2000 frequency, and each of > these other frequencies are 7/8, 6/8 .. 1/8 of 2000MHz, generated by > p4tcc, which seems odd, unless 1000 is a 'real' supported frequency? > > Please try adding the following lines to your /boot/loader.conf and > rebooting, then paste what 'sysctl dev.cpu' says after that? Also check > if just doing this makes any difference to your overheating issue, as it > has for some people. > > hint.p4tcc.0.disable="1" > hint.acpi_throttle.0.disable="1" > hint.p4tcc.1.disable="1" > hint.acpi_throttle.1.disable="1" > > You need both pairs; if you just disable p4tcc, acpi_throttle would > attach and provide those same frequencies, so would be no advantage. > > You may also find 'Fighting for the power' by Alexander Motin useful, in > particular enabling your available C2 state to reduce idle power use: > > http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2009-May/006436.html > > > I don't really know if i have the last available BIOS version, i never > > upgrade it manually... > > If you boot into your BIOS setup, what BIOS version does it show? > > According to the HP website for your model, there's only a BIOS update > for models running AMD processors, none mentioned for the Intel ones > - and even then, of course, only for various versions of Windows. > > > http://h10061.www1.hp.com/ccsearch/search?method=mainQuery&qry=BIOS&pname=HP+Pavilion+dv6-1123ef+Entertainment+Notebook+PC&ptype=consumer&stype=pn&spname=HP+Pavilion+dv6-1123ef+Entertainment+Notebook+PC&spid=3949647&productBigSeriesOid=3837240&pid=3949646&temp_hql=s-001%2Cs-002%2Cs-004%2Cs-003%2Cs-007%2Cs-017%2Cz-001&product_line_code=KV&lang=en&ctry=nl&dlc=nl&mode=fb&uqry=&pname_desc=HP+Pavilion+dv6-1123ef+Entertainment+Notebook+PC > and > > http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/document?docname=c01056794&cc=nl&lc=en&dlc=nl&product=3949647 > > If you are running the latest BIOS, which seems likely, then you might > need to modify your ASL, in which case pay very good attention to what > Alexandre says about that; he can very likely help if you are prepared > to experiment a bit. > > http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/acpi-debug.html > > (but no need to bother the freebsd-acpi list with this, not yet anyway) > > > Now, i read the acpi man page and i don't see anything concerning > > hw.acpi.tz0.temperature, it is a sysctl option? > > See acpi_thermal(4) > > > _HOT should be set to 90?C and _PSV should be set to a less value than > _HOT? > > and _CRT to a greater value? 100?C. I understand there is a problem with > > this values but i don't understand how i have to set them. > > You can adjust _PSV, but not _HOT nor _CRT, unless you modify the ASL. > > Of course, Julian's advice about making sure there's no dust or fluff > etc blocking your fan airways and heatsink is good too; spending a can > of compressed air has helped people where that has been an issue. > > cheers, Ian Ok, thanks for it. The topic of Alexandre is very useful! So, i modify my loader.conf an rc.conf file by adding lines you told me to write (loader.conf) and lines to enable C2 and others to reduce number of sounds genertaed interrupts (see 'Fighting for the power' of Alexandre). I reboot and as you have asked me, the output of systcl dev.cpu after reboot : http://pastebin.com/bajvzy1W I tried to see how to behave my laptop (regarding fan noise and heat). Overall, i think it's a bit better, less noisy but not really perfect (sorry about my vagueness). I didn't do all steps of the topic of Alexandre and maybe after do them, it will be better again... I tried to do an high cpu task but same behavor, system shuting down (heat exceed 92?C, critical...) I will to learn more about acpi debug and ASL from the handbokk and share you more about these. From smithi at nimnet.asn.au Wed May 12 05:56:03 2010 From: smithi at nimnet.asn.au (Ian Smith) Date: Wed May 12 05:56:14 2010 Subject: high cpu temp and fan speed problem In-Reply-To: References: <20100510021753.E22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> <20100510150130.A22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> Message-ID: <20100512145240.U22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> On Mon, 10 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > 2010/5/10 Ian Smith [..] > > cpu0: on acpi0 > > est0: on cpu0 > > p4tcc0: on cpu0 > > cpu1: on acpi0 > > est1: on cpu1 > > p4tcc1: on cpu1 > > ======= > > > > Right, it's a Core2 Duo at 2GHz, using est (absolute) frequency control, > > and p4tcc (relative) frequency thermal control. See cpufreq(4) ie 'man > > cpufreq'. This combination seems to be a problem for these in some > > recent machines. While at 250MHz it should be using only 4.375 watts, > > that doesn't seem to be working right on these, and you may be better > > off (regarding heat) using the fewer frequencies provided just by est. > > > > ======= > > dev.cpu.0.freq: 250 > > dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2000/35000 1750/30625 1500/26250 1250/21875 > > 1000/17500 750/13125 500/8750 250/4375 > > dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/1 C2/57 > > dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C1 > > dev.cpu.0.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% last 500us > > ======= > > > > So, cpufreq seems only to be seeing your 2000 frequency, and each of > > these other frequencies are 7/8, 6/8 .. 1/8 of 2000MHz, generated by > > p4tcc, which seems odd, unless 1000 is a 'real' supported frequency? > > > > Please try adding the following lines to your /boot/loader.conf and > > rebooting, then paste what 'sysctl dev.cpu' says after that? Also check > > if just doing this makes any difference to your overheating issue, as it > > has for some people. > > > > hint.p4tcc.0.disable="1" > > hint.acpi_throttle.0.disable="1" > > hint.p4tcc.1.disable="1" > > hint.acpi_throttle.1.disable="1" > > > > You need both pairs; if you just disable p4tcc, acpi_throttle would > > attach and provide those same frequencies, so would be no advantage. > > > > You may also find 'Fighting for the power' by Alexander Motin useful, in > > particular enabling your available C2 state to reduce idle power use: > > > > http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2009-May/006436.html [..] > Ok, thanks for it. The topic of Alexandre is very useful! So, i modify my > loader.conf an rc.conf file by adding lines you told me to write > (loader.conf) and lines to enable C2 and others to reduce number of sounds > genertaed interrupts (see 'Fighting for the power' of Alexandre). Yes C2 should help overall, even on CPU-intensive tasks like buildworld, and advice on how to to power-down subsystems you're not using is handy. Is there any mention in your BIOS settings about 'C1E' or similar? > I reboot and as you have asked me, the output of systcl dev.cpu after > reboot : http://pastebin.com/bajvzy1W : dev.cpu.0.freq: 250 : dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2000/35000 1750/30625 1500/26250 1250/21875 : 1000/17500 750/13125 500/8750 250/4375 : dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/1 C2/57 : dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C2 : dev.cpu.0.cx_usage: 5.51% 94.48% last 229us Well now I'm confused, unless your C2D actually is really providing all of those frequencies out of the box, without any throttling driver? Are you sure that after booting with those hints in /boot/loader.conf (check: in /boot directory) that no lines at all are shown matching: % egrep 'p4tcc|acpi_throttle' /var/run/dmesg.boot If that shows nothing, then I've been way off-base about this .. > I tried to see how to behave my laptop (regarding fan noise and heat). > Overall, i think it's a bit better, less noisy but not really perfect (sorry > about my vagueness). > > I didn't do all steps of the topic of Alexandre and maybe after do them, it > will be better again... First, a little (understandable) confusion; the 'Fighting for the power' post was by AlexandER Motin (mav@freebsd.org), the developer of recent snd_hda and mods to the powerd algorithms, among other things. It was AlexandRE Kovalenko, note spelling, (cc'd), who replied offering to look through your BIOS ASL code if you dump it out and post it somewhere, as detailed on the ACPI debugging page. > I tried to do an high cpu task but same behavor, system shuting down (heat > exceed 92?C, critical...) Hmm, there was no 92C mentioned before; _HOT was 90C and I don't think FreeBSD uses _HOT at all, just _PSV and _CRT (any corrections welcome) > I will to learn more about acpi debug and ASL from the handbokk and share > you more about these. Good idea. Generating your ASL is simple using those instructions, and Alexandre has a track record at spotting problems, especially thermal, among others who might be interested in looking through it. But please confirm there's no mention of p4tcc or acpi_thermal in dmesg? cheers, Ian From nathan.open at gmail.com Wed May 12 18:24:43 2010 From: nathan.open at gmail.com (Nathan BIAGINI) Date: Wed May 12 18:24:50 2010 Subject: high cpu temp and fan speed problem In-Reply-To: <20100512145240.U22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> References: <20100510021753.E22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> <20100510150130.A22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> <20100512145240.U22612@sola.nimnet.asn.au> Message-ID: 2010/5/12 Ian Smith > On Mon, 10 May 2010, Nathan BIAGINI wrote: > > 2010/5/10 Ian Smith > [..] > > > cpu0: on acpi0 > > > est0: on cpu0 > > > p4tcc0: on cpu0 > > > cpu1: on acpi0 > > > est1: on cpu1 > > > p4tcc1: on cpu1 > > > ======= > > > > > > Right, it's a Core2 Duo at 2GHz, using est (absolute) frequency > control, > > > and p4tcc (relative) frequency thermal control. See cpufreq(4) ie > 'man > > > cpufreq'. This combination seems to be a problem for these in some > > > recent machines. While at 250MHz it should be using only 4.375 watts, > > > that doesn't seem to be working right on these, and you may be better > > > off (regarding heat) using the fewer frequencies provided just by est. > > > > > > ======= > > > dev.cpu.0.freq: 250 > > > dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2000/35000 1750/30625 1500/26250 1250/21875 > > > 1000/17500 750/13125 500/8750 250/4375 > > > dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/1 C2/57 > > > dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C1 > > > dev.cpu.0.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% last 500us > > > ======= > > > > > > So, cpufreq seems only to be seeing your 2000 frequency, and each of > > > these other frequencies are 7/8, 6/8 .. 1/8 of 2000MHz, generated by > > > p4tcc, which seems odd, unless 1000 is a 'real' supported frequency? > > > > > > Please try adding the following lines to your /boot/loader.conf and > > > rebooting, then paste what 'sysctl dev.cpu' says after that? Also > check > > > if just doing this makes any difference to your overheating issue, as > it > > > has for some people. > > > > > > hint.p4tcc.0.disable="1" > > > hint.acpi_throttle.0.disable="1" > > > hint.p4tcc.1.disable="1" > > > hint.acpi_throttle.1.disable="1" > > > > > > You need both pairs; if you just disable p4tcc, acpi_throttle would > > > attach and provide those same frequencies, so would be no advantage. > > > > > > You may also find 'Fighting for the power' by Alexander Motin useful, > in > > > particular enabling your available C2 state to reduce idle power use: > > > > > > > http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2009-May/006436.html > [..] > > > Ok, thanks for it. The topic of Alexandre is very useful! So, i modify > my > > loader.conf an rc.conf file by adding lines you told me to write > > (loader.conf) and lines to enable C2 and others to reduce number of > sounds > > genertaed interrupts (see 'Fighting for the power' of Alexandre). > > Yes C2 should help overall, even on CPU-intensive tasks like buildworld, > and advice on how to to power-down subsystems you're not using is handy. > > Is there any mention in your BIOS settings about 'C1E' or similar? > > > I reboot and as you have asked me, the output of systcl dev.cpu after > > reboot : http://pastebin.com/bajvzy1W > > : dev.cpu.0.freq: 250 > : dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2000/35000 1750/30625 1500/26250 1250/21875 > : 1000/17500 750/13125 500/8750 250/4375 > : dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/1 C2/57 > : dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C2 > : dev.cpu.0.cx_usage: 5.51% 94.48% last 229us > > Well now I'm confused, unless your C2D actually is really providing all > of those frequencies out of the box, without any throttling driver? > > Are you sure that after booting with those hints in /boot/loader.conf > (check: in /boot directory) that no lines at all are shown matching: > > % egrep 'p4tcc|acpi_throttle' /var/run/dmesg.boot > > If that shows nothing, then I've been way off-base about this .. > > > I tried to see how to behave my laptop (regarding fan noise and heat). > > Overall, i think it's a bit better, less noisy but not really perfect > (sorry > > about my vagueness). > > > > I didn't do all steps of the topic of Alexandre and maybe after do them, > it > > will be better again... > > First, a little (understandable) confusion; the 'Fighting for the power' > post was by AlexandER Motin (mav@freebsd.org), the developer of recent > snd_hda and mods to the powerd algorithms, among other things. It was > AlexandRE Kovalenko, note spelling, (cc'd), who replied offering to look > through your BIOS ASL code if you dump it out and post it somewhere, as > detailed on the ACPI debugging page. > > > I tried to do an high cpu task but same behavor, system shuting down > (heat > > exceed 92?C, critical...) > > Hmm, there was no 92C mentioned before; _HOT was 90C and I don't think > FreeBSD uses _HOT at all, just _PSV and _CRT (any corrections welcome) > > > I will to learn more about acpi debug and ASL from the handbokk and > share > > you more about these. > > Good idea. Generating your ASL is simple using those instructions, and > Alexandre has a track record at spotting problems, especially thermal, > among others who might be interested in looking through it. > > But please confirm there's no mention of p4tcc or acpi_thermal in dmesg? > > cheers, Ian Hey ! My laptop is sweating! :) So, after reading different manuals and others threads on the interdet, i tried to tunn a bit my loader.conf with sysctl values but there are somethings i definitly not understand. Fist of all, Ian, i do what you told me to do about p4tcc or acpi_thermal mention in my dmesg.boot file. No mentions found. Next, i noticed that my temp increases until 80C but not higher, significative? Now, about the _PSV and _CRT values. I can set these but i don't what value i have to use for these... Someone can advise me on that, regarding my proc spefications. Then, i generated my asl file and tried to compile it (as explained in the handbook) to detect some errors but no errors, only warnings and optizations and i will post it on the freebsd-acpi mailing list or somewhere else where someone might be abble to read it and detect something wrong. However (and it s a bit funny ;)) : i've got an panic after around 4min : dev = ad4s1f, block = 1, fs = /usr > panic: ffs_blkfree: freeing free block > cpuid=1 > Uptime 4m41s > Cannot dump. Device not found or unavailable Further, i can't shutdown or reboot my laptop, it block on 'Uptime XX' and it never done... I see one sysct value on the acpi manual but i've not tried yet. I enabled the acpi debug (only error) but i don't know where i can read this output... (don't find this information in the manuals). To conclude, i'm a bit confused and i don't what is the problem and where i have to go deeper, acpi bug? Maybe unable acpi and see what happend can be interessting? (wait your opinion before do it). After all, this problem is a good way to learn more about FreeBSD arch and linux overall. Train my english and develop the habit to use the documentation (i.e man page and books). When i will have the suitable materials, i will try to 'clean' my fans but i don't think i have this kind of problem. PS : i don't really know i can consult the BIOS options and i don't respond you about C1E but i see something really wirred. In my BIOS system overview, my model of laptop is dv5 notebook PC oO, it's not true! So, i wait your feedbacks about that, it's maybe the cause of all my problems? I hope (or not). From lambert at lambertfam.org Fri May 14 06:59:18 2010 From: lambert at lambertfam.org (Scott Lambert) Date: Fri May 14 06:59:24 2010 Subject: ACPI issue with minipci slot on Acer TravelMate 5720? Message-ID: <20100514062439.GA17367@sysmon.tcworks.net> I originally thought there was a problem with the iwn driver on resume. However, I swapped the wireless card with an Atheros piece, and still have issues on resume. The symptoms common to both cards are that the driver can see the card on resume but cannot use it. The iwn driver says it "could not lock memory" and "could not load boot firmware." The ath driver says "unable to attach hardware; HAL status 3." pci4: driver added found-> vendor=0x168c, dev=0x001c, revid=0x01 domain=0, bus=4, slot=0, func=0 class=02-00-00, hdrtype=0x00, mfdev=0 cmdreg=0x0507, statreg=0x0010, cachelnsz=16 (dwords) lattimer=0x00 (0 ns), mingnt=0x00 (0 ns), maxlat=0x00 (0 ns) intpin=a, irq=17 powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 MSI supports 1 message MSI-X supports 1 message in map 0x10 pci0:4:0:0: reprobing on driver added ath0: mem 0xf8000000-0xf800ffff irq 17 at device 0.0 on pci4 pcib2: ath0 requested memory range 0xf8000000-0xf800ffff: good ath0: [MPSAFE] ath0: [ITHREAD] ath0: unable to attach hardware; HAL status 3 device_attach: ath0 attach returned 6 I now suspect the real problem is in the ACPI layer. Every other device on the laptop seems to work great. The wireless card works well on initial boot. Once I suspend and resume, it's toast. Unfortunately, I don't know what to try next. This is pciconf -lbcv from a Feb 6, 2010 version of FreeBSD 8-STABLE on initial boot: ath0@pci0:4:0:0: class=0x020000 card=0x04281468 chip=0x001c168c rev=0x01 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Atheros Communications Inc.' device = 'HDAUDIOFUNC_01&VEN_1095&DEV_1392&SUBSYS_10280242&REV_1000 (USBVID_147E&PID_20165&B71A446&0&1)' class = network subclass = ethernet bar [10] = type Memory, range 64, base 0xf8000000, size 65536, enabled cap 01[40] = powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 cap 05[50] = MSI supports 1 message cap 10[60] = PCI-Express 1 legacy endpoint max data 128(128) link x1(x1) cap 11[90] = MSI-X supports 1 message in map 0x10 I recorded the pciconf output after boot and the on resume a couple of minutes later. They were exactly the same. This is pciconf -lbcv on initial boot and after resume for FreeBSD 8-STABLE built May 5th, 2010, the bar line is missing on resume: Boot: ath0@pci0:4:0:0: class=0x020000 card=0x04281468 chip=0x001c168c rev=0x01 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Atheros Communications Inc.' device = 'AR5006 family 802.11abg Wireless NIC' class = network subclass = ethernet bar [10] = type Memory, range 64, base 0xf8000000, size 65536, enabled cap 01[40] = powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 cap 05[50] = MSI supports 1 message cap 10[60] = PCI-Express 1 legacy endpoint max data 128(128) link x1(x1) cap 11[90] = MSI-X supports 1 message in map 0x10 Resume: ath0@pci0:4:0:0: class=0x020000 card=0x04281468 chip=0x001c168c rev=0x01 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Atheros Communications Inc.' device = 'AR5006 family 802.11abg Wireless NIC' class = network subclass = ethernet cap 01[40] = powerspec 2 supports D0 D3 current D0 cap 05[50] = MSI supports 1 message cap 10[60] = PCI-Express 1 legacy endpoint max data 128(128) link x1(x1) cap 11[90] = MSI-X supports 1 message in map 0x10 So, at least I have a difference I can point to now. I've read through the ASL, but I didn't see anything that looks pertinent. That may be due to my ignorance on the subject. It could even be the wrong tree. I would really appreciate if someone could direct me in gathering the information needed to figure this out. Thank you, -- Scott Lambert KC5MLE Unix SysAdmin lambert@lambertfam.org From irina.odlyzhuk at qplaze.com Thu May 20 13:01:36 2010 From: irina.odlyzhuk at qplaze.com (iren) Date: Thu May 20 13:01:42 2010 Subject: Age of Heroes Online !!! Message-ID: <28620864.post@talk.nabble.com> Age of Heroes Online is a multiplatform online RPG-strategy based on series of mobile games ?Age of Heroes? by Qplaze ?. It is based on profoundly developed fantasy world with its unique history, geography, magic and traditionally intricate political situation. Age of Heroes Online is built on the basis of one of the most popular settings in fantasy style ? a story of huge world inhabited by humans, elves, orcs and gnomes. Controls elements used in the game are simple and intuitive? history of the world and game features are presented to the player gradually, step by step. For player are available all the races in game and plenty of development ways for every game class. With almost every NPC or object in game player can interact ? talk, fight, look over. Age of Heroes Online is available both for users of PC and different mobile devices ? mobile phones, pocket PC, communicators ? at any time and almost in any place; The list of supported platform includes ? Microsoft Windows, Windows Mobile 5-6, Symbian OS. Also Age of Heroes Online successfully works on most of mobile phones with Java MIDP 2.0 support and Internet access. However, game functionality on different devices is completely the same and gives no advantages to any of the players. For Age of Heroes Online players is available an enormous game world that greatly exceeds the sizes of other multiplatform MMORPG: ? More than 60 locations with more than 200 unique maps for travelling and exploring; ? More than 60 buildings and objects ? from palaces to tombs, from tradesmen shops to gladiators? arenas. ? 9 different types of locality and game landscape vividly illustrating the differences between game races; ? More than 25 types of battle fields completely depended on type of locality. Gameplay of Age of Heroes Online can surprise with its variety even experienced players of online PC games: ? In game there are more than 100 creatures with most of which player can not only fight but also hire them to his army; ? 4 races of Age of Heroes Online not only have their own set of creatures but also unique locations, architecture, cities, heroes and magic schools; ? For player there are available more than 130 unique quests and tasks of different degree of complexity and in different localities full of danger and adventures; ? Player can select from 12 unique heroes with more than hundred of different skills and special abilities available for development; ? More than 100 different animated effects go with battle actions ? spectacular magic, explosions, lightning, special heroes? abilities and many others, - creating truly epic battle canvas; ? In the world exist 400 different magic objects and artifacts all of which can be found, purchased or gained by player in the battle. http://aoho.qplaze.com/ -- View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/Age-of-Heroes-Online-%21%21%21-tp28620864p28620864.html Sent from the freebsd-mobile mailing list archive at Nabble.com. From geoffrey.ferrari at googlemail.com Sat May 22 17:49:31 2010 From: geoffrey.ferrari at googlemail.com (Geoffrey Ferrari) Date: Sat May 22 17:49:40 2010 Subject: Suspend/Resume problem on Thinkpad X201 (8-STABLE) Message-ID: Hi folks, I've just bought a Lenovo Thinkpad X201 which I plan to use as my main work machine (mainly, all I need is emacs + latex) I've a little past experience with FreeBSD (and Linux), but this is the first time I've committed to trying to use FreeBSD for my main work computer. I thought I'd share some of my experiences and see if you anyone can help me out with the one thing I haven't managed to resolve - resuming from sleep. So far, I've set things up pretty successfully. I installed the FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE (amd64 version) using the USB memstick image. I really wanted to have a ZFS filesystem and I managed to set that up following the guide here (http://rhyous.com/2009/12/01/how-to-install-freebsd-8-0-using-only-zfs-partitions/). I also really wanted to dual boot with Ubuntu, which I've also successfully achieved. I'm using GRUB2 as my bootloader and I wasn't sure how easy it would be to set up FreeBSD to boot, given that it uses a ZFS file system. However, it seems to work just fine! From Linux, I add a Grub2 menuentry with these lines to /etc/grub.d/40_custom: insmode zfs set root (hd0,1) chainloader +1 That simply passes control from Grub to the FreeBSD loader, which works perfectly. I've seen some people try to load FreeBSD/ZFS directly from Grub2 but for some reason, it wouldn't work for me. Under 8.0-RELEASE, neither the WIFI card nor the ethernet card are working, due to needing updated drivers. It's possible to update the WIFI driver only by following the instructions here (http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=8041&page=11). But in the the end, given that I also had other problems, I decided to update my whole system to 8-STABLE via cvsup, rebuilding the kernel and world along the way. Now that I've done so, the ethernet card is recognized by the em driver. The wifi cards needs the iwn driver. My loader.conf includes these lines to make the wifi card work: -- in loader.conf-- if_iwn_load="YES" if_iwnfw_load="YES" wlan_wep_load="YES" wlan_ccmp_load="YES" wlan_tkip_load="YES" Now for my request for help :) My Thinkpad successfully enters sleep mode (that's ACPI level S3 - suspend to ram), but there are problems with resuming out of sleep mode. The main problem is that the LCD does not wake up upon resume, and simply stays black. The computer is actually awake when this happens though! I can e.g. logout (typing blindly) and I can even log in via ssh. However, the screen stays switched off. I read on some forums that some people have experienced a similar problem where their screen switches on but displays nothing, only a black background. But no, my screen doesn't even switch on! I've searched numerous forums and tried various things, but none of them resolve the problem and some make it worse! Here's a sample of what I've tried so far. Setting hw.acpi.video_reset=1 to loader.conf. This makes things worse. When I do this, my laptop refuses to wake from sleep at all. Loading the i915 driver in loader.conf. This seems to do nothing. Loading acpi_ibm in loader.conf. This seems to do nothing. Setting debug.acpi.disabled="YES" in sysctl.conf . This seems to do nothing. I've also tried switching from one virtual console to another, both via the keyboard, and by running "vidcontrol -s 2 > /dev/console". I've checked /var/log/messages after resume and it reports "Interrupt storm detected on irq9" - that's seems to be associated with ACPI. So, I'm writing to ask if anyone can help me to get my laptop to resume properly. I'm including some info below that my help someone to understand what's going on. I really love FreeBSD so I hope someone will be able to help me to get my laptop to sleep and wake reliably! Thanks, Geoff --- dmesg --- Copyright (c) 1992-2010 The FreeBSD Project. Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. FreeBSD is a registered trademark of The FreeBSD Foundation. FreeBSD 8.1-PRERELEASE #0: Sat May 22 09:53:35 BST 2010 root@beastie.localdomain:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC amd64 Timecounter "i8254" frequency 1193182 Hz quality 0 CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 540 @ 2.53GHz (2527.02-MHz K8-class CPU) Origin = "GenuineIntel" Id = 0x20652 Family = 6 Model = 25 Stepping = 2 Features=0xbfebfbff Features2=0x298e3ff AMD Features=0x28100800 AMD Features2=0x1 TSC: P-state invariant real memory = 8589934592 (8192 MB) avail memory = 8035639296 (7663 MB) ACPI APIC Table: FreeBSD/SMP: Multiprocessor System Detected: 4 CPUs FreeBSD/SMP: 1 package(s) x 2 core(s) x 2 SMT threads cpu0 (BSP): APIC ID: 0 cpu1 (AP): APIC ID: 1 cpu2 (AP): APIC ID: 4 cpu3 (AP): APIC ID: 5 ioapic0: Changing APIC ID to 1 ioapic0 irqs 0-23 on motherboard kbd1 at kbdmux0 acpi0: on motherboard acpi0: [ITHREAD] acpi_ec0: port 0x62,0x66 on acpi0 acpi0: Power Button (fixed) acpi0: reservation of 0, a0000 (3) failed acpi0: reservation of 100000, bff00000 (3) failed Timecounter "ACPI-fast" frequency 3579545 Hz quality 1000 acpi_timer0: <24-bit timer at 3.579545MHz> port 0x1008-0x100b on acpi0 cpu0: on acpi0 cpu1: on acpi0 cpu2: on acpi0 cpu3: on acpi0 acpi_hpet0: iomem 0xfed00000-0xfed003ff on acpi0 Timecounter "HPET" frequency 14318180 Hz quality 900 acpi_lid0: on acpi0 acpi_button0: on acpi0 pcib0: on acpi0 pci255: on pcib0 pcib1: port 0xcf8-0xcff on acpi0 pci0: on pcib1 vgapci0: port 0x1800-0x1807 mem 0xf2000000-0xf23fffff,0xd0000000-0xdfffffff irq 16 at device 2.0 on pci0 agp0: on vgapci0 agp0: detected 32764k stolen memory agp0: aperture size is 256M pci0: at device 22.0 (no driver attached) pci0: at device 22.3 (no driver attached) em0: port 0x1820-0x183f mem 0xf2500000-0xf251ffff,0xf2525000-0xf2525fff irq 20 at device 25.0 on pci0 em0: Using MSI interrupt em0: [FILTER] em0: Ethernet address: 5c:ff:35:02:2e:71 ehci0: mem 0xf2728000-0xf27283ff irq 23 at device 26.0 on pci0 ehci0: [ITHREAD] usbus0: EHCI version 1.0 usbus0: on ehci0 pci0: at device 27.0 (no driver attached) pcib2: irq 20 at device 28.0 on pci0 pci13: on pcib2 pcib3: irq 23 at device 28.3 on pci0 pci5: on pcib3 pcib4: irq 20 at device 28.4 on pci0 pci2: on pcib4 iwn0: mem 0xf2400000-0xf2401fff irq 16 at device 0.0 on pci2 iwn0: MIMO 3T3R, MoW, address 00:24:d7:09:c6:a8 iwn0: [ITHREAD] iwn0: 11a rates: 6Mbps 9Mbps 12Mbps 18Mbps 24Mbps 36Mbps 48Mbps 54Mbps iwn0: 11b rates: 1Mbps 2Mbps 5.5Mbps 11Mbps iwn0: 11g rates: 1Mbps 2Mbps 5.5Mbps 11Mbps 6Mbps 9Mbps 12Mbps 18Mbps 24Mbps 36Mbps 48Mbps 54Mbps ehci1: mem 0xf2728400-0xf27287ff irq 19 at device 29.0 on pci0 ehci1: [ITHREAD] usbus1: EHCI version 1.0 usbus1: on ehci1 pcib5: at device 30.0 on pci0 pci14: on pcib5 isab0: at device 31.0 on pci0 isa0: on isab0 atapci0: port 0x1860-0x1867,0x1814-0x1817,0x1818-0x181f,0x1810-0x1813,0x1840-0x185f mem 0xf2727000-0xf27277ff irq 16 at device 31.2 on pci0 atapci0: [ITHREAD] atapci0: AHCI v1.30 controller with 6 3Gbps ports, PM supported ata2: on atapci0 ata2: [ITHREAD] ata3: on atapci0 ata3: [ITHREAD] ata4: on atapci0 ata4: [ITHREAD] ata5: on atapci0 ata5: [ITHREAD] pci0: at device 31.3 (no driver attached) pci0: at device 31.6 (no driver attached) acpi_tz0: on acpi0 atrtc0: port 0x70-0x71 irq 8 on acpi0 atkbdc0: port 0x60,0x64 irq 1 on acpi0 atkbd0: irq 1 on atkbdc0 kbd0 at atkbd0 atkbd0: [GIANT-LOCKED] atkbd0: [ITHREAD] psm0: irq 12 on atkbdc0 psm0: [GIANT-LOCKED] psm0: [ITHREAD] psm0: model Generic PS/2 mouse, device ID 0 battery0: on acpi0 acpi_acad0: on acpi0 orm0: at iomem 0xc0000-0xcffff,0xd0000-0xd0fff,0xd1000-0xd1fff,0xdd000-0xdffff,0xe0000-0xeffff on isa0 sc0: at flags 0x100 on isa0 sc0: VGA <16 virtual consoles, flags=0x300> vga0: at port 0x3c0-0x3df iomem 0xa0000-0xbffff on isa0 ppc0: cannot reserve I/O port range est0: on cpu0 p4tcc0: on cpu0 est1: on cpu1 p4tcc1: on cpu1 est2: on cpu2 p4tcc2: on cpu2 est3: on cpu3 p4tcc3: on cpu3 ZFS filesystem version 3 ZFS storage pool version 14 Timecounters tick every 1.000 msec usbus0: 480Mbps High Speed USB v2.0 usbus1: 480Mbps High Speed USB v2.0 ad4: 476940MB at ata2-master UDMA100 SATA 3Gb/s ugen0.1: at usbus0 uhub0: on usbus0 ugen1.1: at usbus1 uhub1: on usbus1 GEOM: ad4: partition 2 does not start on a track boundary. GEOM: ad4: partition 2 does not end on a track boundary. SMP: AP CPU #1 Launched! SMP: AP CPU #2 Launched! SMP: AP CPU #3 Launched! Root mount waiting for: usbus1 usbus0 uhub0: 3 ports with 3 removable, self powered uhub1: 3 ports with 3 removable, self powered Root mount waiting for: usbus1 usbus0 ugen0.2: at usbus0 uhub2: on usbus0 ugen1.2: at usbus1 uhub3: on usbus1 uhub2: 6 ports with 6 removable, self powered uhub3: 8 ports with 8 removable, self powered Root mount waiting for: usbus0 ugen0.3: at usbus0 Root mount waiting for: usbus0 Root mount waiting for: usbus0 ugen0.4: at usbus0 Trying to mount root from zfs:zroot wlan0: Ethernet address: 00:24:d7:09:c6:a8 em0: link state changed to UP wlan0: link state changed to UP --- sysctl -a --- kern.ostype: FreeBSD kern.osrelease: 8.1-PRERELEASE kern.osrevision: 199506 kern.version: FreeBSD 8.1-PRERELEASE #0: Sat May 22 09:53:35 BST 2010 root@beastie.localdomain:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC kern.maxvnodes: 100000 kern.maxproc: 6164 kern.maxfiles: 12328 kern.argmax: 262144 kern.securelevel: -1 kern.hostname: beastie.localdomain kern.hostid: 2990064634 kern.clockrate: { hz = 1000, tick = 1000, profhz = 2000, stathz = 133 } kern.posix1version: 200112 kern.ngroups: 1023 kern.job_control: 1 kern.saved_ids: 0 kern.boottime: { sec = 1274542348, usec = 139038 } Sat May 22 16:32:28 2010 kern.domainname: kern.osreldate: 800505 kern.bootfile: /boot/kernel/kernel kern.maxfilesperproc: 11095 kern.maxprocperuid: 5547 kern.ipc.maxsockbuf: 262144 kern.ipc.sockbuf_waste_factor: 8 kern.ipc.somaxconn: 128 kern.ipc.max_linkhdr: 40 kern.ipc.max_protohdr: 60 kern.ipc.max_hdr: 100 kern.ipc.max_datalen: 68 kern.ipc.nmbjumbo16: 3200 kern.ipc.nmbjumbo9: 6400 kern.ipc.nmbjumbop: 12800 kern.ipc.nmbclusters: 25600 kern.ipc.piperesizeallowed: 1 kern.ipc.piperesizefail: 0 kern.ipc.pipeallocfail: 0 kern.ipc.pipefragretry: 0 kern.ipc.pipekva: 286720 kern.ipc.maxpipekva: 134619136 kern.ipc.msgseg: 2048 kern.ipc.msgssz: 8 kern.ipc.msgtql: 40 kern.ipc.msgmnb: 2048 kern.ipc.msgmni: 40 kern.ipc.msgmax: 16384 kern.ipc.semaem: 16384 kern.ipc.semvmx: 32767 kern.ipc.semusz: 152 kern.ipc.semume: 10 kern.ipc.semopm: 100 kern.ipc.semmsl: 60 kern.ipc.semmnu: 30 kern.ipc.semmns: 60 kern.ipc.semmni: 10 kern.ipc.semmap: 30 kern.ipc.shm_allow_removed: 0 kern.ipc.shm_use_phys: 0 kern.ipc.shmall: 8192 kern.ipc.shmseg: 128 kern.ipc.shmmni: 192 kern.ipc.shmmin: 1 kern.ipc.shmmax: 33554432 kern.ipc.maxsockets: 25600 kern.ipc.numopensockets: 77 kern.ipc.nsfbufsused: 0 kern.ipc.nsfbufspeak: 0 kern.ipc.nsfbufs: 0 kern.dummy: 0 kern.ps_strings: 140737488355296 kern.usrstack: 140737488355328 kern.logsigexit: 1 kern.iov_max: 1024 kern.hostuuid: 80a94af7-565c-df11-9229-9cf2dc80d866 kern.cam.boot_delay: 0 kern.cam.pmp.default_timeout: 30 kern.cam.pmp.retry_count: 1 kern.cam.cam_srch_hi: 0 kern.cam.scsi_delay: 5000 kern.cam.cd.retry_count: 4 kern.cam.cd.changer.max_busy_seconds: 15 kern.cam.cd.changer.min_busy_seconds: 5 kern.cam.ada.ada_send_ordered: 1 kern.cam.ada.default_timeout: 30 kern.cam.ada.retry_count: 4 kern.cam.da.da_send_ordered: 1 kern.cam.da.default_timeout: 60 kern.cam.da.retry_count: 4 kern.dcons.poll_hz: 25 kern.disks: ad4 kern.geom.collectstats: 1 kern.geom.debugflags: 0 kern.geom.label.debug: 0 kern.geom.label.ext2fs.enable: 1 kern.geom.label.iso9660.enable: 1 kern.geom.label.msdosfs.enable: 1 kern.geom.label.ntfs.enable: 1 kern.geom.label.reiserfs.enable: 1 kern.geom.label.ufs.enable: 1 kern.geom.label.ufsid.enable: 1 kern.geom.label.gptid.enable: 1 kern.geom.label.gpt.enable: 1 kern.elf64.fallback_brand: -1 kern.init_shutdown_timeout: 120 kern.init_path: /sbin/init:/sbin/oinit:/sbin/init.bak:/rescue/init:/stand/sysinstall kern.acct_suspended: 0 kern.acct_configured: 0 kern.acct_chkfreq: 15 kern.acct_resume: 4 kern.acct_suspend: 2 kern.cp_times: 514 0 143 10 41655 247 0 55 3 41970 619 0 198 5 41453 161 0 40 20 42054 kern.cp_time: 1541 0 436 38 167132 kern.constty_wakeups_per_second: 5 kern.consmsgbuf_size: 8192 kern.consmute: 0 kern.console: ttyv0,dcons,/dcons,ttyv0,ucom, kern.openfiles: 257 kern.kq_calloutmax: 4096 kern.ps_arg_cache_limit: 256 kern.stackprot: 7 kern.randompid: 0 kern.lastpid: 1386 kern.ktrace.request_pool: 100 kern.ktrace.genio_size: 4096 kern.module_path: /boot/kernel;/boot/modules kern.malloc_count: 282 kern.fallback_elf_brand: -1 kern.features.compat_freebsd7: 1 kern.features.compat_freebsd6: 1 kern.features.compat_freebsd5: 1 kern.features.compat_freebsd4: 1 kern.features.posix_sem: 1 kern.features.posix_shm: 1 kern.maxusers: 384 kern.ident: GENERIC kern.kstack_pages: 4 kern.shutdown.kproc_shutdown_wait: 60 kern.shutdown.poweroff_delay: 5000 kern.sync_on_panic: 0 kern.corefile: %N.core kern.nodump_coredump: 0 kern.coredump: 1 kern.sugid_coredump: 0 kern.sigqueue.alloc_fail: 0 kern.sigqueue.overflow: 0 kern.sigqueue.preallocate: 1024 kern.sigqueue.max_pending_per_proc: 128 kern.forcesigexit: 1 kern.fscale: 2048 kern.timecounter.tick: 1 kern.timecounter.choice: TSC(-100) HPET(900) ACPI-fast(1000) i8254(0) dummy(-1000000) kern.timecounter.hardware: ACPI-fast kern.timecounter.stepwarnings: 0 kern.timecounter.tc.i8254.mask: 65535 kern.timecounter.tc.i8254.counter: 49545 kern.timecounter.tc.i8254.frequency: 1193182 kern.timecounter.tc.i8254.quality: 0 kern.timecounter.tc.ACPI-fast.mask: 16777215 kern.timecounter.tc.ACPI-fast.counter: 11304421 kern.timecounter.tc.ACPI-fast.frequency: 3579545 kern.timecounter.tc.ACPI-fast.quality: 1000 kern.timecounter.tc.HPET.mask: 4294967295 kern.timecounter.tc.HPET.counter: 714779063 kern.timecounter.tc.HPET.frequency: 14318180 kern.timecounter.tc.HPET.quality: 900 kern.timecounter.tc.TSC.mask: 4294967295 kern.timecounter.tc.TSC.counter: 3963897474 kern.timecounter.tc.TSC.frequency: 2527019359 kern.timecounter.tc.TSC.quality: -100 kern.timecounter.smp_tsc: 0 kern.timecounter.invariant_tsc: 1 kern.threads.max_threads_hits: 0 kern.threads.max_threads_per_proc: 1500 kern.ccpu: 0 kern.sched.preemption: 1 kern.sched.topology_spec: 0, 1, 2, 3 0, 1, 2, 3 0, 1 SMT group 2, 3 SMT group kern.sched.steal_thresh: 2 kern.sched.steal_idle: 1 kern.sched.steal_htt: 1 kern.sched.balance_interval: 133 kern.sched.balance: 1 kern.sched.affinity: 1 kern.sched.idlespinthresh: 4 kern.sched.idlespins: 10000 kern.sched.static_boost: 160 kern.sched.preempt_thresh: 64 kern.sched.interact: 30 kern.sched.slice: 13 kern.sched.name: ULE kern.devstat.version: 6 kern.devstat.generation: 47 kern.devstat.numdevs: 1 kern.kobj_methodcount: 160 kern.log_wakeups_per_second: 5 kern.vm_guest: none kern.sgrowsiz: 131072 kern.maxssiz: 536870912 kern.dflssiz: 8388608 kern.maxdsiz: 34359738368 kern.dfldsiz: 134217728 kern.maxtsiz: 134217728 kern.maxbcache: 0 kern.maxswzone: 33554432 kern.nswbuf: 256 kern.nbuf: 51685 kern.ncallout: 18508 kern.hz: 1000 kern.msgbuf_clear: 0 kern.msgbuf: kern.always_console_output: 0 kern.log_console_output: 1 kern.smp.forward_signal_enabled: 1 kern.smp.topology: 0 kern.smp.cpus: 4 kern.smp.disabled: 0 kern.smp.active: 1 kern.smp.maxcpus: 32 kern.smp.maxid: 3 kern.tty_inq_flush_secure: 1 kern.tty_inq_nslow: 32 kern.tty_inq_nfast: 678 kern.tty_outq_nslow: 0 kern.tty_outq_nfast: 421 kern.pts_maxdev: 999 kern.tty_pty_warningcnt: 1 kern.tty_nout: 141349 kern.tty_nin: 711 kern.minvnodes: 25000 kern.metadelay: 28 kern.dirdelay: 29 kern.filedelay: 30 kern.chroot_allow_open_directories: 1 kern.elf32.fallback_brand: -1 kern.random.yarrow.gengateinterval: 10 kern.random.yarrow.bins: 10 kern.random.yarrow.fastthresh: 192 kern.random.yarrow.slowthresh: 256 kern.random.yarrow.slowoverthresh: 2 kern.random.sys.seeded: 1 kern.random.sys.harvest.ethernet: 1 kern.random.sys.harvest.point_to_point: 1 kern.random.sys.harvest.interrupt: 1 kern.random.sys.harvest.swi: 0 vm.vmtotal: System wide totals computed every five seconds: (values in kilobytes) =============================================== Processes: (RUNQ: 2 Disk Wait: 0 Page Wait: 0 Sleep: 66) Virtual Memory: (Total: 1074742284K, Active 884716K) Real Memory: (Total: 494544K Active 137800K) Shared Virtual Memory: (Total: 52384K Active: 14796K) Shared Real Memory: (Total: 21928K Active: 8892K) Free Memory Pages: 7317364K vm.loadavg: { 0.03 0.14 0.08 } vm.v_free_min: 12475 vm.v_free_target: 52517 vm.v_free_reserved: 2617 vm.v_inactive_target: 78775 vm.v_cache_min: 52517 vm.v_cache_max: 105034 vm.v_pageout_free_min: 34 vm.pageout_algorithm: 0 vm.swap_enabled: 1 vm.kmem_size_scale: 3 vm.kmem_size_max: 329853485875 vm.kmem_size_min: 0 vm.kmem_size: 2692448256 vm.nswapdev: 1 vm.dmmax: 32 vm.swap_async_max: 4 vm.overcommit: 0 vm.swap_reserved: 715485184 vm.swap_total: 8589934592 vm.zone_count: 183 vm.swap_idle_threshold2: 10 vm.swap_idle_threshold1: 2 vm.kstacks: 224 vm.kstack_cache_size: 128 vm.exec_map_entries: 16 vm.stats.misc.zero_page_count: 7 vm.stats.misc.cnt_prezero: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_kthreadpages: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_rforkpages: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_vforkpages: 13494 vm.stats.vm.v_forkpages: 344044 vm.stats.vm.v_kthreads: 21 vm.stats.vm.v_rforks: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_vforks: 9 vm.stats.vm.v_forks: 1356 vm.stats.vm.v_interrupt_free_min: 2 vm.stats.vm.v_pageout_free_min: 34 vm.stats.vm.v_cache_max: 105034 vm.stats.vm.v_cache_min: 52517 vm.stats.vm.v_cache_count: 1483 vm.stats.vm.v_inactive_count: 7967 vm.stats.vm.v_inactive_target: 78775 vm.stats.vm.v_active_count: 34288 vm.stats.vm.v_wire_count: 100269 vm.stats.vm.v_free_count: 1827858 vm.stats.vm.v_free_min: 12475 vm.stats.vm.v_free_target: 52517 vm.stats.vm.v_free_reserved: 2617 vm.stats.vm.v_page_count: 1972008 vm.stats.vm.v_page_size: 4096 vm.stats.vm.v_tfree: 167385 vm.stats.vm.v_pfree: 71199 vm.stats.vm.v_dfree: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_tcached: 7936 vm.stats.vm.v_pdpages: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_pdwakeups: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_reactivated: 6303 vm.stats.vm.v_intrans: 35 vm.stats.vm.v_vnodepgsout: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_vnodepgsin: 15546 vm.stats.vm.v_vnodeout: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_vnodein: 15546 vm.stats.vm.v_swappgsout: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_swappgsin: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_swapout: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_swapin: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_ozfod: 0 vm.stats.vm.v_zfod: 76203 vm.stats.vm.v_cow_optim: 440 vm.stats.vm.v_cow_faults: 54807 vm.stats.vm.v_vm_faults: 215198 vm.stats.sys.v_soft: 53674 vm.stats.sys.v_intr: 23142 vm.stats.sys.v_syscall: 930048 vm.stats.sys.v_trap: 203548 vm.stats.sys.v_swtch: 270920 vm.stats.object.bypasses: 843 vm.stats.object.collapses: 5348 vm.v_free_severe: 7546 vm.max_proc_mmap: 224370 vm.old_msync: 0 vm.msync_flush_flags: 3 vm.boot_pages: 48 vm.max_wired: 650609 vm.pageout_lock_miss: 0 vm.disable_swapspace_pageouts: 0 vm.defer_swapspace_pageouts: 0 vm.swap_idle_enabled: 0 vm.pageout_stats_interval: 5 vm.pageout_full_stats_interval: 20 vm.pageout_stats_max: 52517 vm.max_launder: 32 vm.phys_segs: SEGMENT 0: start: 0x1000 end: 0x9b000 free list: 0xffffffff80c674e8 SEGMENT 1: start: 0x1091000 end: 0xbb27c000 free list: 0xffffffff80c67140 SEGMENT 2: start: 0xbb282000 end: 0xbb35f000 free list: 0xffffffff80c67140 SEGMENT 3: start: 0xbb40f000 end: 0xbb46f000 free list: 0xffffffff80c67140 SEGMENT 4: start: 0xbb70f000 end: 0xbb717000 free list: 0xffffffff80c67140 SEGMENT 5: start: 0xbb71f000 end: 0xbb76c000 free list: 0xffffffff80c67140 SEGMENT 6: start: 0xbb7ff000 end: 0xbb800000 free list: 0xffffffff80c67140 SEGMENT 7: start: 0x100000000 end: 0x1eb320000 free list: 0xffffffff80c67140 SEGMENT 8: start: 0x200000000 end: 0x23bff0000 free list: 0xffffffff80c67140 vm.phys_free: FREE LIST 0: ORDER (SIZE) | NUMBER | POOL 0 | POOL 1 | POOL 2 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 12 ( 16384K) | 425 | 0 | 0 11 ( 8192K) | 1 | 1 | 0 10 ( 4096K) | 0 | 0 | 0 9 ( 2048K) | 2 | 1 | 0 8 ( 1024K) | 0 | 1 | 0 7 ( 512K) | 0 | 1 | 0 6 ( 256K) | 1 | 0 | 0 5 ( 128K) | 0 | 1 | 0 4 ( 64K) | 1 | 1 | 5 3 ( 32K) | 1 | 1 | 11 2 ( 16K) | 1 | 0 | 20 1 ( 8K) | 0 | 1 | 102 0 ( 4K) | 0 | 1 | 406 FREE LIST 1: ORDER (SIZE) | NUMBER | POOL 0 | POOL 1 | POOL 2 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 12 ( 16384K) | 0 | 0 | 0 11 ( 8192K) | 0 | 0 | 0 10 ( 4096K) | 0 | 0 | 0 9 ( 2048K) | 0 | 0 | 0 8 ( 1024K) | 0 | 0 | 0 7 ( 512K) | 0 | 0 | 0 6 ( 256K) | 1 | 0 | 0 5 ( 128K) | 1 | 0 | 0 4 ( 64K) | 1 | 0 | 0 3 ( 32K) | 2 | 0 | 0 2 ( 16K) | 0 | 0 | 0 1 ( 8K) | 2 | 0 | 0 0 ( 4K) | 2 | 0 | 0 vm.reserv.reclaimed: 0 vm.reserv.partpopq: LEVEL SIZE NUMBER -1: 325528K, 208 vm.reserv.freed: 5443 vm.reserv.broken: 14 vm.idlezero_enable: 0 vm.kvm_free: 545920118784 vm.kvm_size: 549755809792 vm.pmap.pmap_collect_active: 0 vm.pmap.pmap_collect_inactive: 0 vm.pmap.pv_entry_spare: 4880 vm.pmap.pv_entry_allocs: 774542 vm.pmap.pv_entry_frees: 727678 vm.pmap.pc_chunk_tryfail: 0 vm.pmap.pc_chunk_frees: 5442 vm.pmap.pc_chunk_allocs: 5750 vm.pmap.pc_chunk_count: 308 vm.pmap.pv_entry_count: 46864 vm.pmap.pdpe.demotions: 0 vm.pmap.pde.promotions: 188 vm.pmap.pde.p_failures: 13869 vm.pmap.pde.mappings: 0 vm.pmap.pde.demotions: 22 vm.pmap.shpgperproc: 200 vm.pmap.pv_entry_max: 3204808 vm.pmap.pg_ps_enabled: 1 vfs.ufs.dirhash_reclaimage: 5 vfs.ufs.dirhash_lowmemcount: 0 vfs.ufs.dirhash_docheck: 0 vfs.ufs.dirhash_mem: 0 vfs.ufs.dirhash_maxmem: 2097152 vfs.ufs.dirhash_minsize: 2560 vfs.zfs.l2c_only_size: 0 vfs.zfs.mfu_ghost_data_lsize: 0 vfs.zfs.mfu_ghost_metadata_lsize: 0 vfs.zfs.mfu_ghost_size: 0 vfs.zfs.mfu_data_lsize: 78220288 vfs.zfs.mfu_metadata_lsize: 1561600 vfs.zfs.mfu_size: 81063936 vfs.zfs.mru_ghost_data_lsize: 0 vfs.zfs.mru_ghost_metadata_lsize: 0 vfs.zfs.mru_ghost_size: 0 vfs.zfs.mru_data_lsize: 90454528 vfs.zfs.mru_metadata_lsize: 18748416 vfs.zfs.mru_size: 123488768 vfs.zfs.anon_data_lsize: 0 vfs.zfs.anon_metadata_lsize: 0 vfs.zfs.anon_size: 150016 vfs.zfs.l2arc_noprefetch: 0 vfs.zfs.l2arc_feed_secs_shift: 1 vfs.zfs.l2arc_feed_secs: 1 vfs.zfs.l2arc_headroom: 128 vfs.zfs.l2arc_write_boost: 67108864 vfs.zfs.l2arc_write_max: 67108864 vfs.zfs.arc_meta_limit: 420695040 vfs.zfs.arc_meta_used: 42130912 vfs.zfs.mdcomp_disable: 0 vfs.zfs.arc_min: 210347520 vfs.zfs.arc_max: 1682780160 vfs.zfs.zfetch.array_rd_sz: 1048576 vfs.zfs.zfetch.block_cap: 256 vfs.zfs.zfetch.min_sec_reap: 2 vfs.zfs.zfetch.max_streams: 8 vfs.zfs.prefetch_disable: 0 vfs.zfs.check_hostid: 1 vfs.zfs.recover: 0 vfs.zfs.txg.write_limit_override: 0 vfs.zfs.txg.synctime: 5 vfs.zfs.txg.timeout: 30 vfs.zfs.scrub_limit: 10 vfs.zfs.vdev.cache.bshift: 16 vfs.zfs.vdev.cache.size: 10485760 vfs.zfs.vdev.cache.max: 16384 vfs.zfs.vdev.aggregation_limit: 131072 vfs.zfs.vdev.ramp_rate: 2 vfs.zfs.vdev.time_shift: 6 vfs.zfs.vdev.min_pending: 4 vfs.zfs.vdev.max_pending: 35 vfs.zfs.cache_flush_disable: 0 vfs.zfs.zil_disable: 0 vfs.zfs.version.zpl: 3 vfs.zfs.version.vdev_boot: 1 vfs.zfs.version.spa: 14 vfs.zfs.version.dmu_backup_stream: 1 vfs.zfs.version.dmu_backup_header: 2 vfs.zfs.version.acl: 1 vfs.zfs.debug: 0 vfs.zfs.super_owner: 0 vfs.devfs.rule_depth: 1 vfs.devfs.generation: 89 vfs.nfs.downdelayinitial: 12 vfs.nfs.downdelayinterval: 30 vfs.nfs.skip_wcc_data_onerr: 1 vfs.nfs.nfs3_jukebox_delay: 10 vfs.nfs.reconnects: 0 vfs.nfs.bufpackets: 4 vfs.nfs.defect: 0 vfs.nfs.iodmax: 20 vfs.nfs.iodmin: 0 vfs.nfs.iodmaxidle: 120 vfs.nfs.diskless_rootpath: vfs.nfs.diskless_valid: 0 vfs.nfs.nfs_ip_paranoia: 1 vfs.nfs.nfs_directio_allow_mmap: 1 vfs.nfs.nfs_directio_enable: 0 vfs.nfs.clean_pages_on_close: 1 vfs.nfs.nfsv3_commit_on_close: 0 vfs.nfs.prime_access_cache: 0 vfs.nfs.access_cache_timeout: 60 vfs.pfs.trace: 0 vfs.pfs.vncache.misses: 0 vfs.pfs.vncache.hits: 0 vfs.pfs.vncache.maxentries: 0 vfs.pfs.vncache.entries: 0 vfs.flushwithdeps: 0 vfs.notbufdflashes: 0 vfs.flushbufqtarget: 100 vfs.getnewbufrestarts: 0 vfs.getnewbufcalls: 0 vfs.hifreebuffers: 5752 vfs.lofreebuffers: 2876 vfs.numfreebuffers: 51685 vfs.dirtybufthresh: 11646 vfs.hidirtybuffers: 12941 vfs.lodirtybuffers: 6470 vfs.numdirtybuffers: 0 vfs.recursiveflushes: 0 vfs.altbufferflushes: 0 vfs.bdwriteskip: 0 vfs.dirtybufferflushes: 0 vfs.hirunningspace: 1048576 vfs.lorunningspace: 524288 vfs.bufdefragcnt: 0 vfs.buffreekvacnt: 0 vfs.bufreusecnt: 0 vfs.hibufspace: 846151680 vfs.lobufspace: 846086144 vfs.maxmallocbufspace: 42307584 vfs.bufmallocspace: 0 vfs.maxbufspace: 846807040 vfs.bufspace: 0 vfs.runningbufspace: 0 vfs.vmiodirenable: 1 vfs.cache.numfullpathfound: 97 vfs.cache.numfullpathfail4: 0 vfs.cache.numfullpathfail2: 4 vfs.cache.numfullpathfail1: 0 vfs.cache.numfullpathcalls: 101 vfs.cache.nchstats: 261808 5856 164 0 24995 0 0 0 vfs.cache.numupgrades: 3 vfs.cache.numneghits: 5856 vfs.cache.numnegzaps: 56 vfs.cache.numposhits: 261808 vfs.cache.numposzaps: 108 vfs.cache.nummisszap: 47 vfs.cache.nummiss: 24948 vfs.cache.numchecks: 271005 vfs.cache.dotdothits: 90 vfs.cache.dothits: 278 vfs.cache.numcalls: 293191 vfs.cache.numcache: 4115 vfs.cache.numneg: 257 vfs.read_max: 8 vfs.write_behind: 1 vfs.lookup_shared: 1 vfs.usermount: 0 vfs.worklist_len: 0 vfs.timestamp_precision: 0 vfs.reassignbufcalls: 0 vfs.vlru_allow_cache_src: 0 vfs.freevnodes: 3150 vfs.wantfreevnodes: 25000 vfs.numvnodes: 3952 vfs.nfs_common.realign_count: 0 vfs.nfs_common.realign_test: 0 vfs.nfsrv.nfs_privport: 0 vfs.nfsrv.fha.bin_shift: 18 vfs.nfsrv.fha.max_nfsds_per_fh: 8 vfs.nfsrv.fha.max_reqs_per_nfsd: 4 vfs.nfsrv.fha.fhe_stats: No file handle entries. vfs.nfsrv.commit_miss: 0 vfs.nfsrv.commit_blks: 0 vfs.nfsrv.async: 0 vfs.nfsrv.gatherdelay_v3: 0 vfs.nfsrv.gatherdelay: 10000 vfs.nfsrv.minthreads: 1 vfs.nfsrv.maxthreads: 1 vfs.nfsrv.threads: 0 vfs.nfsrv.request_space_used: 0 vfs.nfsrv.request_space_used_highest: 0 vfs.nfsrv.request_space_high: 13107200 vfs.nfsrv.request_space_low: 8738133 vfs.nfsrv.request_space_throttled: 0 vfs.nfsrv.request_space_throttle_count: 0 vfs.ffs.doreallocblks: 1 vfs.ffs.doasyncfree: 1 vfs.ffs.compute_summary_at_mount: 0 net.local.stream.recvspace: 8192 net.local.stream.sendspace: 8192 net.local.dgram.recvspace: 4096 net.local.dgram.maxdgram: 2048 net.local.taskcount: 0 net.local.recycled: 0 net.local.inflight: 0 net.inet.ip.portrange.randomtime: 45 net.inet.ip.portrange.randomcps: 10 net.inet.ip.portrange.randomized: 1 net.inet.ip.portrange.reservedlow: 0 net.inet.ip.portrange.reservedhigh: 1023 net.inet.ip.portrange.hilast: 65535 net.inet.ip.portrange.hifirst: 49152 net.inet.ip.portrange.last: 65535 net.inet.ip.portrange.first: 10000 net.inet.ip.portrange.lowlast: 600 net.inet.ip.portrange.lowfirst: 1023 net.inet.ip.forwarding: 0 net.inet.ip.redirect: 1 net.inet.ip.ttl: 64 net.inet.ip.rtexpire: 3600 net.inet.ip.rtminexpire: 10 net.inet.ip.rtmaxcache: 128 net.inet.ip.sourceroute: 0 net.inet.ip.intr_queue_maxlen: 256 net.inet.ip.intr_queue_drops: 0 net.inet.ip.accept_sourceroute: 0 net.inet.ip.keepfaith: 0 net.inet.ip.gifttl: 30 net.inet.ip.same_prefix_carp_only: 0 net.inet.ip.subnets_are_local: 0 net.inet.ip.random_id_total: 0 net.inet.ip.random_id_collisions: 0 net.inet.ip.random_id_period: 8192 net.inet.ip.mcast.loop: 1 net.inet.ip.mcast.maxsocksrc: 128 net.inet.ip.mcast.maxgrpsrc: 512 net.inet.ip.fastforwarding: 0 net.inet.ip.maxfragpackets: 800 net.inet.ip.output_flowtable_size: 32768 net.inet.ip.maxfragsperpacket: 16 net.inet.ip.fragpackets: 0 net.inet.ip.check_interface: 0 net.inet.ip.random_id: 0 net.inet.ip.sendsourcequench: 0 net.inet.ip.process_options: 1 net.inet.icmp.maskrepl: 0 net.inet.icmp.icmplim: 200 net.inet.icmp.bmcastecho: 0 net.inet.icmp.quotelen: 8 net.inet.icmp.reply_from_interface: 0 net.inet.icmp.reply_src: net.inet.icmp.icmplim_output: 1 net.inet.icmp.log_redirect: 0 net.inet.icmp.drop_redirect: 0 net.inet.icmp.maskfake: 0 net.inet.igmp.gsrdelay: 10 net.inet.igmp.default_version: 3 net.inet.igmp.legacysupp: 0 net.inet.igmp.v2enable: 1 net.inet.igmp.v1enable: 1 net.inet.igmp.sendlocal: 1 net.inet.igmp.sendra: 1 net.inet.igmp.recvifkludge: 1 net.inet.tcp.rfc1323: 1 net.inet.tcp.mssdflt: 512 net.inet.tcp.keepidle: 7200000 net.inet.tcp.keepintvl: 75000 net.inet.tcp.sendspace: 32768 net.inet.tcp.recvspace: 65536 net.inet.tcp.keepinit: 75000 net.inet.tcp.delacktime: 100 net.inet.tcp.v6mssdflt: 1024 net.inet.tcp.hostcache.purge: 0 net.inet.tcp.hostcache.prune: 300 net.inet.tcp.hostcache.expire: 3600 net.inet.tcp.hostcache.count: 4 net.inet.tcp.hostcache.bucketlimit: 30 net.inet.tcp.hostcache.hashsize: 512 net.inet.tcp.hostcache.cachelimit: 15360 net.inet.tcp.read_locking: 1 net.inet.tcp.recvbuf_max: 262144 net.inet.tcp.recvbuf_inc: 16384 net.inet.tcp.recvbuf_auto: 1 net.inet.tcp.insecure_rst: 0 net.inet.tcp.ecn.maxretries: 1 net.inet.tcp.ecn.enable: 0 net.inet.tcp.abc_l_var: 2 net.inet.tcp.rfc3465: 1 net.inet.tcp.rfc3390: 1 net.inet.tcp.rfc3042: 1 net.inet.tcp.drop_synfin: 0 net.inet.tcp.delayed_ack: 1 net.inet.tcp.blackhole: 0 net.inet.tcp.log_in_vain: 0 net.inet.tcp.sendbuf_max: 262144 net.inet.tcp.sendbuf_inc: 8192 net.inet.tcp.sendbuf_auto: 1 net.inet.tcp.tso: 1 net.inet.tcp.newreno: 1 net.inet.tcp.local_slowstart_flightsize: 4 net.inet.tcp.slowstart_flightsize: 1 net.inet.tcp.path_mtu_discovery: 1 net.inet.tcp.reass.overflows: 0 net.inet.tcp.reass.maxqlen: 48 net.inet.tcp.reass.cursegments: 0 net.inet.tcp.reass.maxsegments: 1600 net.inet.tcp.sack.globalholes: 0 net.inet.tcp.sack.globalmaxholes: 65536 net.inet.tcp.sack.maxholes: 128 net.inet.tcp.sack.enable: 1 net.inet.tcp.inflight.stab: 20 net.inet.tcp.inflight.max: 1073725440 net.inet.tcp.inflight.min: 6144 net.inet.tcp.inflight.rttthresh: 10 net.inet.tcp.inflight.debug: 0 net.inet.tcp.inflight.enable: 1 net.inet.tcp.isn_reseed_interval: 0 net.inet.tcp.icmp_may_rst: 1 net.inet.tcp.pcbcount: 9 net.inet.tcp.do_tcpdrain: 1 net.inet.tcp.tcbhashsize: 512 net.inet.tcp.log_debug: 0 net.inet.tcp.minmss: 216 net.inet.tcp.syncache.rst_on_sock_fail: 1 net.inet.tcp.syncache.rexmtlimit: 3 net.inet.tcp.syncache.hashsize: 512 net.inet.tcp.syncache.count: 0 net.inet.tcp.syncache.cachelimit: 15360 net.inet.tcp.syncache.bucketlimit: 30 net.inet.tcp.syncookies_only: 0 net.inet.tcp.syncookies: 1 net.inet.tcp.timer_race: 0 net.inet.tcp.finwait2_timeout: 60000 net.inet.tcp.fast_finwait2_recycle: 0 net.inet.tcp.always_keepalive: 1 net.inet.tcp.rexmit_slop: 200 net.inet.tcp.rexmit_min: 30 net.inet.tcp.msl: 30000 net.inet.tcp.nolocaltimewait: 0 net.inet.tcp.maxtcptw: 5120 net.inet.udp.checksum: 1 net.inet.udp.maxdgram: 9216 net.inet.udp.recvspace: 42080 net.inet.udp.blackhole: 0 net.inet.udp.log_in_vain: 0 net.inet.sctp.vtag_time_wait: 60 net.inet.sctp.nat_friendly_init: 0 net.inet.sctp.enable_sack_immediately: 0 net.inet.sctp.udp_tunneling_port: 0 net.inet.sctp.udp_tunneling_for_client_enable: 0 net.inet.sctp.mobility_fasthandoff: 0 net.inet.sctp.mobility_base: 0 net.inet.sctp.default_frag_interleave: 1 net.inet.sctp.default_cc_module: 0 net.inet.sctp.log_level: 0 net.inet.sctp.max_retran_chunk: 30 net.inet.sctp.min_residual: 1452 net.inet.sctp.strict_data_order: 0 net.inet.sctp.abort_at_limit: 0 net.inet.sctp.hb_max_burst: 4 net.inet.sctp.do_sctp_drain: 1 net.inet.sctp.max_chained_mbufs: 5 net.inet.sctp.abc_l_var: 1 net.inet.sctp.nat_friendly: 1 net.inet.sctp.auth_disable: 0 net.inet.sctp.asconf_auth_nochk: 0 net.inet.sctp.early_fast_retran_msec: 250 net.inet.sctp.early_fast_retran: 0 net.inet.sctp.cwnd_maxburst: 1 net.inet.sctp.cmt_pf: 0 net.inet.sctp.cmt_use_dac: 0 net.inet.sctp.nr_sack_on_off: 0 net.inet.sctp.cmt_on_off: 0 net.inet.sctp.outgoing_streams: 10 net.inet.sctp.add_more_on_output: 1452 net.inet.sctp.path_rtx_max: 5 net.inet.sctp.assoc_rtx_max: 10 net.inet.sctp.init_rtx_max: 8 net.inet.sctp.valid_cookie_life: 60000 net.inet.sctp.init_rto_max: 60000 net.inet.sctp.rto_initial: 3000 net.inet.sctp.rto_min: 1000 net.inet.sctp.rto_max: 60000 net.inet.sctp.secret_lifetime: 3600 net.inet.sctp.shutdown_guard_time: 180 net.inet.sctp.pmtu_raise_time: 600 net.inet.sctp.heartbeat_interval: 30000 net.inet.sctp.asoc_resource: 10 net.inet.sctp.sys_resource: 1000 net.inet.sctp.sack_freq: 2 net.inet.sctp.delayed_sack_time: 200 net.inet.sctp.chunkscale: 10 net.inet.sctp.min_split_point: 2904 net.inet.sctp.pcbhashsize: 256 net.inet.sctp.tcbhashsize: 1024 net.inet.sctp.maxchunks: 3200 net.inet.sctp.maxburst: 4 net.inet.sctp.peer_chkoh: 256 net.inet.sctp.strict_init: 1 net.inet.sctp.loopback_nocsum: 1 net.inet.sctp.strict_sacks: 1 net.inet.sctp.ecn_nonce: 0 net.inet.sctp.ecn_enable: 1 net.inet.sctp.auto_asconf: 1 net.inet.sctp.recvspace: 233016 net.inet.sctp.sendspace: 233016 net.inet.raw.recvspace: 9216 net.inet.raw.maxdgram: 9216 net.inet.accf.unloadable: 0 net.inet.flowtable.stats: table name: ipv4 collisions: 0 allocated: 0 misses: 41 max_depth: 0 free_checks: 96 frees: 35 hits: 209 lookups: 250 net.inet.flowtable.nmbflows: 99328 net.inet.flowtable.tcp_expire: 86400 net.inet.flowtable.fin_wait_expire: 600 net.inet.flowtable.udp_expire: 300 net.inet.flowtable.syn_expire: 300 net.inet.flowtable.enable: 1 net.inet.flowtable.debug: 0 net.link.generic.system.ifcount: 4 net.link.ether.inet.log_arp_permanent_modify: 1 net.link.ether.inet.log_arp_movements: 1 net.link.ether.inet.log_arp_wrong_iface: 1 net.link.ether.inet.proxyall: 0 net.link.ether.inet.useloopback: 1 net.link.ether.inet.maxtries: 5 net.link.ether.inet.max_age: 1200 net.link.ether.ipfw: 0 net.link.vlan.soft_pad: 0 net.link.gif.parallel_tunnels: 0 net.link.gif.max_nesting: 1 net.link.log_link_state_change: 1 net.link.tun.devfs_cloning: 1 net.inet6.ip6.forwarding: 0 net.inet6.ip6.redirect: 1 net.inet6.ip6.hlim: 64 net.inet6.ip6.maxfragpackets: 6400 net.inet6.ip6.accept_rtadv: 0 net.inet6.ip6.keepfaith: 0 net.inet6.ip6.log_interval: 5 net.inet6.ip6.hdrnestlimit: 15 net.inet6.ip6.dad_count: 1 net.inet6.ip6.auto_flowlabel: 1 net.inet6.ip6.defmcasthlim: 1 net.inet6.ip6.gifhlim: 30 net.inet6.ip6.kame_version: FreeBSD net.inet6.ip6.use_deprecated: 1 net.inet6.ip6.rr_prune: 5 net.inet6.ip6.v6only: 1 net.inet6.ip6.rtexpire: 3600 net.inet6.ip6.rtminexpire: 10 net.inet6.ip6.rtmaxcache: 128 net.inet6.ip6.use_tempaddr: 0 net.inet6.ip6.temppltime: 86400 net.inet6.ip6.tempvltime: 604800 net.inet6.ip6.auto_linklocal: 0 net.inet6.ip6.prefer_tempaddr: 0 net.inet6.ip6.use_defaultzone: 0 net.inet6.ip6.maxfrags: 6400 net.inet6.ip6.mcast_pmtu: 0 net.inet6.ip6.mcast.loop: 1 net.inet6.ip6.mcast.maxsocksrc: 128 net.inet6.ip6.mcast.maxgrpsrc: 512 net.inet6.icmp6.rediraccept: 1 net.inet6.icmp6.redirtimeout: 600 net.inet6.icmp6.nd6_prune: 1 net.inet6.icmp6.nd6_delay: 5 net.inet6.icmp6.nd6_umaxtries: 3 net.inet6.icmp6.nd6_mmaxtries: 3 net.inet6.icmp6.nd6_useloopback: 1 net.inet6.icmp6.nodeinfo: 3 net.inet6.icmp6.errppslimit: 100 net.inet6.icmp6.nd6_maxnudhint: 0 net.inet6.icmp6.nd6_debug: 0 net.inet6.icmp6.nd6_maxqueuelen: 1 net.inet6.icmp6.nd6_onlink_ns_rfc4861: 0 net.inet6.mld.use_allow: 1 net.inet6.mld.v1enable: 1 net.inet6.mld.gsrdelay: 10 net.bpf.zerocopy_enable: 0 net.bpf.maxinsns: 512 net.bpf.maxbufsize: 524288 net.bpf.bufsize: 4096 net.ifdescr_maxlen: 1024 net.isr.numthreads: 1 net.isr.defaultqlimit: 256 net.isr.maxqlimit: 10240 net.isr.bindthreads: 0 net.isr.maxthreads: 1 net.isr.direct: 1 net.isr.direct_force: 1 net.raw.recvspace: 8192 net.raw.sendspace: 8192 net.my_fibnum: 0 net.add_addr_allfibs: 1 net.fibs: 1 net.route.netisr_maxqlen: 256 net.wlan.cac_timeout: 60 net.wlan.nol_timeout: 1800 net.wlan.debug: 0 net.wlan.addba_maxtries: 3 net.wlan.addba_backoff: 10000 net.wlan.addba_timeout: 250 net.wlan.recv_bar: 1 net.wlan.ampdu_age: 500 net.wlan.hwmp.inact: 5000 net.wlan.hwmp.rannint: 1000 net.wlan.hwmp.rootint: 2000 net.wlan.hwmp.roottimeout: 5000 net.wlan.hwmp.pathlifetime: 5000 net.wlan.hwmp.replyforward: 1 net.wlan.hwmp.targetonly: 0 net.wlan.mesh.maxretries: 2 net.wlan.mesh.confirmtimeout: 40 net.wlan.mesh.holdingtimeout: 40 net.wlan.mesh.retrytimeout: 40 net.wlan.0.%parent: iwn0 net.wlan.0.driver_caps: 629202945 net.wlan.0.debug: 0 net.wlan.0.bmiss_max: 2 net.wlan.0.inact_run: 300 net.wlan.0.inact_probe: 30 net.wlan.0.inact_auth: 180 net.wlan.0.inact_init: 30 net.wlan.0.amrr_rate_interval: 500 net.wlan.0.amrr_max_sucess_threshold: 15 net.wlan.0.amrr_min_sucess_threshold: 1 debug.acpi.suspend_bounce: 0 debug.acpi.reset_clock: 1 debug.acpi.do_powerstate: 1 debug.acpi.interpreter_slack: 1 debug.acpi.enable_debug_objects: 0 debug.acpi.acpi_ca_version: 20100331 debug.acpi.ec.timeout: 750 debug.acpi.ec.polled: 0 debug.acpi.ec.burst: 0 debug.acpi.batt.batt_sleep_ms: 0 debug.acpi.resume_beep: 0 debug.firewire_debug: 0 debug.fwmem_debug: 0 debug.if_fwe_debug: 0 debug.if_fwip_debug: 0 debug.mddebug: 0 debug.elf64_legacy_coredump: 0 debug.bootverbose: 0 debug.boothowto: 0 debug.cpufreq.verbose: 0 debug.cpufreq.lowest: 0 debug.fail_point.buf_pressure: off debug.sizeof.cdev_priv: 376 debug.sizeof.cdev: 288 debug.sizeof.g_bioq: 56 debug.sizeof.g_consumer: 96 debug.sizeof.g_provider: 136 debug.sizeof.g_geom: 136 debug.sizeof.g_class: 136 debug.sizeof.kinfo_proc: 1088 debug.sizeof.buf: 600 debug.sizeof.bio: 232 debug.sizeof.proc: 1120 debug.sizeof.vnode: 472 debug.sizeof.devstat: 288 debug.sizeof.namecache: 72 debug.sizeof.znode: 376 debug.osd: 0 debug.to_avg_mpcalls: 1022 debug.to_avg_lockcalls: 0 debug.to_avg_gcalls: 239 debug.to_avg_depth: 1511 debug.umtx.umtx_pi_allocated: 0 debug.kdb.stop_cpus: 1 debug.kdb.trap_code: 0 debug.kdb.trap: 0 debug.kdb.panic: 0 debug.kdb.enter: 0 debug.kdb.current: debug.kdb.available: debug.rman_debug: 0 debug.ttydebug: 0 debug.disablefullpath: 0 debug.disablecwd: 0 debug.vfscache: 1 debug.numcachehv: 276 debug.numcache: 4115 debug.numneg: 257 debug.ncnegfactor: 16 debug.nchash: 131071 debug.vnlru_nowhere: 0 debug.rush_requests: 0 debug.if_tun_debug: 0 debug.nlm_debug: 0 debug.collectsnapstats: 0 debug.snapdebug: 0 debug.dopersistence: 0 debug.dir_entry: 0 debug.direct_blk_ptrs: 0 debug.inode_bitmap: 0 debug.indir_blk_ptrs: 0 debug.sync_limit_hit: 0 debug.ino_limit_hit: 0 debug.blk_limit_hit: 0 debug.ino_limit_push: 0 debug.blk_limit_push: 0 debug.worklist_push: 0 debug.maxindirdeps: 50 debug.tickdelay: 2 debug.max_softdeps: 400000 debug.dobkgrdwrite: 1 debug.bigcgs: 0 debug.dircheck: 0 debug.minidump: 1 debug.psm.pkterrthresh: 2 debug.psm.usecs: 500000 debug.psm.secs: 0 debug.psm.errusecs: 0 debug.psm.errsecs: 2 debug.psm.hz: 20 debug.psm.loglevel: 0 debug.fdc.settle: 0 debug.fdc.spec2: 16 debug.fdc.spec1: 175 debug.fdc.retries: 10 debug.fdc.debugflags: 0 debug.fdc.fifo: 8 debug.elf32_legacy_coredump: 0 debug.hwpstate_verbose: 0 debug.x86bios.int: 0 debug.x86bios.call: 0 hw.machine: amd64 hw.model: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 540 @ 2.53GHz hw.ncpu: 4 hw.byteorder: 1234 hw.physmem: 8359346176 hw.usermem: 7948644352 hw.pagesize: 4096 hw.floatingpoint: 1 hw.machine_arch: amd64 hw.realmem: 9596567552 hw.amr.force_sg32: 0 hw.an.an_cache_iponly: 1 hw.an.an_cache_mcastonly: 0 hw.an.an_cache_mode: dbm hw.an.an_dump: off hw.ata.setmax: 0 hw.ata.wc: 1 hw.ata.atapi_dma: 1 hw.ata.ata_dma_check_80pin: 1 hw.ata.ata_dma: 1 hw.ath.bstuck: 4 hw.ath.txbuf: 200 hw.ath.rxbuf: 40 hw.ath.resetcal: 1200 hw.ath.shortcal: 100 hw.ath.longcal: 30 hw.ath.hal.swba_backoff: 0 hw.ath.hal.sw_brt: 10 hw.ath.hal.dma_brt: 2 hw.bce.msi_enable: 1 hw.bce.tso_enable: 1 hw.bge.allow_asf: 0 hw.cardbus.cis_debug: 0 hw.cardbus.debug: 0 hw.cs.recv_delay: 570 hw.cs.ignore_checksum_failure: 0 hw.firewire.hold_count: 0 hw.firewire.try_bmr: 1 hw.firewire.fwmem.speed: 2 hw.firewire.fwmem.eui64_lo: 0 hw.firewire.fwmem.eui64_hi: 0 hw.firewire.phydma_enable: 1 hw.firewire.nocyclemaster: 0 hw.firewire.fwe.rx_queue_len: 128 hw.firewire.fwe.tx_speed: 2 hw.firewire.fwe.stream_ch: 1 hw.firewire.fwip.rx_queue_len: 128 hw.mfi.max_cmds: 128 hw.mfi.event_class: 0 hw.mfi.event_locale: 65535 hw.pccard.cis_debug: 0 hw.pccard.debug: 0 hw.cbb.debug: 0 hw.cbb.start_32_io: 4096 hw.cbb.start_16_io: 256 hw.cbb.start_memory: 2281701376 hw.pcic.pd6722_vsense: 1 hw.pcic.intr_mask: 57016 hw.pci.usb_early_takeover: 1 hw.pci.honor_msi_blacklist: 1 hw.pci.enable_msix: 1 hw.pci.enable_msi: 1 hw.pci.do_power_resume: 1 hw.pci.do_power_nodriver: 0 hw.pci.enable_io_modes: 1 hw.pci.default_vgapci_unit: -1 hw.pci.host_mem_start: 2147483648 hw.pci.mcfg: 1 hw.syscons.kbd_debug: 1 hw.syscons.kbd_reboot: 1 hw.syscons.bell: 1 hw.syscons.saver.keybonly: 1 hw.syscons.sc_no_suspend_vtswitch: 0 hw.usb.ehci.lostintrbug: 0 hw.usb.ehci.iaadbug: 0 hw.usb.ehci.no_hs: 0 hw.usb.ehci.debug: 0 hw.usb.ohci.debug: 0 hw.usb.uhci.loop: 0 hw.usb.uhci.debug: 0 hw.usb.no_boot_wait: 0 hw.usb.ctrl.debug: 0 hw.usb.umass.debug: 0 hw.usb.urio.debug: 0 hw.usb.debug: 0 hw.usb.dev.debug: 0 hw.usb.usb_lang_mask: 255 hw.usb.usb_lang_id: 9 hw.usb.template: 0 hw.usb.ugen.debug: 0 hw.usb.power_timeout: 30 hw.usb.uhub.debug: 0 hw.usb.proc.debug: 0 hw.usb.pr_recovery_delay: 250 hw.usb.pr_poll_delay: 50 hw.usb.aue.debug: 0 hw.usb.axe.debug: 0 hw.usb.cdce.debug: 0 hw.usb.cue.debug: 0 hw.usb.kue.debug: 0 hw.usb.rue.debug: 0 hw.usb.udav.debug: 0 hw.usb.rum.debug: 0 hw.usb.uath.regdomain: 0 hw.usb.uath.countrycode: 0 hw.usb.ural.debug: 0 hw.usb.zyd.debug: 0 hw.usb.ubsa.debug: 0 hw.usb.uftdi.debug: 0 hw.usb.ulpt.debug: 0 hw.usb.uplcom.debug: 0 hw.usb.uslcom.debug: 0 hw.usb.uvisor.debug: 0 hw.usb.uvscom.debug: 0 hw.usb.ucom.cons_baud: 9600 hw.usb.ucom.cons_unit: -1 hw.usb.ucom.debug: 0 hw.usb.uhid.debug: 0 hw.usb.ukbd.no_leds: 0 hw.usb.ukbd.debug: 0 hw.usb.ums.debug: 0 hw.wi.debug: 0 hw.wi.txerate: 0 hw.xe.debug: 0 hw.intr_storm_threshold: 1000 hw.pagesizes: 4096 2097152 0 hw.availpages: 2040856 hw.bus.devctl_queue: 1000 hw.bus.devctl_disable: 0 hw.busdma.total_bpages: 2192 hw.busdma.zone0.total_bpages: 2192 hw.busdma.zone0.free_bpages: 2192 hw.busdma.zone0.reserved_bpages: 0 hw.busdma.zone0.active_bpages: 0 hw.busdma.zone0.total_bounced: 621 hw.busdma.zone0.total_deferred: 0 hw.busdma.zone0.lowaddr: 0xffffffff hw.busdma.zone0.alignment: 4096 hw.clockrate: 2527 hw.via_feature_xcrypt: 0 hw.via_feature_rng: 0 hw.instruction_sse: 1 hw.apic.enable_extint: 0 hw.mca.erratum383: 0 hw.mca.amd10h_L1TP: 1 hw.mca.enabled: 1 hw.mca.count: 0 hw.mca.interval: 3600 hw.mca.force_scan: 0 hw.psm.tap_timeout: 125000 hw.psm.tap_threshold: 25 hw.kbd.keymap_restrict_change: 0 hw.drm.msi: 1 hw.acpi.supported_sleep_state: S3 S4 S5 hw.acpi.power_button_state: S5 hw.acpi.sleep_button_state: S3 hw.acpi.lid_switch_state: NONE hw.acpi.standby_state: NONE hw.acpi.suspend_state: S3 hw.acpi.sleep_delay: 1 hw.acpi.s4bios: 0 hw.acpi.verbose: 0 hw.acpi.disable_on_reboot: 0 hw.acpi.handle_reboot: 0 hw.acpi.reset_video: 0 hw.acpi.cpu.cx_lowest: C1 hw.acpi.thermal.min_runtime: 0 hw.acpi.thermal.polling_rate: 10 hw.acpi.thermal.user_override: 0 hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.temperature: 54.0C hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.active: -1 hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.passive_cooling: 1 hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.thermal_flags: 0 hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._PSV: 91.5C hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._HOT: -1 hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._CRT: 100.0C hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._ACx: -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TC1: 5 hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TC2: 4 hw.acpi.thermal.tz0._TSP: 600 hw.acpi.battery.life: 100 hw.acpi.battery.time: -1 hw.acpi.battery.state: 0 hw.acpi.battery.units: 1 hw.acpi.battery.info_expire: 5 hw.acpi.acline: 1 machdep.acpi_timer_freq: 3579545 machdep.enable_panic_key: 0 machdep.rtc_save_period: 1800 machdep.adjkerntz: -3600 machdep.wall_cmos_clock: 1 machdep.disable_rtc_set: 0 machdep.acpi_root: 1009904 machdep.disable_mtrrs: 0 machdep.idle: acpi machdep.idle_available: spin, mwait, mwait_hlt, hlt, acpi, machdep.hlt_cpus: 0 machdep.prot_fault_translation: 0 machdep.panic_on_nmi: 1 machdep.tsc_freq: 2527019359 machdep.i8254_freq: 1193182 user.cs_path: /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin: user.bc_base_max: 99 user.bc_dim_max: 2048 user.bc_scale_max: 99 user.bc_string_max: 1000 user.coll_weights_max: 0 user.expr_nest_max: 32 user.line_max: 2048 user.re_dup_max: 255 user.posix2_version: 199212 user.posix2_c_bind: 0 user.posix2_c_dev: 0 user.posix2_char_term: 0 user.posix2_fort_dev: 0 user.posix2_fort_run: 0 user.posix2_localedef: 0 user.posix2_sw_dev: 0 user.posix2_upe: 0 user.stream_max: 20 user.tzname_max: 255 p1003_1b.asynchronous_io: 0 p1003_1b.mapped_files: 1 p1003_1b.memlock: 0 p1003_1b.memlock_range: 0 p1003_1b.memory_protection: 0 p1003_1b.message_passing: 0 p1003_1b.prioritized_io: 0 p1003_1b.priority_scheduling: 1 p1003_1b.realtime_signals: 200112 p1003_1b.semaphores: 0 p1003_1b.fsync: 0 p1003_1b.shared_memory_objects: 1 p1003_1b.synchronized_io: 0 p1003_1b.timers: 200112 p1003_1b.aio_listio_max: -1 p1003_1b.aio_max: -1 p1003_1b.aio_prio_delta_max: -1 p1003_1b.delaytimer_max: 2147483647 p1003_1b.mq_open_max: 0 p1003_1b.pagesize: 4096 p1003_1b.rtsig_max: 62 p1003_1b.sem_nsems_max: 30 p1003_1b.sem_value_max: 2147483647 p1003_1b.sigqueue_max: 128 p1003_1b.timer_max: 32 p1003_1b.nsems: 0 security.jail.param.cpuset.id: 0 security.jail.param.host.hostid: 0 security.jail.param.host.hostuuid: 64 security.jail.param.host.domainname: 256 security.jail.param.host.hostname: 256 security.jail.param.children.max: 0 security.jail.param.children.cur: 0 security.jail.param.enforce_statfs: 0 security.jail.param.securelevel: 0 security.jail.param.path: 1024 security.jail.param.name: 256 security.jail.param.parent: 0 security.jail.param.jid: 0 security.jail.enforce_statfs: 2 security.jail.mount_allowed: 0 security.jail.chflags_allowed: 0 security.jail.allow_raw_sockets: 0 security.jail.sysvipc_allowed: 0 security.jail.socket_unixiproute_only: 1 security.jail.set_hostname_allowed: 1 security.jail.jail_max_af_ips: 255 security.jail.jailed: 0 security.bsd.map_at_zero: 0 security.bsd.suser_enabled: 1 security.bsd.unprivileged_proc_debug: 1 security.bsd.conservative_signals: 1 security.bsd.see_other_gids: 1 security.bsd.see_other_uids: 1 security.bsd.unprivileged_read_msgbuf: 1 security.bsd.hardlink_check_gid: 0 security.bsd.hardlink_check_uid: 0 security.bsd.unprivileged_get_quota: 0 security.mac.labeled: 0 security.mac.max_slots: 4 security.mac.version: 4 security.mac.mmap_revocation_via_cow: 0 security.mac.mmap_revocation: 1 compat.ia32.maxvmem: 0 compat.ia32.maxssiz: 67108864 compat.ia32.maxdsiz: 536870912 dev.nexus.0.%driver: nexus dev.nexus.0.%parent: root0 dev.ram.0.%desc: System RAM dev.ram.0.%driver: ram dev.ram.0.%parent: nexus0 dev.acpi.0.%desc: LENOVO TP-6Q dev.acpi.0.%driver: acpi dev.acpi.0.%parent: nexus0 dev.acpi_ec.0.%desc: Embedded Controller: GPE 0x11, ECDT dev.acpi_ec.0.%driver: acpi_ec dev.acpi_ec.0.%location: handle=\_SB_.PCI0.LPC_.EC__ dev.acpi_ec.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C09 _UID=0 dev.acpi_ec.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.acpi_sysresource.0.%desc: System Resource dev.acpi_sysresource.0.%driver: acpi_sysresource dev.acpi_sysresource.0.%location: handle=\_SB_.MEM_ dev.acpi_sysresource.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C01 _UID=0 dev.acpi_sysresource.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.acpi_sysresource.1.%desc: System Resource dev.acpi_sysresource.1.%driver: acpi_sysresource dev.acpi_sysresource.1.%location: handle=\_SB_.PCI0.LPC_.SIO_ dev.acpi_sysresource.1.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C02 _UID=0 dev.acpi_sysresource.1.%parent: acpi0 dev.acpi_timer.0.%desc: 24-bit timer at 3.579545MHz dev.acpi_timer.0.%driver: acpi_timer dev.acpi_timer.0.%location: unknown dev.acpi_timer.0.%pnpinfo: unknown dev.acpi_timer.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.cpu.0.%desc: ACPI CPU dev.cpu.0.%driver: cpu dev.cpu.0.%location: handle=\_PR_.CPU0 dev.cpu.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=none _UID=0 dev.cpu.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.cpu.0.freq: 2534 dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2534/25000 2399/23648 2266/22342 2133/21080 1999/19806 1866/18575 1733/17387 1599/16204 1466/15057 1333/13941 1199/12830 1049/11226 899/9622 749/8018 599/6415 449/4811 299/3207 149/1603 dev.cpu.0.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/245 dev.cpu.0.cx_lowest: C1 dev.cpu.0.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% last 500us dev.cpu.1.%desc: ACPI CPU dev.cpu.1.%driver: cpu dev.cpu.1.%location: handle=\_PR_.CPU1 dev.cpu.1.%pnpinfo: _HID=none _UID=0 dev.cpu.1.%parent: acpi0 dev.cpu.1.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/245 dev.cpu.1.cx_lowest: C1 dev.cpu.1.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% last 500us dev.cpu.2.%desc: ACPI CPU dev.cpu.2.%driver: cpu dev.cpu.2.%location: handle=\_PR_.CPU2 dev.cpu.2.%pnpinfo: _HID=none _UID=0 dev.cpu.2.%parent: acpi0 dev.cpu.2.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/245 dev.cpu.2.cx_lowest: C1 dev.cpu.2.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% last 500us dev.cpu.3.%desc: ACPI CPU dev.cpu.3.%driver: cpu dev.cpu.3.%location: handle=\_PR_.CPU3 dev.cpu.3.%pnpinfo: _HID=none _UID=0 dev.cpu.3.%parent: acpi0 dev.cpu.3.cx_supported: C1/3 C2/245 dev.cpu.3.cx_lowest: C1 dev.cpu.3.cx_usage: 100.00% 0.00% last 500us dev.pci_link.0.%desc: ACPI PCI Link LNKA dev.pci_link.0.%driver: pci_link dev.pci_link.0.%location: handle=\_SB_.LNKA dev.pci_link.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C0F _UID=1 dev.pci_link.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.pci_link.1.%desc: ACPI PCI Link LNKB dev.pci_link.1.%driver: pci_link dev.pci_link.1.%location: handle=\_SB_.LNKB dev.pci_link.1.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C0F _UID=2 dev.pci_link.1.%parent: acpi0 dev.pci_link.2.%desc: ACPI PCI Link LNKC dev.pci_link.2.%driver: pci_link dev.pci_link.2.%location: handle=\_SB_.LNKC dev.pci_link.2.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C0F _UID=3 dev.pci_link.2.%parent: acpi0 dev.pci_link.3.%desc: ACPI PCI Link LNKD dev.pci_link.3.%driver: pci_link dev.pci_link.3.%location: handle=\_SB_.LNKD dev.pci_link.3.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C0F _UID=4 dev.pci_link.3.%parent: acpi0 dev.pci_link.4.%desc: ACPI PCI Link LNKE dev.pci_link.4.%driver: pci_link dev.pci_link.4.%location: handle=\_SB_.LNKE dev.pci_link.4.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C0F _UID=5 dev.pci_link.4.%parent: acpi0 dev.pci_link.5.%desc: ACPI PCI Link LNKF dev.pci_link.5.%driver: pci_link dev.pci_link.5.%location: handle=\_SB_.LNKF dev.pci_link.5.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C0F _UID=6 dev.pci_link.5.%parent: acpi0 dev.pci_link.6.%desc: ACPI PCI Link LNKG dev.pci_link.6.%driver: pci_link dev.pci_link.6.%location: handle=\_SB_.LNKG dev.pci_link.6.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C0F _UID=7 dev.pci_link.6.%parent: acpi0 dev.pci_link.7.%desc: ACPI PCI Link LNKH dev.pci_link.7.%driver: pci_link dev.pci_link.7.%location: handle=\_SB_.LNKH dev.pci_link.7.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C0F _UID=8 dev.pci_link.7.%parent: acpi0 dev.acpi_hpet.0.%desc: High Precision Event Timer dev.acpi_hpet.0.%driver: acpi_hpet dev.acpi_hpet.0.%location: unknown dev.acpi_hpet.0.%pnpinfo: unknown dev.acpi_hpet.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.acpi_lid.0.%desc: Control Method Lid Switch dev.acpi_lid.0.%driver: acpi_lid dev.acpi_lid.0.%location: handle=\_SB_.LID_ dev.acpi_lid.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C0D _UID=0 dev.acpi_lid.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.acpi_lid.0.wake: 1 dev.acpi_button.0.%desc: Sleep Button dev.acpi_button.0.%driver: acpi_button dev.acpi_button.0.%location: handle=\_SB_.SLPB dev.acpi_button.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C0E _UID=0 dev.acpi_button.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.acpi_button.0.wake: 1 dev.pcib.0.%desc: ACPI Host-PCI bridge dev.pcib.0.%driver: pcib dev.pcib.0.%location: handle=\_SB_.UNCR dev.pcib.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0A03 _UID=0 dev.pcib.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.pcib.1.%desc: ACPI Host-PCI bridge dev.pcib.1.%driver: pcib dev.pcib.1.%location: handle=\_SB_.PCI0 dev.pcib.1.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0A08 _UID=0 dev.pcib.1.%parent: acpi0 dev.pcib.2.%desc: ACPI PCI-PCI bridge dev.pcib.2.%driver: pcib dev.pcib.2.%location: slot=28 function=0 handle=\_SB_.PCI0.EXP1 dev.pcib.2.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x3b42 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2164 class=0x060400 dev.pcib.2.%parent: pci0 dev.pcib.2.domain: 0 dev.pcib.2.pribus: 0 dev.pcib.2.secbus: 13 dev.pcib.2.subbus: 13 dev.pcib.2.wake: 0 dev.pcib.3.%desc: ACPI PCI-PCI bridge dev.pcib.3.%driver: pcib dev.pcib.3.%location: slot=28 function=3 handle=\_SB_.PCI0.EXP4 dev.pcib.3.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x3b48 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2164 class=0x060400 dev.pcib.3.%parent: pci0 dev.pcib.3.domain: 0 dev.pcib.3.pribus: 0 dev.pcib.3.secbus: 5 dev.pcib.3.subbus: 12 dev.pcib.3.wake: 0 dev.pcib.4.%desc: ACPI PCI-PCI bridge dev.pcib.4.%driver: pcib dev.pcib.4.%location: slot=28 function=4 handle=\_SB_.PCI0.EXP5 dev.pcib.4.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x3b4a subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2164 class=0x060400 dev.pcib.4.%parent: pci0 dev.pcib.4.domain: 0 dev.pcib.4.pribus: 0 dev.pcib.4.secbus: 2 dev.pcib.4.subbus: 2 dev.pcib.4.wake: 0 dev.pcib.5.%desc: ACPI PCI-PCI bridge dev.pcib.5.%driver: pcib dev.pcib.5.%location: slot=30 function=0 handle=\_SB_.PCI0.PCI1 dev.pcib.5.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x2448 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2165 class=0x060401 dev.pcib.5.%parent: pci0 dev.pcib.5.domain: 0 dev.pcib.5.pribus: 0 dev.pcib.5.secbus: 14 dev.pcib.5.subbus: 14 dev.pci.255.%desc: ACPI PCI bus dev.pci.255.%driver: pci dev.pci.255.%parent: pcib0 dev.pci.0.%desc: ACPI PCI bus dev.pci.0.%driver: pci dev.pci.0.%parent: pcib1 dev.pci.13.%desc: ACPI PCI bus dev.pci.13.%driver: pci dev.pci.13.%parent: pcib2 dev.pci.13.wake: 0 dev.pci.5.%desc: ACPI PCI bus dev.pci.5.%driver: pci dev.pci.5.%parent: pcib3 dev.pci.5.wake: 0 dev.pci.2.%desc: ACPI PCI bus dev.pci.2.%driver: pci dev.pci.2.%parent: pcib4 dev.pci.2.wake: 0 dev.pci.14.%desc: ACPI PCI bus dev.pci.14.%driver: pci dev.pci.14.%parent: pcib5 dev.hostb.0.%desc: Host to PCI bridge dev.hostb.0.%driver: hostb dev.hostb.0.%location: slot=0 function=0 dev.hostb.0.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x2c62 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2196 class=0x060000 dev.hostb.0.%parent: pci255 dev.hostb.1.%desc: Host to PCI bridge dev.hostb.1.%driver: hostb dev.hostb.1.%location: slot=0 function=1 handle=\_SB_.UNCR.SAD_ dev.hostb.1.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x2d01 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2196 class=0x060000 dev.hostb.1.%parent: pci255 dev.hostb.2.%desc: Host to PCI bridge dev.hostb.2.%driver: hostb dev.hostb.2.%location: slot=2 function=0 dev.hostb.2.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x2d10 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2196 class=0x060000 dev.hostb.2.%parent: pci255 dev.hostb.3.%desc: Host to PCI bridge dev.hostb.3.%driver: hostb dev.hostb.3.%location: slot=2 function=1 dev.hostb.3.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x2d11 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2196 class=0x060000 dev.hostb.3.%parent: pci255 dev.hostb.4.%desc: Host to PCI bridge dev.hostb.4.%driver: hostb dev.hostb.4.%location: slot=2 function=2 dev.hostb.4.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x2d12 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2196 class=0x060000 dev.hostb.4.%parent: pci255 dev.hostb.5.%desc: Host to PCI bridge dev.hostb.5.%driver: hostb dev.hostb.5.%location: slot=2 function=3 dev.hostb.5.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x2d13 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2196 class=0x060000 dev.hostb.5.%parent: pci255 dev.hostb.6.%desc: Host to PCI bridge dev.hostb.6.%driver: hostb dev.hostb.6.%location: slot=0 function=0 dev.hostb.6.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x0044 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2193 class=0x060000 dev.hostb.6.%parent: pci0 dev.vgapci.0.%desc: VGA-compatible display dev.vgapci.0.%driver: vgapci dev.vgapci.0.%location: slot=2 function=0 handle=\_SB_.PCI0.VID_ dev.vgapci.0.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x0046 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x215a class=0x030000 dev.vgapci.0.%parent: pci0 dev.agp.0.%desc: Intel Ironlake (M) SVGA controller dev.agp.0.%driver: agp dev.agp.0.%parent: vgapci0 dev.em.0.%desc: Intel(R) PRO/1000 Network Connection 7.0.5 dev.em.0.%driver: em dev.em.0.%location: slot=25 function=0 handle=\_SB_.PCI0.IGBE dev.em.0.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x10ea subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2153 class=0x020000 dev.em.0.%parent: pci0 dev.em.0.debug: -1 dev.em.0.stats: -1 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dev.iwn.0.%driver: iwn dev.iwn.0.%location: slot=0 function=0 dev.iwn.0.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x4238 subvendor=0x8086 subdevice=0x1111 class=0x028000 dev.iwn.0.%parent: pci2 dev.iwn.0.debug: 0 dev.isab.0.%desc: PCI-ISA bridge dev.isab.0.%driver: isab dev.isab.0.%location: slot=31 function=0 handle=\_SB_.PCI0.LPC_ dev.isab.0.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x3b07 subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2166 class=0x060100 dev.isab.0.%parent: pci0 dev.isa.0.%desc: ISA bus dev.isa.0.%driver: isa dev.isa.0.%parent: isab0 dev.atapci.0.%desc: Intel AHCI controller dev.atapci.0.%driver: atapci dev.atapci.0.%location: slot=31 function=2 handle=\_SB_.PCI0.SAT1 dev.atapci.0.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x3b2f subvendor=0x17aa subdevice=0x2168 class=0x010601 dev.atapci.0.%parent: pci0 dev.ata.2.%desc: ATA channel 0 dev.ata.2.%driver: ata dev.ata.2.%parent: atapci0 dev.ata.3.%desc: ATA channel 1 dev.ata.3.%driver: ata dev.ata.3.%parent: atapci0 dev.ata.4.%desc: ATA channel 4 dev.ata.4.%driver: ata dev.ata.4.%parent: atapci0 dev.ata.5.%desc: ATA channel 5 dev.ata.5.%driver: ata dev.ata.5.%parent: atapci0 dev.acpi_tz.0.%desc: Thermal Zone dev.acpi_tz.0.%driver: acpi_tz dev.acpi_tz.0.%location: handle=\_TZ_.THM0 dev.acpi_tz.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=none _UID=0 dev.acpi_tz.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.attimer.0.%desc: AT timer dev.attimer.0.%driver: attimer dev.attimer.0.%location: handle=\_SB_.PCI0.LPC_.TIMR dev.attimer.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0100 _UID=0 dev.attimer.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.atdma.0.%desc: AT DMA controller dev.atdma.0.%driver: atdma dev.atdma.0.%location: handle=\_SB_.PCI0.LPC_.DMAC dev.atdma.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0200 _UID=0 dev.atdma.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.fpupnp.0.%desc: Legacy ISA coprocessor support dev.fpupnp.0.%driver: fpupnp dev.fpupnp.0.%location: handle=\_SB_.PCI0.LPC_.FPU_ dev.fpupnp.0.%pnpinfo: _HID=PNP0C04 _UID=0 dev.fpupnp.0.%parent: acpi0 dev.atrtc.0.%desc: AT realtime clock dev.atrtc.0.%driver: atrtc dev.atrtc.0.%location: handle=\_SB_.PCI0.LPC_.RTC_ dev.atrtc.0.%pnpinfo: 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kstat.zfs.misc.arcstats.l2_write_buffer_list_iter: 0 kstat.zfs.misc.arcstats.l2_write_buffer_list_null_iter: 0 kstat.zfs.misc.vdev_cache_stats.delegations: 1695 kstat.zfs.misc.vdev_cache_stats.hits: 816 kstat.zfs.misc.vdev_cache_stats.misses: 1125 --- pciconf -lv --- hostb0@pci0:255:0:0: class=0x060000 card=0x219617aa chip=0x2c628086 rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = bridge subclass = HOST-PCI hostb1@pci0:255:0:1: class=0x060000 card=0x219617aa chip=0x2d018086 rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = bridge subclass = HOST-PCI hostb2@pci0:255:2:0: class=0x060000 card=0x219617aa chip=0x2d108086 rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = bridge subclass = HOST-PCI hostb3@pci0:255:2:1: class=0x060000 card=0x219617aa chip=0x2d118086 rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = bridge subclass = HOST-PCI hostb4@pci0:255:2:2: class=0x060000 card=0x219617aa chip=0x2d128086 rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = bridge subclass = HOST-PCI hostb5@pci0:255:2:3: class=0x060000 card=0x219617aa chip=0x2d138086 rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = bridge subclass = HOST-PCI hostb6@pci0:0:0:0: class=0x060000 card=0x219317aa chip=0x00448086 rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = bridge subclass = HOST-PCI vgapci0@pci0:0:2:0: class=0x030000 card=0x215a17aa chip=0x00468086 rev=0x02 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = display subclass = VGA none0@pci0:0:22:0: class=0x078000 card=0x215f17aa chip=0x3b648086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = simple comms none1@pci0:0:22:3: class=0x070002 card=0x216217aa chip=0x3b678086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = simple comms subclass = UART em0@pci0:0:25:0: class=0x020000 card=0x215317aa chip=0x10ea8086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = network subclass = ethernet ehci0@pci0:0:26:0: class=0x0c0320 card=0x216317aa chip=0x3b3c8086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = serial bus subclass = USB none2@pci0:0:27:0: class=0x040300 card=0x215e17aa chip=0x3b568086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = multimedia subclass = HDA pcib2@pci0:0:28:0: class=0x060400 card=0x216417aa chip=0x3b428086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x01 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = bridge subclass = PCI-PCI pcib3@pci0:0:28:3: class=0x060400 card=0x216417aa chip=0x3b488086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x01 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = bridge subclass = PCI-PCI pcib4@pci0:0:28:4: class=0x060400 card=0x216417aa chip=0x3b4a8086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x01 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = bridge subclass = PCI-PCI ehci1@pci0:0:29:0: class=0x0c0320 card=0x216317aa chip=0x3b348086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = serial bus subclass = USB pcib5@pci0:0:30:0: class=0x060401 card=0x216517aa chip=0x24488086 rev=0xa6 hdr=0x01 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' device = '82801 Family (ICH2/3/4/5/6/7/8/9-M) Hub Interface to PCI Bridge' class = bridge subclass = PCI-PCI isab0@pci0:0:31:0: class=0x060100 card=0x216617aa chip=0x3b078086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = bridge subclass = PCI-ISA atapci0@pci0:0:31:2: class=0x010601 card=0x216817aa chip=0x3b2f8086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' device = 'IBEX AHCI Controller(6Port)' class = mass storage subclass = SATA none3@pci0:0:31:3: class=0x0c0500 card=0x216717aa chip=0x3b308086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = serial bus subclass = SMBus none4@pci0:0:31:6: class=0x118000 card=0x219017aa chip=0x3b328086 rev=0x06 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = dasp iwn0@pci0:2:0:0: class=0x028000 card=0x11118086 chip=0x42388086 rev=0x35 hdr=0x00 vendor = 'Intel Corporation' class = network --- My /boot/loader.conf --- zfs_load="YES" vfs.root.mountfrom="zfs:zroot" if_iwn_load="YES" if_iwnfw_load="YES" wlan_wep_load="YES" wlan_ccmp_load="YES" wlan_tkip_load="YES" i915_load="YES" autoboot_delay="3" --- my rc.conf --- # zfs support zfs_enable="YES" # network wlans_iwn0="wlan0" ifconfig_wlan0="WPA DHCP" ifconfig_em0="DHCP" # hal and dbus hald_enable="YES" dbus_enable="YES" # 3D graphics agp_load="YES" # power settings powerd_enable="YES" powerd_flags="-b adaptive -a max" economy_cx_lowest="HIGH" economy_cpu_freq="LOW" # console settings keymap="uk.iso" # hostname hostname="beastie.localdomain" # services sshd_enable="YES" ntpd_enable="YES" From lambert at lambertfam.org Mon May 24 17:05:16 2010 From: lambert at lambertfam.org (Scott Lambert) Date: Mon May 24 17:05:22 2010 Subject: Suspend/Resume problem on Thinkpad X201 (8-STABLE) In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <20100524170514.GD34184@sysmon.tcworks.net> On Sat, May 22, 2010 at 06:20:15PM +0100, Geoffrey Ferrari wrote: > Hi folks, > > I've just bought a Lenovo Thinkpad X201 which I plan to use as my main > work machine (mainly, all I need is emacs + latex) I've a little past > experience with FreeBSD (and Linux), but this is the first time I've > committed to trying to use FreeBSD for my main work computer. I > Now for my request for help :) My Thinkpad successfully enters sleep > mode (that's ACPI level S3 - suspend to ram), but there are problems > with resuming out of sleep mode. The main problem is that the LCD does > not wake up upon resume, and simply stays black. The computer is > actually awake when this happens though! I can e.g. logout (typing > blindly) and I can even log in via ssh. However, the screen stays > switched off. I read on some forums that some people have experienced > a similar problem where their screen switches on but displays nothing, > only a black background. But no, my screen doesn't even switch on! > > I've searched numerous forums and tried various things, but none of > them resolve the problem and some make it worse! Here's a sample of > what I've tried so far. > > Setting hw.acpi.video_reset=1 to loader.conf. This makes things worse. > When I do this, my laptop refuses to wake from sleep at all. > Loading the i915 driver in loader.conf. This seems to do nothing. > Loading acpi_ibm in loader.conf. This seems to do nothing. > Setting debug.acpi.disabled="YES" in sysctl.conf . This seems to do nothing. > > I've also tried switching from one virtual console to another, both > via the keyboard, and by running "vidcontrol -s 2 > /dev/console". > > I've checked /var/log/messages after resume and it reports "Interrupt > storm detected on irq9" - that's seems to be associated with ACPI. > > So, I'm writing to ask if anyone can help me to get my laptop to > resume properly. I'm including some info below that my help someone to > understand what's going on. I really love FreeBSD so I hope someone > will be able to help me to get my laptop to sleep and wake reliably! Are you in X when you sleep? Have you tried after switching to ttyv0 first? CTRL-ALT-F1 from X. I have this in my rc.suspend, right after the creation of the /var/run/rc.suspend.pid file. /usr/sbin/vidcontrol -s 1 < /dev/ttyv0 I also unload the wireless driver in rc.suspend, and load it in rc.resume. But my wireless card's microPCI slot doesn't seem to get fully renabled on resume yet. -- Scott Lambert KC5MLE Unix SysAdmin lambert@lambertfam.org From jkim at FreeBSD.org Mon May 24 18:16:44 2010 From: jkim at FreeBSD.org (Jung-uk Kim) Date: Mon May 24 18:16:51 2010 Subject: Suspend/Resume problem on Thinkpad X201 (8-STABLE) In-Reply-To: <20100524170514.GD34184@sysmon.tcworks.net> References: <20100524170514.GD34184@sysmon.tcworks.net> Message-ID: <201005241416.28882.jkim@FreeBSD.org> On Monday 24 May 2010 01:05 pm, Scott Lambert wrote: > On Sat, May 22, 2010 at 06:20:15PM +0100, Geoffrey Ferrari wrote: > > Hi folks, > > > > I've just bought a Lenovo Thinkpad X201 which I plan to use as my > > main work machine (mainly, all I need is emacs + latex) I've a > > little past experience with FreeBSD (and Linux), but this is the > > first time I've committed to trying to use FreeBSD for my main > > work computer. I > > > > > Now for my request for help :) My Thinkpad successfully enters > > sleep mode (that's ACPI level S3 - suspend to ram), but there are > > problems with resuming out of sleep mode. The main problem is > > that the LCD does not wake up upon resume, and simply stays > > black. The computer is actually awake when this happens though! I > > can e.g. logout (typing blindly) and I can even log in via ssh. > > However, the screen stays switched off. I read on some forums > > that some people have experienced a similar problem where their > > screen switches on but displays nothing, only a black background. > > But no, my screen doesn't even switch on! > > > > I've searched numerous forums and tried various things, but none > > of them resolve the problem and some make it worse! Here's a > > sample of what I've tried so far. > > > > Setting hw.acpi.video_reset=1 to loader.conf. This makes things > > worse. When I do this, my laptop refuses to wake from sleep at > > all. Loading the i915 driver in loader.conf. This seems to do > > nothing. Loading acpi_ibm in loader.conf. This seems to do > > nothing. Setting debug.acpi.disabled="YES" in sysctl.conf . This > > seems to do nothing. > > > > I've also tried switching from one virtual console to another, > > both via the keyboard, and by running "vidcontrol -s 2 > > > /dev/console". > > > > I've checked /var/log/messages after resume and it reports > > "Interrupt storm detected on irq9" - that's seems to be > > associated with ACPI. > > > > So, I'm writing to ask if anyone can help me to get my laptop to > > resume properly. I'm including some info below that my help > > someone to understand what's going on. I really love FreeBSD so I > > hope someone will be able to help me to get my laptop to sleep > > and wake reliably! > > Are you in X when you sleep? Have you tried after switching to > ttyv0 first? CTRL-ALT-F1 from X. > > I have this in my rc.suspend, right after the creation of the > /var/run/rc.suspend.pid file. > > /usr/sbin/vidcontrol -s 1 < /dev/ttyv0 --- >8 --- SNIP!!! --- >8 --- Actually it may not be necessary because syscons is automagically switched to 0 unless you set SC_NO_SUSPEND_VTYSWITCH in kernel configuration or 'hw.syscons.sc_no_suspend_vtswitch' tunable. Also, 'hw.acpi.video_reset' tunable is not recommended. If you want something similar, you should load vesa (maybe dpms as well) and it should be able to handle video reset more gracefully. FYI, talking about syscons, I committed another patch few days ago: http://docs.freebsd.org/cgi/mid.cgi?201005220735.o4M7ZHwk086790 Please test the patch if possible. Jung-uk Kim From geoffrey.ferrari at googlemail.com Mon May 24 21:07:18 2010 From: geoffrey.ferrari at googlemail.com (Geoffrey Ferrari) Date: Mon May 24 21:07:24 2010 Subject: Suspend/Resume problem on Thinkpad X201 (8-STABLE) Message-ID: On Monday 24 May 2010 01:05 pm, Scott Lambert wrote: > Are you in X when you sleep? Have you tried after switching to ttyv0 > first? CTRL-ALT-F1 from X. I've tried suspending/resuming both from the console and from X. The same problem with the screen not re-awakening occurs in both cases. > I have this in my rc.suspend, right after the creation of the > /var/run/rc.suspend.pid file. > > /usr/sbin/vidcontrol -s 1 < /dev/ttyv0 > > I also unload the wireless driver in rc.suspend, and load it in > rc.resume. But my wireless card's microPCI slot doesn't seem to get > fully renabled on resume yet. I tried both of these suggestions but sadly no luck. Thanks for your suggestions, Scott, anyway. By the way, what is your machine? Is it a Thinkpad X201 or something similar? Two other pieces of information that may be useful: 1) Suspend/resume works perfectly under the latest Ubuntu, without any special configuration. 2) I've upgraded the machine's BIOS using the latest update from Lenovo. From rex1fernando at gmail.com Mon May 24 21:45:13 2010 From: rex1fernando at gmail.com (Rex Fernando) Date: Mon May 24 21:45:20 2010 Subject: 802.11n PCI card for access point Message-ID: I have an old computer I want to configure as an access point. I need to buy a PCI card for 802.11n. As far as I can tell from reading the manual, only certain wireless cards will support this; could someone point me to a list of supported cards? Thanks, Rex Fernando From me at janh.de Mon May 24 21:52:00 2010 From: me at janh.de (Jan Henrik Sylvester) Date: Mon May 24 21:52:06 2010 Subject: Suspend/Resume problem on Thinkpad X201 (8-STABLE) In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <4BFAF4F5.3040401@janh.de> On 01/-10/63 20:59, Geoffrey Ferrari wrote: > I tried both of these suggestions but sadly no luck. Thanks for your > suggestions, Scott, anyway. By the way, what is your machine? Is it a > Thinkpad X201 or something similar? > > Two other pieces of information that may be useful: > 1) Suspend/resume works perfectly under the latest Ubuntu, without any > special configuration. > 2) I've upgraded the machine's BIOS using the latest update from Lenovo. Unfortunately, I can only provide a "me, too". I have got a Thinkpad T510 (i7-620M, 4GB RAM, Nvidia NVS 3100M) on 8-STABLE amd64 with exactly the same issue. I did compare your dmesg and sysctl with mine -- everything but the graphics is practically the same (you got ATA+ZFS, I got AHCI+journaling UFS, I enabled hda, C2 states, and changed the clockrate). What could be interesting: - The issue does not seem to be due to the on CPU graphics. It happens with the proprietary Nvidia driver, too. - The issue does not seem to be due to amd64. In the beginning, I had i386 installed and saw the same. I also installed the latest BIOS ("BIOS: 1.18 / ECP: 1.10") a few days ago hoping that this would be it: "(Fix) Fixed an issue where system might not be resumed on non-Windows ACPI OS." Unfortunatelly, nothing changed. BTW: Since your laptop is so similar, the March/April thread I started "Thinkpad T510: LAN? CPU-C3?" probably applies to you, too. Most important: What FreeBSD calls C2 is probably C3, which you might want to activate. Cheers, Jan Henrik From scrubby at scrubtheweb.com Tue May 25 13:58:06 2010 From: scrubby at scrubtheweb.com (ScrubTheWeb.com(tm)) Date: Tue May 25 13:58:13 2010 Subject: Confirmation Required by JUN 1, 2010 Message-ID: <201005251357.o4PDvslc001926@scrubby.scrubtheweb.com> CONFIRMATION IS REQUIRED BY JUN 1, 2010 - SEE BELOW! Thanks again for submitting your URL to ScrubTheWeb(tm). Please read this entire email message to complete your no cost submission. The following URL was submitted to ScrubTheWeb.com(tm): http://www.galiciagaiteira.com/galeria4.html If you wish to CONFIRM, EDIT or DELETE this submission point your browser to: http://www.scrubtheweb.com/confirm/id/14fc5c21bc9153b28bb05afd2a2aa6ef/ We do NOT maintain a mailing list of any kind and we do NOT sell, rent or use your email address for any other purpose than this confirmation email. Note: Please do not reply to this email, as your reply will not be received. If you need to contact us for any reason please point your browser to: http://www.scrubtheweb.com/feedback/ Thanks again, ScrubTheWeb.com(tm) http://www.scrubtheweb.com/ Meta Tag Analyzer http://www.scrubtheweb.com/abs/meta-check.html Meta Tag Builder http://www.scrubtheweb.com/abs/builder.html ------------------- End of Document ------------------- From lambert at lambertfam.org Wed May 26 04:20:07 2010 From: lambert at lambertfam.org (Scott Lambert) Date: Wed May 26 04:20:14 2010 Subject: Suspend/Resume problem on Thinkpad X201 (8-STABLE) In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <20100526042005.GH34184@sysmon.tcworks.net> On Mon, May 24, 2010 at 10:07:16PM +0100, Geoffrey Ferrari wrote: > On Monday 24 May 2010 01:05 pm, Scott Lambert wrote: > > Are you in X when you sleep? Have you tried after switching to ttyv0 > > first? CTRL-ALT-F1 from X. > > I've tried suspending/resuming both from the console and from X. The > same problem with the screen not re-awakening occurs in both cases. Bummer. > > I have this in my rc.suspend, right after the creation of the > > /var/run/rc.suspend.pid file. > > > > /usr/sbin/vidcontrol -s 1 < /dev/ttyv0 > > > > I also unload the wireless driver in rc.suspend, and load it in > > rc.resume. But my wireless card's microPCI slot doesn't seem to get > > fully renabled on resume yet. > > I tried both of these suggestions but sadly no luck. Thanks for your > suggestions, Scott, anyway. By the way, what is your machine? Is it a > Thinkpad X201 or something similar? No, I am running an Acer TravelMate 5720. My only problem is with that darn wireless card not being usable on resume. I am quite happy with FreeBSD 8 amd64. Someday I'll get time to figure out what info I need to give the brains on this list to get that fixed. -- Scott Lambert KC5MLE Unix SysAdmin lambert@lambertfam.org From mira at chlastak.cz Wed May 26 22:43:51 2010 From: mira at chlastak.cz (Miroslav Chlastak) Date: Wed May 26 22:53:38 2010 Subject: Atheros and how to convert RSSI to dBm Message-ID: <4BFD9FE4.3090309@chlastak.cz> Hello, is there a way how to convert RSSI from output of "ifconfig ath0 list sta" to dBm?: [snip] ADDR AID CHAN RATE RSSI IDLE TXSEQ RXSEQ CAPS FLAG 00:4f:62:1d:d8:5d 14 9 11M 18.5 0 15932 22400 ES A [snip] I my test enviroment I use this function: noise floor + RSSI*2 = signal of client in dBm Then i get the same value as from "tcpdump -n -i ath0 -p -y IEEE802_11_RADIO": [snip] 10:41:04.746395 86402611933us tsft short preamble 58.5 Mb/s -61dB signal -98dB noise antenna 1 [0x00000012] IP 10.0.0.1.2049 > 192.168.100.2.123: NTPv3, Client, length 48 [snip] Right? Or is this conversion "stupid"? Some better idea? Is there a way how to get noise floor via "ifconfig"? I get it from output of "athstats" :( -- Mira From rpaulo at FreeBSD.org Thu May 27 00:36:44 2010 From: rpaulo at FreeBSD.org (Rui Paulo) Date: Thu May 27 00:36:57 2010 Subject: Atheros and how to convert RSSI to dBm In-Reply-To: <4BFD9FE4.3090309@chlastak.cz> References: <4BFD9FE4.3090309@chlastak.cz> Message-ID: On 26 May 2010, at 23:25, Miroslav Chlastak wrote: > Hello, > > is there a way how to convert RSSI from output of "ifconfig ath0 list sta" to dBm?: > > [snip] > > ADDR AID CHAN RATE RSSI IDLE TXSEQ RXSEQ CAPS FLAG > 00:4f:62:1d:d8:5d 14 9 11M 18.5 0 15932 22400 ES A > > [snip] > > I my test enviroment I use this function: > noise floor + RSSI*2 = signal of client in dBm > > Then i get the same value as from "tcpdump -n -i ath0 -p -y IEEE802_11_RADIO": > > [snip] > > 10:41:04.746395 86402611933us tsft short preamble 58.5 Mb/s -61dB signal -98dB noise antenna 1 [0x00000012] IP 10.0.0.1.2049 > 192.168.100.2.123: NTPv3, Client, length 48 > > [snip] > > > Right? Or is this conversion "stupid"? Some better idea? > > Is there a way how to get noise floor via "ifconfig"? I get it from output of "athstats" :( No, there's no way right now. Check this: http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2006-September/028895.html Regards, -- Rui Paulo From mira at chlastak.cz Thu May 27 07:58:10 2010 From: mira at chlastak.cz (Miroslav Chlastak) Date: Thu May 27 07:58:16 2010 Subject: Atheros and how to convert RSSI to dBm In-Reply-To: References: <4BFD9FE4.3090309@chlastak.cz> Message-ID: <4BFE260D.1090701@chlastak.cz> On 27.5.2010 02:16, Rui Paulo wrote: > On 26 May 2010, at 23:25, Miroslav Chlastak wrote: > > >> Hello, >> >> is there a way how to convert RSSI from output of "ifconfig ath0 list sta" to dBm?: >> >> [snip] >> >> ADDR AID CHAN RATE RSSI IDLE TXSEQ RXSEQ CAPS FLAG >> 00:4f:62:1d:d8:5d 14 9 11M 18.5 0 15932 22400 ES A >> >> [snip] >> >> I my test enviroment I use this function: >> noise floor + RSSI*2 = signal of client in dBm >> >> Then i get the same value as from "tcpdump -n -i ath0 -p -y IEEE802_11_RADIO": >> >> [snip] >> >> 10:41:04.746395 86402611933us tsft short preamble 58.5 Mb/s -61dB signal -98dB noise antenna 1 [0x00000012] IP 10.0.0.1.2049> 192.168.100.2.123: NTPv3, Client, length 48 >> >> [snip] >> >> >> Right? Or is this conversion "stupid"? Some better idea? >> >> Is there a way how to get noise floor via "ifconfig"? I get it from output of "athstats" :( >> > No, there's no way right now. > > Check this: http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2006-September/028895.html > > Regards, > -- > Rui Paulo > > > But this mail was sent on September 2006 - it's still impossible? :( And how to do it tcpdump? tcpdump -n -i ath0 -p -y IEEE802_11_RADIO": [snip] 10:41:04.746395 86402611933us tsft short preamble 58.5 Mb/s -61dB signal -98dB noise antenna 1 [0x00000012] IP 10.0.0.1.2049> 192.168.100.2.123: NTPv3, Client, length 48 [snip] Signal -61dB is right signal of my connected wireless client. Tcpdump this signal "know", but system (via ifconfig) doesn't? -- Mira Chlastak From rpaulo at FreeBSD.org Thu May 27 08:24:00 2010 From: rpaulo at FreeBSD.org (Rui Paulo) Date: Thu May 27 08:24:07 2010 Subject: Atheros and how to convert RSSI to dBm In-Reply-To: <4BFE260D.1090701@chlastak.cz> References: <4BFD9FE4.3090309@chlastak.cz> <4BFE260D.1090701@chlastak.cz> Message-ID: On 27 May 2010, at 08:58, Miroslav Chlastak wrote: > On 27.5.2010 02:16, Rui Paulo wrote: >> On 26 May 2010, at 23:25, Miroslav Chlastak wrote: >> >> >>> Hello, >>> >>> is there a way how to convert RSSI from output of "ifconfig ath0 list sta" to dBm?: >>> >>> [snip] >>> >>> ADDR AID CHAN RATE RSSI IDLE TXSEQ RXSEQ CAPS FLAG >>> 00:4f:62:1d:d8:5d 14 9 11M 18.5 0 15932 22400 ES A >>> >>> [snip] >>> >>> I my test enviroment I use this function: >>> noise floor + RSSI*2 = signal of client in dBm >>> >>> Then i get the same value as from "tcpdump -n -i ath0 -p -y IEEE802_11_RADIO": >>> >>> [snip] >>> >>> 10:41:04.746395 86402611933us tsft short preamble 58.5 Mb/s -61dB signal -98dB noise antenna 1 [0x00000012] IP 10.0.0.1.2049> 192.168.100.2.123: NTPv3, Client, length 48 >>> >>> [snip] >>> >>> >>> Right? Or is this conversion "stupid"? Some better idea? >>> >>> Is there a way how to get noise floor via "ifconfig"? I get it from output of "athstats" :( >>> >> No, there's no way right now. >> >> Check this: http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2006-September/028895.html >> >> Regards, >> -- >> Rui Paulo >> >> >> > > But this mail was sent on September 2006 - it's still impossible? :( > > And how to do it tcpdump? > > tcpdump -n -i ath0 -p -y IEEE802_11_RADIO": > > [snip] > > 10:41:04.746395 86402611933us tsft short preamble 58.5 Mb/s -61dB signal -98dB noise antenna 1 [0x00000012] IP 10.0.0.1.2049> 192.168.100.2.123: NTPv3, Client, length 48 > > [snip] > > > Signal -61dB is right signal of my connected wireless client. Tcpdump this signal "know", but system (via ifconfig) doesn't? Yes, that's right. The changes were not done yet to support displaying this data in ifconfig. It's not hard to change ifconfig, what's hard is changing every driver to provide useful info. ath passes this information to radiotap the same way it provides this information to athstats. Regards, -- Rui Paulo From mira at chlastak.cz Thu May 27 21:40:18 2010 From: mira at chlastak.cz (Miroslav Chlastak) Date: Thu May 27 21:40:24 2010 Subject: Atheros and how to convert RSSI to dBm Message-ID: <4BFEE6C5.8080807@chlastak.cz> On 27.5.2010 10:23, Rui Paulo wrote: > On 27 May 2010, at 08:58, Miroslav Chlastak wrote: > > >> On 27.5.2010 02:16, Rui Paulo wrote: >> >>> On 26 May 2010, at 23:25, Miroslav Chlastak wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>> Hello, >>>> >>>> is there a way how to convert RSSI from output of "ifconfig ath0 list sta" to dBm?: >>>> >>>> [snip] >>>> >>>> ADDR AID CHAN RATE RSSI IDLE TXSEQ RXSEQ CAPS FLAG >>>> 00:4f:62:1d:d8:5d 14 9 11M 18.5 0 15932 22400 ES A >>>> >>>> [snip] >>>> >>>> I my test enviroment I use this function: >>>> noise floor + RSSI*2 = signal of client in dBm >>>> >>>> Then i get the same value as from "tcpdump -n -i ath0 -p -y IEEE802_11_RADIO": >>>> >>>> [snip] >>>> >>>> 10:41:04.746395 86402611933us tsft short preamble 58.5 Mb/s -61dB signal -98dB noise antenna 1 [0x00000012] IP 10.0.0.1.2049> 192.168.100.2.123: NTPv3, Client, length 48 >>>> >>>> [snip] >>>> >>>> >>>> Right? Or is this conversion "stupid"? Some better idea? >>>> >>>> Is there a way how to get noise floor via "ifconfig"? I get it from output of "athstats" :( >>>> >>>> >>> No, there's no way right now. >>> >>> Check this: http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2006-September/028895.html >>> >>> Regards, >>> -- >>> Rui Paulo >>> >>> >>> >>> >> But this mail was sent on September 2006 - it's still impossible? :( >> >> And how to do it tcpdump? >> >> tcpdump -n -i ath0 -p -y IEEE802_11_RADIO": >> >> [snip] >> >> 10:41:04.746395 86402611933us tsft short preamble 58.5 Mb/s -61dB signal -98dB noise antenna 1 [0x00000012] IP 10.0.0.1.2049> 192.168.100.2.123: NTPv3, Client, length 48 >> >> [snip] >> >> >> Signal -61dB is right signal of my connected wireless client. Tcpdump this signal "know", but system (via ifconfig) doesn't? >> > Yes, that's right. The changes were not done yet to support displaying this data in ifconfig. It's not hard to change ifconfig, what's hard is changing every driver to provide useful info. ath passes this information to radiotap the same way it provides this information to athstats. > > Regards, > -- > Rui Paulo > > > And why not display a new column name "Signal"? Card with "supported features" display right signal of wireless client and others display "NaN"? Atheros drivers have this support? Is my converting algoritmus right for ath devices (noise floor + RSSI*2 = signal of wireless client in dBm)? -- Mira Chlastak From alex323 at gmail.com Fri May 28 17:10:49 2010 From: alex323 at gmail.com (Alex) Date: Fri May 28 17:10:56 2010 Subject: Intel 5300AGN Message-ID: <20100528131038.41a41645@gmail.com> Hi. I am about to purchase an Intel 5300AGN. Is it compatible with FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE amd64? Thank you. -- Alex -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 195 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-mobile/attachments/20100528/7d063c1b/signature.pgp From glen.j.barber at gmail.com Sat May 29 14:14:50 2010 From: glen.j.barber at gmail.com (Glen Barber) Date: Sat May 29 14:14:57 2010 Subject: Intel 5300AGN In-Reply-To: <20100528131038.41a41645@gmail.com> References: <20100528131038.41a41645@gmail.com> Message-ID: <4C011BD5.5010605@gmail.com> Hi, On 5/28/10 1:10 PM, Alex wrote: > Hi. I am about to purchase an Intel 5300AGN. Is it compatible with > FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE amd64? > > Thank you. > You would have better luck with 8.1-PRERELEASE, as the iwn(4) driver was ported to 8-STABLE after -RELEASE was already out. Regards, -- Glen Barber From glen.j.barber at gmail.com Sat May 29 14:21:01 2010 From: glen.j.barber at gmail.com (Glen Barber) Date: Sat May 29 14:21:06 2010 Subject: Intel 5300AGN In-Reply-To: <4C011BD5.5010605@gmail.com> References: <20100528131038.41a41645@gmail.com> <4C011BD5.5010605@gmail.com> Message-ID: <4C011C69.6020100@gmail.com> On 5/29/10 9:51 AM, Glen Barber wrote: > Hi, > > On 5/28/10 1:10 PM, Alex wrote: >> Hi. I am about to purchase an Intel 5300AGN. Is it compatible with >> FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE amd64? >> >> Thank you. >> > > You would have better luck with 8.1-PRERELEASE, as the iwn(4) driver was > ported to 8-STABLE after -RELEASE was already out. > > Regards, > Just to clarify, 5100/5300AGN support was added to iwn(4) after -RELEASE was out; the driver already existed for previous chipsets. Regards, -- Glen Barber From sam at freebsd.org Sat May 29 20:47:24 2010 From: sam at freebsd.org (Sam Leffler) Date: Sat May 29 20:47:31 2010 Subject: Atheros and how to convert RSSI to dBm In-Reply-To: <4BFD9FE4.3090309@chlastak.cz> References: <4BFD9FE4.3090309@chlastak.cz> Message-ID: <4C017D58.10800@freebsd.org> On 5/26/10 3:25 PM, Miroslav Chlastak wrote: > Hello, > > is there a way how to convert RSSI from output of "ifconfig ath0 list > sta" to dBm?: > > [snip] > > ADDR AID CHAN RATE RSSI IDLE TXSEQ RXSEQ CAPS FLAG > 00:4f:62:1d:d8:5d 14 9 11M 18.5 0 15932 22400 ES A > > [snip] > > I my test enviroment I use this function: > noise floor + RSSI*2 = signal of client in dBm > > Then i get the same value as from "tcpdump -n -i ath0 -p -y > IEEE802_11_RADIO": > > [snip] > > 10:41:04.746395 86402611933us tsft short preamble 58.5 Mb/s -61dB signal > -98dB noise antenna 1 [0x00000012] IP 10.0.0.1.2049 > 192.168.100.2.123: > NTPv3, Client, length 48 > > [snip] > > > Right? Or is this conversion "stupid"? Some better idea? > > Is there a way how to get noise floor via "ifconfig"? I get it from > output of "athstats" :( > > tcpdump calculates the signal value using rssi as you described. I personally never cared much for this value because getting an accurate measure for noise floor is hard (especially when you consider 11n) and for ath at least the available noise floor dat is only approximate. I can think of very few situations where you want signal and NOT rssi. Sam From sam at freebsd.org Sat May 29 20:49:29 2010 From: sam at freebsd.org (Sam Leffler) Date: Sat May 29 20:50:03 2010 Subject: Atheros and how to convert RSSI to dBm In-Reply-To: References: <4BFD9FE4.3090309@chlastak.cz> <4BFE260D.1090701@chlastak.cz> Message-ID: <4C017DD7.5000901@freebsd.org> On 5/27/10 1:23 AM, Rui Paulo wrote: > On 27 May 2010, at 08:58, Miroslav Chlastak wrote: > >> On 27.5.2010 02:16, Rui Paulo wrote: >>> On 26 May 2010, at 23:25, Miroslav Chlastak wrote: >>> >>> >>>> Hello, >>>> >>>> is there a way how to convert RSSI from output of "ifconfig ath0 list sta" to dBm?: >>>> >>>> [snip] >>>> >>>> ADDR AID CHAN RATE RSSI IDLE TXSEQ RXSEQ CAPS FLAG >>>> 00:4f:62:1d:d8:5d 14 9 11M 18.5 0 15932 22400 ES A >>>> >>>> [snip] >>>> >>>> I my test enviroment I use this function: >>>> noise floor + RSSI*2 = signal of client in dBm >>>> >>>> Then i get the same value as from "tcpdump -n -i ath0 -p -y IEEE802_11_RADIO": >>>> >>>> [snip] >>>> >>>> 10:41:04.746395 86402611933us tsft short preamble 58.5 Mb/s -61dB signal -98dB noise antenna 1 [0x00000012] IP 10.0.0.1.2049> 192.168.100.2.123: NTPv3, Client, length 48 >>>> >>>> [snip] >>>> >>>> >>>> Right? Or is this conversion "stupid"? Some better idea? >>>> >>>> Is there a way how to get noise floor via "ifconfig"? I get it from output of "athstats" :( >>>> >>> No, there's no way right now. >>> >>> Check this: http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2006-September/028895.html >>> >>> Regards, >>> -- >>> Rui Paulo >>> >>> >>> >> >> But this mail was sent on September 2006 - it's still impossible? :( >> >> And how to do it tcpdump? >> >> tcpdump -n -i ath0 -p -y IEEE802_11_RADIO": >> >> [snip] >> >> 10:41:04.746395 86402611933us tsft short preamble 58.5 Mb/s -61dB signal -98dB noise antenna 1 [0x00000012] IP 10.0.0.1.2049> 192.168.100.2.123: NTPv3, Client, length 48 >> >> [snip] >> >> >> Signal -61dB is right signal of my connected wireless client. Tcpdump this signal "know", but system (via ifconfig) doesn't? > > Yes, that's right. The changes were not done yet to support displaying this data in ifconfig. It's not hard to change ifconfig, what's hard is changing every driver to provide useful info. ath passes this information to radiotap the same way it provides this information to athstats. I believe every driver does already report rssi in .5 dBm units but not every device exports noise floor. rssi is used by net80211 during scanning so if it's inaccurate then it can affect the scanning algorithm. Sam