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CPU overheating in Ubuntu 18.04


Stop cpu from overheatingCPU hardware errors in Ubuntu 17.04Set CPU temperature throttle threshold on Ubuntu/ThinkpadXPS 9370 thermal throttling ubuntu 18.04Core/Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled - Lenovo E590CPU overheating (Acer 4730z + Ubuntu 12.10)Ubuntu CPU Fan at 2200 RPM and CPU top at 90°CT430 i5 overheatingSurface Pro 1 Overheating with 16.04CPU overheating on Ubuntu 16.04 (MSI GE40)Power Management related to heatSet CPU temperature throttle threshold on Ubuntu/ThinkpadLaptop CPU+GPU overheating after update to 18.04 LTS






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty
margin-bottom:0;









5

















As I was checking the kernel logs I noticed :



kernel: CPU2: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 13430).



I have 4 CPUs and all of them have the same issue.
My laptop hardware info :



K46CB (ASUS-NotebookSKU)



CPU info :



  1. Architecture: x86_64


  2. Model name: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3537U CPU @ 2.00GHz


I searched the log and found this CPU hardware errors in Ubuntu 17.04
and Stop cpu from overheating, I checked my packages and I have thermald and intel-microcode installed.



I can hear my laptop's fan working, but sometimes it really gets hot and I can feel it through the case.



In Windows-10, although CPU usage gets high, the temperature is usually normal.



Any idea what may have gone wrong? and what can I do to further investigate this issue?



Update



I checked thermald.service status and I found this line :



thermald[879]:sysfs read failed /sys/class/thermal/cooling_device0/cur_state










share|improve this question


































    5

















    As I was checking the kernel logs I noticed :



    kernel: CPU2: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 13430).



    I have 4 CPUs and all of them have the same issue.
    My laptop hardware info :



    K46CB (ASUS-NotebookSKU)



    CPU info :



    1. Architecture: x86_64


    2. Model name: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3537U CPU @ 2.00GHz


    I searched the log and found this CPU hardware errors in Ubuntu 17.04
    and Stop cpu from overheating, I checked my packages and I have thermald and intel-microcode installed.



    I can hear my laptop's fan working, but sometimes it really gets hot and I can feel it through the case.



    In Windows-10, although CPU usage gets high, the temperature is usually normal.



    Any idea what may have gone wrong? and what can I do to further investigate this issue?



    Update



    I checked thermald.service status and I found this line :



    thermald[879]:sysfs read failed /sys/class/thermal/cooling_device0/cur_state










    share|improve this question






























      5












      5








      5








      As I was checking the kernel logs I noticed :



      kernel: CPU2: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 13430).



      I have 4 CPUs and all of them have the same issue.
      My laptop hardware info :



      K46CB (ASUS-NotebookSKU)



      CPU info :



      1. Architecture: x86_64


      2. Model name: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3537U CPU @ 2.00GHz


      I searched the log and found this CPU hardware errors in Ubuntu 17.04
      and Stop cpu from overheating, I checked my packages and I have thermald and intel-microcode installed.



      I can hear my laptop's fan working, but sometimes it really gets hot and I can feel it through the case.



      In Windows-10, although CPU usage gets high, the temperature is usually normal.



      Any idea what may have gone wrong? and what can I do to further investigate this issue?



      Update



      I checked thermald.service status and I found this line :



      thermald[879]:sysfs read failed /sys/class/thermal/cooling_device0/cur_state










      share|improve this question

















      As I was checking the kernel logs I noticed :



      kernel: CPU2: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 13430).



      I have 4 CPUs and all of them have the same issue.
      My laptop hardware info :



      K46CB (ASUS-NotebookSKU)



      CPU info :



      1. Architecture: x86_64


      2. Model name: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3537U CPU @ 2.00GHz


      I searched the log and found this CPU hardware errors in Ubuntu 17.04
      and Stop cpu from overheating, I checked my packages and I have thermald and intel-microcode installed.



      I can hear my laptop's fan working, but sometimes it really gets hot and I can feel it through the case.



      In Windows-10, although CPU usage gets high, the temperature is usually normal.



      Any idea what may have gone wrong? and what can I do to further investigate this issue?



      Update



      I checked thermald.service status and I found this line :



      thermald[879]:sysfs read failed /sys/class/thermal/cooling_device0/cur_state







      18.04 cpu overheating temperature intel-cpu






      share|improve this question
















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Jul 13 at 16:18







      Navid

















      asked Jul 13 at 16:04









      NavidNavid

      264 bronze badges




      264 bronze badges























          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          3


















          You should see (and possibly subscribe to) this bug report:



          • Thermald sysfs read failed /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zoneX/temp

          There have been numerous posts in Ask Ubuntu about CPU throttling recently:



          • Core/Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled - Lenovo E590

          • Set CPU temperature throttle threshold on Ubuntu/Thinkpad

          • XPS 9370 thermal throttling ubuntu 18.04

          All these posts say the same thing which happens to me periodically:



          ~$ journalctl | grep 'cpu clock throttled'
          Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU4: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
          Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU0: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
          Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU6: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
          Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU2: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
          Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU3: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
          Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU7: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
          Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU5: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
          Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU1: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
          Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU0: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
          Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU4: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)


          In my case it happens so rarely and with no adverse side-effects I've chosen to ignore the errors.



          Similar launchpad bug reports on the same issue:



          • Erratic behavior of CPU frequency control under load

          • Kernel wrong temperature reporting

          And just so you know it's not just Ubuntu, from Redhat:



          • Overheating CPU generates Hardware Error messages





          share|improve this answer


























          • What thermal/fan control packages do you have installed? If thermald is one of them, have you customized /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml for your hardware configuration?

            – heynnema
            Jul 14 at 13:52











          • @heynnema I've never used software to control the fans. I do use thermald but it has default config file. Fans are controlled by the laptop and almost never come on. I have to do something silly like run all 8 CPUs at 100% for more about a minute.

            – WinEunuuchs2Unix
            Jul 14 at 14:23











          • See my answer for a brief intro on how to develop a custom .xml file to control thermald. It's not that difficult. You can also search AU for other thermald answers that I've provided in the past. I've got thermald keeping my temps < 140 degrees.

            – heynnema
            Jul 14 at 14:42











          • @heynnema I don't have any temperature problems since May 20 the errors only appeared once in journalctl. I like the way the Laptop's ACPI keeps the fans turned off all the time. No noise is good noise. Conky reports temp at 51 / 52 degrees as I type this now.

            – WinEunuuchs2Unix
            Jul 14 at 14:56












          • Nice. Hey, point of note... you and I used to have similar rep, but you've blown way beyond me now. How much time do you dedicate to AU help?

            – heynnema
            Jul 14 at 15:04


















          2


















          It sounds like your /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml file needs to be tweaked for your hardware...



          I'd install thermald...



          • sudo apt-get update


          • sudo apt-get install thermald


          Thermald comes with a default configuration file at /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml that will control most computers, but may need to be customized for some computers. See man thermal-conf.xml for some details and examples. Once one has modified the configuration file, stop thermald and restart it:



          sudo service thermald restart


          After installing thermald, I'd stop the thermald process, and run it manually as sudo thermald --no-daemon to watch its actions in real time. This real time info can be used to create your own customized thermal-conf.xml file. See man thermald for more information.



          sudo service thermald stop
          sudo thermald --no-daemon --loglevel=debug


          You can search for thermald here on Ask Ubuntu to see what previous answers there are. Many of the answers come from me.



          A good starter reference is at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/PowerManagement/ThermalIssues






          share|improve this answer

































            0


















            The poblemel is therefold. First you have a high cpu usage. Secondly, the CPU's cooling is not enough and third , it doesn't correctly throttle.



            Higher cpu usage might be due to unity not correctly using you hardware geoduck acceleration. And unity is quite cpu intensive. You might twerk it or even switch to a different desktop manager, le cinnamon, Kubuntu, lubuntu or Linux mint.



            Cpu cooling on laptops is notoriously bad. Cleaning your company fan and putting the laptop on a flat surface instead of fabric/pillow might help.



            About trottling, you can set the maximum cpu frequency to a lower setting or switch to power saving mode.






            share|improve this answer



























              Your Answer








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              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes








              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              3


















              You should see (and possibly subscribe to) this bug report:



              • Thermald sysfs read failed /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zoneX/temp

              There have been numerous posts in Ask Ubuntu about CPU throttling recently:



              • Core/Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled - Lenovo E590

              • Set CPU temperature throttle threshold on Ubuntu/Thinkpad

              • XPS 9370 thermal throttling ubuntu 18.04

              All these posts say the same thing which happens to me periodically:



              ~$ journalctl | grep 'cpu clock throttled'
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU4: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU0: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU6: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU2: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU3: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU7: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU5: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU1: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU0: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU4: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)


              In my case it happens so rarely and with no adverse side-effects I've chosen to ignore the errors.



              Similar launchpad bug reports on the same issue:



              • Erratic behavior of CPU frequency control under load

              • Kernel wrong temperature reporting

              And just so you know it's not just Ubuntu, from Redhat:



              • Overheating CPU generates Hardware Error messages





              share|improve this answer


























              • What thermal/fan control packages do you have installed? If thermald is one of them, have you customized /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml for your hardware configuration?

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 13:52











              • @heynnema I've never used software to control the fans. I do use thermald but it has default config file. Fans are controlled by the laptop and almost never come on. I have to do something silly like run all 8 CPUs at 100% for more about a minute.

                – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                Jul 14 at 14:23











              • See my answer for a brief intro on how to develop a custom .xml file to control thermald. It's not that difficult. You can also search AU for other thermald answers that I've provided in the past. I've got thermald keeping my temps < 140 degrees.

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 14:42











              • @heynnema I don't have any temperature problems since May 20 the errors only appeared once in journalctl. I like the way the Laptop's ACPI keeps the fans turned off all the time. No noise is good noise. Conky reports temp at 51 / 52 degrees as I type this now.

                – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                Jul 14 at 14:56












              • Nice. Hey, point of note... you and I used to have similar rep, but you've blown way beyond me now. How much time do you dedicate to AU help?

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 15:04















              3


















              You should see (and possibly subscribe to) this bug report:



              • Thermald sysfs read failed /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zoneX/temp

              There have been numerous posts in Ask Ubuntu about CPU throttling recently:



              • Core/Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled - Lenovo E590

              • Set CPU temperature throttle threshold on Ubuntu/Thinkpad

              • XPS 9370 thermal throttling ubuntu 18.04

              All these posts say the same thing which happens to me periodically:



              ~$ journalctl | grep 'cpu clock throttled'
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU4: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU0: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU6: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU2: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU3: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU7: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU5: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU1: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU0: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU4: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)


              In my case it happens so rarely and with no adverse side-effects I've chosen to ignore the errors.



              Similar launchpad bug reports on the same issue:



              • Erratic behavior of CPU frequency control under load

              • Kernel wrong temperature reporting

              And just so you know it's not just Ubuntu, from Redhat:



              • Overheating CPU generates Hardware Error messages





              share|improve this answer


























              • What thermal/fan control packages do you have installed? If thermald is one of them, have you customized /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml for your hardware configuration?

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 13:52











              • @heynnema I've never used software to control the fans. I do use thermald but it has default config file. Fans are controlled by the laptop and almost never come on. I have to do something silly like run all 8 CPUs at 100% for more about a minute.

                – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                Jul 14 at 14:23











              • See my answer for a brief intro on how to develop a custom .xml file to control thermald. It's not that difficult. You can also search AU for other thermald answers that I've provided in the past. I've got thermald keeping my temps < 140 degrees.

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 14:42











              • @heynnema I don't have any temperature problems since May 20 the errors only appeared once in journalctl. I like the way the Laptop's ACPI keeps the fans turned off all the time. No noise is good noise. Conky reports temp at 51 / 52 degrees as I type this now.

                – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                Jul 14 at 14:56












              • Nice. Hey, point of note... you and I used to have similar rep, but you've blown way beyond me now. How much time do you dedicate to AU help?

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 15:04













              3














              3










              3









              You should see (and possibly subscribe to) this bug report:



              • Thermald sysfs read failed /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zoneX/temp

              There have been numerous posts in Ask Ubuntu about CPU throttling recently:



              • Core/Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled - Lenovo E590

              • Set CPU temperature throttle threshold on Ubuntu/Thinkpad

              • XPS 9370 thermal throttling ubuntu 18.04

              All these posts say the same thing which happens to me periodically:



              ~$ journalctl | grep 'cpu clock throttled'
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU4: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU0: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU6: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU2: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU3: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU7: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU5: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU1: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU0: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU4: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)


              In my case it happens so rarely and with no adverse side-effects I've chosen to ignore the errors.



              Similar launchpad bug reports on the same issue:



              • Erratic behavior of CPU frequency control under load

              • Kernel wrong temperature reporting

              And just so you know it's not just Ubuntu, from Redhat:



              • Overheating CPU generates Hardware Error messages





              share|improve this answer














              You should see (and possibly subscribe to) this bug report:



              • Thermald sysfs read failed /sys/class/thermal/thermal_zoneX/temp

              There have been numerous posts in Ask Ubuntu about CPU throttling recently:



              • Core/Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled - Lenovo E590

              • Set CPU temperature throttle threshold on Ubuntu/Thinkpad

              • XPS 9370 thermal throttling ubuntu 18.04

              All these posts say the same thing which happens to me periodically:



              ~$ journalctl | grep 'cpu clock throttled'
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU4: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU0: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU6: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU2: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU3: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU7: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU5: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU1: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU0: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
              Jun 22 10:55:52 alien kernel: CPU4: Package temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)


              In my case it happens so rarely and with no adverse side-effects I've chosen to ignore the errors.



              Similar launchpad bug reports on the same issue:



              • Erratic behavior of CPU frequency control under load

              • Kernel wrong temperature reporting

              And just so you know it's not just Ubuntu, from Redhat:



              • Overheating CPU generates Hardware Error messages






              share|improve this answer













              share|improve this answer




              share|improve this answer










              answered Jul 13 at 22:31









              WinEunuuchs2UnixWinEunuuchs2Unix

              60.3k18 gold badges122 silver badges236 bronze badges




              60.3k18 gold badges122 silver badges236 bronze badges















              • What thermal/fan control packages do you have installed? If thermald is one of them, have you customized /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml for your hardware configuration?

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 13:52











              • @heynnema I've never used software to control the fans. I do use thermald but it has default config file. Fans are controlled by the laptop and almost never come on. I have to do something silly like run all 8 CPUs at 100% for more about a minute.

                – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                Jul 14 at 14:23











              • See my answer for a brief intro on how to develop a custom .xml file to control thermald. It's not that difficult. You can also search AU for other thermald answers that I've provided in the past. I've got thermald keeping my temps < 140 degrees.

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 14:42











              • @heynnema I don't have any temperature problems since May 20 the errors only appeared once in journalctl. I like the way the Laptop's ACPI keeps the fans turned off all the time. No noise is good noise. Conky reports temp at 51 / 52 degrees as I type this now.

                – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                Jul 14 at 14:56












              • Nice. Hey, point of note... you and I used to have similar rep, but you've blown way beyond me now. How much time do you dedicate to AU help?

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 15:04

















              • What thermal/fan control packages do you have installed? If thermald is one of them, have you customized /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml for your hardware configuration?

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 13:52











              • @heynnema I've never used software to control the fans. I do use thermald but it has default config file. Fans are controlled by the laptop and almost never come on. I have to do something silly like run all 8 CPUs at 100% for more about a minute.

                – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                Jul 14 at 14:23











              • See my answer for a brief intro on how to develop a custom .xml file to control thermald. It's not that difficult. You can also search AU for other thermald answers that I've provided in the past. I've got thermald keeping my temps < 140 degrees.

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 14:42











              • @heynnema I don't have any temperature problems since May 20 the errors only appeared once in journalctl. I like the way the Laptop's ACPI keeps the fans turned off all the time. No noise is good noise. Conky reports temp at 51 / 52 degrees as I type this now.

                – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                Jul 14 at 14:56












              • Nice. Hey, point of note... you and I used to have similar rep, but you've blown way beyond me now. How much time do you dedicate to AU help?

                – heynnema
                Jul 14 at 15:04
















              What thermal/fan control packages do you have installed? If thermald is one of them, have you customized /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml for your hardware configuration?

              – heynnema
              Jul 14 at 13:52





              What thermal/fan control packages do you have installed? If thermald is one of them, have you customized /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml for your hardware configuration?

              – heynnema
              Jul 14 at 13:52













              @heynnema I've never used software to control the fans. I do use thermald but it has default config file. Fans are controlled by the laptop and almost never come on. I have to do something silly like run all 8 CPUs at 100% for more about a minute.

              – WinEunuuchs2Unix
              Jul 14 at 14:23





              @heynnema I've never used software to control the fans. I do use thermald but it has default config file. Fans are controlled by the laptop and almost never come on. I have to do something silly like run all 8 CPUs at 100% for more about a minute.

              – WinEunuuchs2Unix
              Jul 14 at 14:23













              See my answer for a brief intro on how to develop a custom .xml file to control thermald. It's not that difficult. You can also search AU for other thermald answers that I've provided in the past. I've got thermald keeping my temps < 140 degrees.

              – heynnema
              Jul 14 at 14:42





              See my answer for a brief intro on how to develop a custom .xml file to control thermald. It's not that difficult. You can also search AU for other thermald answers that I've provided in the past. I've got thermald keeping my temps < 140 degrees.

              – heynnema
              Jul 14 at 14:42













              @heynnema I don't have any temperature problems since May 20 the errors only appeared once in journalctl. I like the way the Laptop's ACPI keeps the fans turned off all the time. No noise is good noise. Conky reports temp at 51 / 52 degrees as I type this now.

              – WinEunuuchs2Unix
              Jul 14 at 14:56






              @heynnema I don't have any temperature problems since May 20 the errors only appeared once in journalctl. I like the way the Laptop's ACPI keeps the fans turned off all the time. No noise is good noise. Conky reports temp at 51 / 52 degrees as I type this now.

              – WinEunuuchs2Unix
              Jul 14 at 14:56














              Nice. Hey, point of note... you and I used to have similar rep, but you've blown way beyond me now. How much time do you dedicate to AU help?

              – heynnema
              Jul 14 at 15:04





              Nice. Hey, point of note... you and I used to have similar rep, but you've blown way beyond me now. How much time do you dedicate to AU help?

              – heynnema
              Jul 14 at 15:04













              2


















              It sounds like your /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml file needs to be tweaked for your hardware...



              I'd install thermald...



              • sudo apt-get update


              • sudo apt-get install thermald


              Thermald comes with a default configuration file at /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml that will control most computers, but may need to be customized for some computers. See man thermal-conf.xml for some details and examples. Once one has modified the configuration file, stop thermald and restart it:



              sudo service thermald restart


              After installing thermald, I'd stop the thermald process, and run it manually as sudo thermald --no-daemon to watch its actions in real time. This real time info can be used to create your own customized thermal-conf.xml file. See man thermald for more information.



              sudo service thermald stop
              sudo thermald --no-daemon --loglevel=debug


              You can search for thermald here on Ask Ubuntu to see what previous answers there are. Many of the answers come from me.



              A good starter reference is at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/PowerManagement/ThermalIssues






              share|improve this answer






























                2


















                It sounds like your /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml file needs to be tweaked for your hardware...



                I'd install thermald...



                • sudo apt-get update


                • sudo apt-get install thermald


                Thermald comes with a default configuration file at /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml that will control most computers, but may need to be customized for some computers. See man thermal-conf.xml for some details and examples. Once one has modified the configuration file, stop thermald and restart it:



                sudo service thermald restart


                After installing thermald, I'd stop the thermald process, and run it manually as sudo thermald --no-daemon to watch its actions in real time. This real time info can be used to create your own customized thermal-conf.xml file. See man thermald for more information.



                sudo service thermald stop
                sudo thermald --no-daemon --loglevel=debug


                You can search for thermald here on Ask Ubuntu to see what previous answers there are. Many of the answers come from me.



                A good starter reference is at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/PowerManagement/ThermalIssues






                share|improve this answer




























                  2














                  2










                  2









                  It sounds like your /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml file needs to be tweaked for your hardware...



                  I'd install thermald...



                  • sudo apt-get update


                  • sudo apt-get install thermald


                  Thermald comes with a default configuration file at /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml that will control most computers, but may need to be customized for some computers. See man thermal-conf.xml for some details and examples. Once one has modified the configuration file, stop thermald and restart it:



                  sudo service thermald restart


                  After installing thermald, I'd stop the thermald process, and run it manually as sudo thermald --no-daemon to watch its actions in real time. This real time info can be used to create your own customized thermal-conf.xml file. See man thermald for more information.



                  sudo service thermald stop
                  sudo thermald --no-daemon --loglevel=debug


                  You can search for thermald here on Ask Ubuntu to see what previous answers there are. Many of the answers come from me.



                  A good starter reference is at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/PowerManagement/ThermalIssues






                  share|improve this answer














                  It sounds like your /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml file needs to be tweaked for your hardware...



                  I'd install thermald...



                  • sudo apt-get update


                  • sudo apt-get install thermald


                  Thermald comes with a default configuration file at /etc/thermald/thermal-conf.xml that will control most computers, but may need to be customized for some computers. See man thermal-conf.xml for some details and examples. Once one has modified the configuration file, stop thermald and restart it:



                  sudo service thermald restart


                  After installing thermald, I'd stop the thermald process, and run it manually as sudo thermald --no-daemon to watch its actions in real time. This real time info can be used to create your own customized thermal-conf.xml file. See man thermald for more information.



                  sudo service thermald stop
                  sudo thermald --no-daemon --loglevel=debug


                  You can search for thermald here on Ask Ubuntu to see what previous answers there are. Many of the answers come from me.



                  A good starter reference is at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/PowerManagement/ThermalIssues







                  share|improve this answer













                  share|improve this answer




                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Jul 13 at 18:22









                  heynnemaheynnema

                  27.7k3 gold badges31 silver badges75 bronze badges




                  27.7k3 gold badges31 silver badges75 bronze badges
























                      0


















                      The poblemel is therefold. First you have a high cpu usage. Secondly, the CPU's cooling is not enough and third , it doesn't correctly throttle.



                      Higher cpu usage might be due to unity not correctly using you hardware geoduck acceleration. And unity is quite cpu intensive. You might twerk it or even switch to a different desktop manager, le cinnamon, Kubuntu, lubuntu or Linux mint.



                      Cpu cooling on laptops is notoriously bad. Cleaning your company fan and putting the laptop on a flat surface instead of fabric/pillow might help.



                      About trottling, you can set the maximum cpu frequency to a lower setting or switch to power saving mode.






                      share|improve this answer






























                        0


















                        The poblemel is therefold. First you have a high cpu usage. Secondly, the CPU's cooling is not enough and third , it doesn't correctly throttle.



                        Higher cpu usage might be due to unity not correctly using you hardware geoduck acceleration. And unity is quite cpu intensive. You might twerk it or even switch to a different desktop manager, le cinnamon, Kubuntu, lubuntu or Linux mint.



                        Cpu cooling on laptops is notoriously bad. Cleaning your company fan and putting the laptop on a flat surface instead of fabric/pillow might help.



                        About trottling, you can set the maximum cpu frequency to a lower setting or switch to power saving mode.






                        share|improve this answer




























                          0














                          0










                          0









                          The poblemel is therefold. First you have a high cpu usage. Secondly, the CPU's cooling is not enough and third , it doesn't correctly throttle.



                          Higher cpu usage might be due to unity not correctly using you hardware geoduck acceleration. And unity is quite cpu intensive. You might twerk it or even switch to a different desktop manager, le cinnamon, Kubuntu, lubuntu or Linux mint.



                          Cpu cooling on laptops is notoriously bad. Cleaning your company fan and putting the laptop on a flat surface instead of fabric/pillow might help.



                          About trottling, you can set the maximum cpu frequency to a lower setting or switch to power saving mode.






                          share|improve this answer














                          The poblemel is therefold. First you have a high cpu usage. Secondly, the CPU's cooling is not enough and third , it doesn't correctly throttle.



                          Higher cpu usage might be due to unity not correctly using you hardware geoduck acceleration. And unity is quite cpu intensive. You might twerk it or even switch to a different desktop manager, le cinnamon, Kubuntu, lubuntu or Linux mint.



                          Cpu cooling on laptops is notoriously bad. Cleaning your company fan and putting the laptop on a flat surface instead of fabric/pillow might help.



                          About trottling, you can set the maximum cpu frequency to a lower setting or switch to power saving mode.







                          share|improve this answer













                          share|improve this answer




                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Jul 13 at 16:39









                          Dr PhilDr Phil

                          2562 silver badges5 bronze badges




                          2562 silver badges5 bronze badges































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