On Mon, 2007-01-15 at 11:49 -0500, Tom Diehl wrote: > On Mon, 15 Jan 2007, Daniel de Kok wrote: > > > On Mon, January 15, 2007 2:44 am, Tom Diehl wrote: > >> Assuming cpufreqd is part of cpuspeed then, yes it is disabled. The only > >> thing I can find on the system that refers to cpufreq are kernel modules. > > > > Yeah, sorry, I always mix up cpufreqd and cpuspeed :). Are any module > > related to clock scaling loaded? > > Not that I see. > > [root at hepa pts0 init.d]# lsmod > Module Size Used by > md5 4033 1 > ipv6 234113 14 > dm_mod 59349 0 > uhci_hcd 31065 0 > ehci_hcd 31045 0 > via_rhine 23113 0 > mii 5057 1 via_rhine > ext3 116553 1 > jbd 71385 1 ext3 > [root at hepa pts0 init.d]# OK ... another thing to check is that you have the latest BIOS offered by the manufacture (as there my be some updates there). Could also be some apic/acpi detection issues (bios might fix those). I have seen CentOS run OK on several via processor machines ... in fact, these guys sell them with CentOS installed: http://www.cheeplinux.com/index.php?cPath=72&osC Thanks, Johnny Hughes -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20070115/356eb68b/attachment-0005.sig>