Hello, I have a ProBook 4540s and since I installed openSUSE my laptop heats badly. I use Gnome right now.
Here is my output of sensors
acpitz-virtual-0 Adapter:
Virtual device temp1: +47.0°C (crit = +128.0°C)
temp2: +0.0°C (crit = +128.0°C)
temp3: +40.0°C (crit = +128.0°C)
temp4: +47.0°C (crit = +128.0°C)
temp5: +26.0°C (crit = +128.0°C)
temp6: +127.0°C (crit = +128.0°C)
temp7: +0.0°C (crit = +128.0°C)
temp8: +0.0°C (crit = +128.0°C)
coretemp-isa-0000 Adapter:
ISA adapter Physical id 0:
+47.0°C (high = +72.0°C, crit = +90.0°C)
Core 0:
+48.0°C (high = +72.0°C, crit = +90.0°C)
Core 1: +44.0°C (high = +72.0°C, crit = +90.0°C)
Does anyone know what is temp6?
P.S.
I opened this thread since my last thread was closed due to it was a mess, if anybody wonders why I opened duplicate threads.
Thanks.
P.P.S
Maybe this is more relevant to the Laptop board, I posted it here but on second thought it might not be the best choice, so it is up to you mods
A scan of the internet files shows that acpitz-virtual-0 are temp readings taken under the the CPU as opposed to being in it. I don’t know how old this lap might be, but if it has been used in a dusty environment or is older that 12 months, I would buy a can of duster spray and blow out the dust from all vents. I also suggest you can set it to a lower speed: C.F.U. - CPU Frequency Utilitiy - Version 1.10 - For use with the cpufrequtils package - Blogs - openSUSE Forums and you can reduce its power setup in YaST: YaST Power Management - Control Your CPU Energy Usage How To & FAQ - Blogs - openSUSE Forums and I find this older blog a good read on kernel power: https://forums.opensuse.org/blogs/oldcpu/gnu-linux-opensuse-power-management-regressions-38/ and you can always try a different kernel version: openSUSE and Installing New Linux Kernel Versions - Blogs - openSUSE Forums
Thank You for using openSUSE,
Hi
I have an HP ProBook 4525s with an ATI HD4250 and run the gnome-shell extension https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/356/radeon-power-profile-manager/ to use a low profile.
I suspect this laptop is a hybrid graphics system, please confirm by giving us the output of this command:
/sbin/lspci | grep VGA