Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers critical temperature eached, shutting down Post 302467461 by ctsgnb on Friday 29th of October 2010 12:05:27 PM
Old 10-29-2010
It looks like it is more a matter of DBAN compatibility with your hardware than a real cooling problem.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

shutting down oracle with the server

What can I do to ensure that oracle database is shut down when the server reboots. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: krishan
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Shutting down Solaris

Hi I have a mix of solaris 8,9 & 10. I need to have our 6 Solaris servers shutdown buy a script that will be executed by APC network Shutdown software Im really not sure how I would write a script to shut them down and the following processes? the processes are portmapper seq seq_api... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tonysequoia
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Shutting down the Server

Hi Is there anyway i can find out from which terminal a shutdown command has been run from ? :( (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ktech
3 Replies

4. Solaris

Sun Fire v440 keeps shutting down

Hello, I hope you can help me. I am new to Sun servers and we have a Sun Fire v440 server in which one power supply failed, we are waiting for new one. But now our server is shutting down constantly. Is there any setting with which we can prevent this behaviour? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Tibor
1 Replies

5. Ubuntu

Ubuntu Hangs when shutting down

i really dont know any other way to put it besides that Ubuntu 8.04, that i just installed on my computer hangs when it shuts down. the bar depletes the orange like it should, but it never actually shuts down. anyone know whats going on? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Texasone
3 Replies

6. Solaris

I Need to edit message at shutting down

on solaris 8 i edited file rc0 in /sbin at last line ex. /sbin/sync; /sbin/sync; /sbin/sync # Unmount file systems. /usr, /var, /var/adm, /var/run are not unmounted by # umountall because they are mounted by rcS (for single user mode) rather than # mountall. If this is changed,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: infjustice
1 Replies

7. AIX

Getting error while shutting down

Hi, I am getting the error "/etc/rc.shutdown failed. Shutdown aborting" while shutting down the os. Please suggest. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
1 Replies

8. Fedora

Script for shutting down 48 computers

Hi All, I am pretty new to unix type languages. At work we have a server room with about 50 windows computers in one system and 50 in a unix system. We sometimes have power outages and I don't like the power slam. I wrote a windows batch file using sysinternals help to shutdown the windows... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jeff Rollins
4 Replies

9. Solaris

11.2 not shutting down completely

I just installed this 11.2 ver and when I tell it to shutdown it takes for ever then just hangs with this just a little bit of that red line left to go, then it just sits there like forever until I get tired of looking at it then force a shutdown by holding my power button down until my laptop... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: userx-bw
8 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

DISKs are gone after shutting down and replace an FC card

Hi there, I had issue with one of MY FC cards on T4-2 servers so system team replace it and start the machine but when launch FORMAT command so I don't see my shared disks coming from storage controller. i have checked at the Fabric switch so WWN numbers are visible and zones are ok and after... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: janakors
1 Replies
ACPI_THERMAL(4) 					   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 					   ACPI_THERMAL(4)

NAME
acpi_thermal -- ACPI thermal management subsystem SYNOPSIS
device acpi DESCRIPTION
The acpi_thermal driver provides the thermal management features of the ACPI module. This driver has a sysctl(8) interface and a devd(8) notification interface. The sysctls export properties of each ACPI thermal zone object. There can be multiple thermal zones in a system. For example, each CPU and the enclosure could all be separate thermal zones, each with its own setpoints and cooling devices. Thermal zones are numbered sequentially in the order they appear in the AML. The acpi_thermal driver also activates the active cooling system according to each thermal zone's setpoints. SYSCTL VARIABLES
hw.acpi.thermal.min_runtime Number of seconds to continue active cooling once started. A new active cooling level will not be selected until this interval expires. hw.acpi.thermal.polling_rate Number of seconds between polling the current temperature. hw.acpi.thermal.user_override If set to 1, allow user override of various setpoints (below). The original values for these settings are obtained from the BIOS and system overheating and possible damage could occur if changed. Default is 0 (no override). hw.acpi.thermal.tz%d.active Current active cooling system state. If this is non-negative, the appropriate _AC%d object is running. Set this value to the desired active cooling level to force the corresponding fan object to the appropriate level. hw.acpi.thermal.tz%d.passive_cooling If set to 1, passive cooling is enabled. It does cooling without fans using cpufreq(4) as the mechanism for controlling CPU speed. Default is enabled for tz0 where it is available. hw.acpi.thermal.tz%d.thermal_flags Current thermal zone status. These are bit-masked values. hw.acpi.thermal.tz%d.temperature Current temperature for this zone. hw.acpi.thermal.tz%d._PSV Temperature to start passive cooling by throttling down CPU, etc. This value can be overridden by the user. hw.acpi.thermal.tz%d._HOT Temperature to start critical suspend to disk (S4). This value can be overridden by the user. hw.acpi.thermal.tz%d._CRT Temperature to start critical shutdown (S5). This value can be overridden by the user. hw.acpi.thermal.tz%d._ACx Temperatures at which to switch to the corresponding active cooling level. The lower the _ACx value, the higher the cooling power. All temperatures are printed in Celsius. Values can be set in Celsius (by providing a trailing "C") or Kelvin (by leaving off any trailing letter). When setting a value by sysctl(8), do not specify a trailing decimal (i.e., 90C instead of 90.0C). NOTIFIES
Notifies are passed to userland via devd(8). See /etc/devd.conf and devd.conf(5) for examples. The acpi_thermal driver sends events with the following attributes: system ACPI subsystem Thermal type The fully qualified thermal zone object path as in the ASL. notify An integer designating the event: 0x80 Current temperature has changed. 0x81 One or more trip points (_ACx, _PSV) have changed. 0x82 One or more device lists (_ALx, _PSL, _TZD) have changed. 0xcc Non-standard notify that the system will shutdown if the temperature stays above _CRT or _HOT for one more poll cycle. SEE ALSO
acpi(4), cpufreq(4), acpidump(8) AUTHORS
Michael Smith This manual page was written by Takanori Watanabe. BSD
March 17, 2007 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:18 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy