On 11/21/19 1:40 AM, Josh wrote:
Thanks Travis for listing down your BIOS settings. The changes I made
to match your settings:
Config - Power
8254 Timer Clock Gating -> Auto this was to Disabled in my BIOS
Config - USB
Always On USB - Disabled this was Enabled in my BIOS
Security
Thanks Travis for listing down your BIOS settings. The changes I made
to match your settings:
Config - Power
8254 Timer Clock Gating -> Auto this was to Disabled in my BIOS
Config - USB
Always On USB - Disabled this was Enabled in my BIOS
Security - I/O Port Access
Memory Card Slot
The issue lies in here:
Config - USB
USB UEFI BIOS Support -> Enabled
Always On USB - Disabled
Config - Thunderbolt 3
Thunderbolt BIOS Assist Mode -> Enabled
On Tue, Nov 19, 2019, at 10:06, Josh wrote:
> Have you tried on 6.5?
>
> My X1rev6 did not like the upgrade to 6.6. heavy cpu consumption,
> super hot, laggy when browsing and fan spinning consistently.
>
> I've reinstalled 6.5 and been using the same settings as yours.
> everything is back to no
On Tue, 2019-11-19 at 12:54 -0600, Dave Trudgian wrote:
> On Tue, 2019-11-19 at 19:06 +0100, Josh wrote:
> > Have you tried on 6.5?
> >
> > My X1rev6 did not like the upgrade to 6.6. heavy cpu consumption,
> > super hot, laggy when browsing and fan spinning consistently.
> >
> > I've reinstalled
On Tue, 2019-11-19 at 19:06 +0100, Josh wrote:
> Have you tried on 6.5?
>
> My X1rev6 did not like the upgrade to 6.6. heavy cpu consumption,
> super hot, laggy when browsing and fan spinning consistently.
>
> I've reinstalled 6.5 and been using the same settings as yours.
> everything is back to
Have you tried on 6.5?
My X1rev6 did not like the upgrade to 6.6. heavy cpu consumption,
super hot, laggy when browsing and fan spinning consistently.
I've reinstalled 6.5 and been using the same settings as yours.
everything is back to normal. I guess I will wait for 6.7...
On Fri, Nov 15, 2019
This may come across as a strange question, but is the microphone
disabled in the BIOS? The azalia driver has(had?) some issues with that
before.
Cheers,
Joe
On 2019-11-16, David Trudgian wrote:
> I have also set the following systcl values:
>
> # shared memory limits (browsers, etc.)
> # max shared memory pages (*4096=8GB)
> kern.shminfo.shmall=20971552
> # max shared memory segment size (2GiB)
> kern.shminfo.shmmax=2147483647
>
*David, sorry for the repeated message. I realized that reply only went out
to you alone and not the mailing list :P
Here's what I have tried:
setup the xorg.conf file to tell it to use the intel driver instead of
modesetting
#/etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/20-intel.conf
Section "Device"
Identifier "int
On 11/15/19 9:51 AM, Michael H wrote:
> *laptop: thinkpad x230, i7 processor, 8G ram, intel hd 4000 gpu*
> *New OpenBSD user with a fresh install.*
I have a ThinkPad T430 which I'm now typing this on. It's an i5-3320m
(vs your i7-3520m) with 12GB RAM and the same HD4000 class graphics, so
it's pre
*laptop: thinkpad x230, i7 processor, 8G ram, intel hd 4000 gpu*
*New OpenBSD user with a fresh install.*
My user account is created from the install process and has "staff" class -
though i haven't increased the datasize-cur, datasize-max for staff yet.
Additionally, apmd has been set to -A as su
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