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Sorry, for some reason I thought I was going to have to build a new kernel. I set my HZ to 100 in the loader.conf, and it did lower the pitch of the whine to where I can hardly hear it now. I can still hear a difference when I toggle the CPU halt off and on, but the difference between 1000 and 100 HZ is like night and day. Thank you very much, my ears appreciate it. :) Paul Lipps paul.lipps@gmail.com Begin forwarded message: > From: Paul Lipps <paul.lipps@gmail.com> > Date: June 6, 2006 4:01:48 AM CDT > To: Joseph Koshy <joseph.koshy@gmail.com> > Cc: freebsd-smp@freebsd.org > Subject: Re: High Pitched Whine > > On Jun 6, 2006, at 1:10 AM, Joseph Koshy wrote: >> The only thing that I can think of that could think of that >> could whine is a flaky magnetic component. >> >> Does the frequency of the whine change if you change HZ? >> Does the whine reduce if the processor is fully compute >> bound? > > Yes, the whine actually goes away under a full load. It is > intermittent when the CPU is being stressed intermittently, and of > course constant when the CPU is idle. > > I am going to try compiling a new kernel with a reduced HZ setting > as suggested. Is the output of this command: > > sysctl kern.clockrate > > displaying the current HZ setting? If so it's 1000 at the moment. I > will compile a new kernel using the GENERIC configuration file with > only the HZ option changed to 100 rather then 1000 and report my > findings. > > > _______________________________________________ freebsd-smp@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-smp To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-smp-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"