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I've been living with this problem since I installed archlinux on my not so up to date pc based on a Pentium 4 mobo with HT.
The problem is w/o putting acpi=ht in the kernel boot line the PC won't start up and freezes shortly after passing grub.
Especially in combination with apm=power off (enabling auto power off after system shutdown) I can happily live with that.
But after a complete system upgrade in late September which apparently includes a kernel upgrade the pc won't fire up again, even
with acpi=ht and apm=power off in the kernel line... it freezes shortly after grub. It seems acpi=ht has lost its magic.
http://www.mediafire.com/imageview.php? … gx&thumb=5
Now I need your kind help to find out what's going on. Has there been a change to the kernel parameters? Should I re-install the kernel? How?
You can find the pacman install log here in case you need it -> http://pastebin.com/24ThBjZG
Many thanks!
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I really need my linux system by the end of this week, because I've to return my current pc back to the university dep.
Any idea how and where to start looking?
Many thanks!
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goodboy, you can try to downgrade to kernel26-LTS (2.6.32), it's in the official repo.
It's older than your previous .34, so it probably supports the acpi trick.
Last edited by hidefromkgb (2010-10-18 15:03:33)
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there is something odd at your kernel boot parameters.
it seems you want to enable some kind of acpi, and then provide an apm mode. both are mutually exclussive.
and from the linux documentation, acpi=ht does not exist. did you try any of the following?
147 acpi= [HW,ACPI,X86]
148 Advanced Configuration and Power Interface
149 Format: { force | off | strict | noirq | rsdt }
150 force -- enable ACPI if default was off
151 off -- disable ACPI if default was on
152 noirq -- do not use ACPI for IRQ routing
153 strict -- Be less tolerant of platforms that are no t
154 strictly ACPI specification compliant.
155 rsdt -- prefer RSDT over (default) XSDT
156 copy_dsdt -- copy DSDT to memory
157
158 See also Documentation/power/pm.txt, pci=noacpi
this was taken from linux-2.6/Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt
EDIT
and some more digging: i got to the patch that removed the ht parameter: http://kerneltrap.org/mailarchive/git-c … 5/28/40705
you could try to revert that patch on a custom kernel, but i dont think this to be a long term solution. i guess the best you can do is file a bug report upstream requesting for a revert or a fix for your situation.
EDIT2: seems that your only viable solution would be acpi=off if you dont want to compile your own kernel (you will apparently lose hyperthreading too)
Last edited by eldragon (2010-10-18 17:14:32)
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I always believed one of the strengths of Linux was to support older systems, I don't understand why they just cancelled the acpi=ht option w/o an alternative, the majority doesn't even know that option exists. I'm going to ask them to revert the patch. For now I've to live with no ht enabled.
Again many thanks you really helped me a great deal.
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I always believed one of the strengths of Linux was to support older systems, I don't understand why they just cancelled the acpi=ht option w/o an alternative, the majority doesn't even know that option exists. I'm going to ask them to revert the patch. For now I've to live with no ht enabled.
Again many thanks you really helped me a great deal.
Are you sure, it's a kernel problem? I have P4HT machine, which has been running arch for 15 months already, with the default config. Before, there was RHEL5 with 2.6.18
Arch Linux is more than just GNU/Linux -- it's an adventure
pkill -9 systemd
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