On Thu, Apr 21, 2011 at 08:42:56AM -0700, bsquared wrote:
> 
> At first I thought your reply was off target because I did not see
> these messages running in Ubuntu on the same computer.  However, the
> errors are in the logs in the Ubuntu environment, but they never
> appeared in terminal as is the case in my working copy of LFS.  The
> computer is a five year old Compaq SR1000 T.
> 
> I'll try looking for a BIOS update and/or inspecting my CPU cooling. I
> haven't thoroughly cleaned the innards, so maybe that's the issue.
> 
> Suppose, I go with kernel option acpi=off, should I disable it in kernel 
> config?
> 
 Personally, I would be very reluctant to turn off acpi.  Let's step
back and take another look - in ubuntu, the messages exist in the
log and everything seems to work fine, but in LFS they jump up in
the terminal and scare you to death ?  I've been there in the past
for different messages, I can understand how it feels (even editing
is a pain when the error messages interfere).  I don't know how you
have things set at the moment, nor what level of severity these
messages are coded at, so the following might not help.  But for me
it has been useful on occasion - in /etc/rc.d/init.d/sysklogd, change
the line which starts klogd to

  loadproc klogd -c 4

 Sorry I can't paste the sed at the moment, I've no mouse on the
server, and I've just finished bringing it back up after replacing
the system disk [ took *ages* to log in this morning, and then
smartd started warning me the drive was failing : unimpressive on a
drive less than a month old, but at least I've managed to get a new
drive locally and got the data copied ok ].

 Checking the cpu cooling is a good idea, but jumping into BIOS
updates or reconfiguring the kernel is a bit drastic if the errors
are not major.

ĸen
-- 
das eine Mal als Tragödie, das andere Mal als Farce
-- 
http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-support
FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/faq.html
Unsubscribe: See the above information page

Reply via email to