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@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
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# Using thermald to avoid thermal throttling
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# Using thermald to avoid thermal throttling
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1. Install `thermald` for your distro, on many distros it might be installed by default
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1. Install `thermald` for your distro, on many distros it might be installed by default
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-2. Place thermal-conf.xml into the `/etc/thermald/` directory
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+2. Copy the `thermal-conf.xml` file into the `/etc/thermald/` directory
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3. Depending on your ambient temperature you might want to lower the `<Temperature>` line to make thermald kick in more aggressively. (65000 = 65°C)
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3. Depending on your ambient temperature you might want to lower the `<Temperature>` line to make thermald kick in more aggressively. (65000 = 65°C)
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-4. Place thermal-cpu-cdev-order.xml into the `/etc/thermald/` directory
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-5. `sudo systemctl restart thermald`
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+4. Copy the `thermal-cpu-cdev-order.xml` file into the `/etc/thermald/` directory
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+5. Run `sudo systemctl restart thermald`
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# Making Fedora respect your config files
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# Making Fedora respect your config files
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Fedora uses the `--adaptive` option by default, thus ignoring your config files. This might also apply to some other distros.
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Fedora uses the `--adaptive` option by default, thus ignoring your config files. This might also apply to some other distros.
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