On Thu, 2020-04-16 at 20:54 +0000, Anton Keks wrote:
> No, normally it's below 60C.
>
> I can get it to 80C (and shutdown) when the AC is plugged in and
> charging the battery and I load my CPU a lot at the same time.
>
> Usually it means a video conference with several people and charging
> at
> the same time. A little bit of sun also helps.
>
> So I guess the cooling mechanism here is not adequate, if thermald
> tries
> to do anything about it at all. I am attaching thermald debug log, if
> it
> helps.
>
> Also, I usually can avoid the shutdown if I manually reduce CPU
> target
> temperature to 70C using this tool:
> https://github.com/erpalma/throttled
> This results in very heavy CPU throttling well below 1GHz.
Not sure if you ran dptfxtract tool on this system. May be thermald is
not doing anything because there is no target device.
On Thu, 2020-04-16 at 20:54 +0000, Anton Keks wrote: /github. com/erpalma/ throttled
> No, normally it's below 60C.
>
> I can get it to 80C (and shutdown) when the AC is plugged in and
> charging the battery and I load my CPU a lot at the same time.
>
> Usually it means a video conference with several people and charging
> at
> the same time. A little bit of sun also helps.
>
> So I guess the cooling mechanism here is not adequate, if thermald
> tries
> to do anything about it at all. I am attaching thermald debug log, if
> it
> helps.
>
> Also, I usually can avoid the shutdown if I manually reduce CPU
> target
> temperature to 70C using this tool:
> https:/
> This results in very heavy CPU throttling well below 1GHz.
Not sure if you ran dptfxtract tool on this system. May be thermald is
not doing anything because there is no target device.
Thanks,
Srinivas
> /bugs.launchpad .net/ubuntu/ +source/ linux/+ bug/1873083/ +attachment/ 5355770/ +files/ thermald. txt
>
> ** Attachment added: "thermald debug log"
>
> https:/
>