what does this mean?
tpm tpm0: [Hardware Error]: Adjusting reported timeouts: A 10000->750000us B 10000->2000000us C 1000
Hi
Unfortunately you have posted in the wrong forum, will close temporarily and move to install/boot/login
Hi
Moved and re-opened.
So you have tpm enabled or disabled in the system BIOS, if enabled and not using it, then suggest disabling and see what happens.
I suspect Malcolm is making the same guess,
Trusted Platform Module.
Not just the BIOS, but is a way to lock access based on certificates embedded in your hardware.
Most often the certs are embedded in chips soldered on your system board, but the chips can also be in hard drives.
Sound familiar with anything you know about your system?
TSU
On Mon 09 Oct 2017 10:56:01 PM CDT, tsu2 wrote:
I suspect Malcolm is making the same guess,
Trusted Platform Module.
Not just the BIOS, but is a way to lock access based on certificates
embedded in your hardware.
Most often the certs are embedded in chips soldered on your system
board, but the chips can also be in hard drives.
Sound familiar with anything you know about your system?
TSU
Hi
No guess I have a HP 14 that has a TPM2 BIOS setting, it’s disabled
and hidden from the cpu to avoid the following TPM2 driver error;
tpm_crb MSFT0101:00: can't request region for resource [mem 0x9fbba000-0x9fbbdfff]
tpm_crb: probe of MSFT0101:00 failed with error -16
AFAIK, TPM 2 has limited support in the current kernels…
–
Cheers Malcolm °¿° SUSE Knowledge Partner (Linux Counter #276890)
openSUSE Leap 42.2|GNOME 3.20.2|4.4.87-18.29-default
If you find this post helpful and are logged into the web interface,
please show your appreciation and click on the star below… Thanks!