cpufreqd 2.4.2-4ubuntu1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

cpufreqd (2.4.2-4ubuntu1) mantic; urgency=medium

  * Try to use cpufreq on ppc64el

 -- Gianfranco Costamagna <email address hidden>  Thu, 27 Jul 2023 08:20:20 +0200

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Uploaded by:
Gianfranco Costamagna
Uploaded to:
Mantic
Original maintainer:
Debian QA Group
Architectures:
any
Section:
admin
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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Series Pocket Published Component Section

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File Size SHA-256 Checksum
cpufreqd_2.4.2.orig.tar.bz2 64.8 KiB 27632ba27c22463089dc329b0afbeabd26c176e35f8711ae2edb0d490a86d7f2
cpufreqd_2.4.2-4ubuntu1.debian.tar.xz 12.1 KiB f168c06e7371e6a968b1448679b7bb997a830446617ea9d2ca4dbb2922e6d5ff
cpufreqd_2.4.2-4ubuntu1.dsc 1.8 KiB f79c3975ed3d3e68ff79175a8888ad3a5733b3cea1f817f5bce3b77dcf3e9707

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Binary packages built by this source

cpufreqd: fully configurable daemon for dynamic frequency and voltage scaling

 cpufreqd is meant to be a replacement of the speedstep applet you can find on
 some other OS, it monitors the system status and selects the most appropriate
 CPU level. It is fully configurable and easily extensible through the many
 available plug-ins (more to come).
 Despite its name it can be used to control also the NForce2-Atxp1 voltage
 regulator and the core and memory clock for NVidia cards (see README.Debian).
 .
 You need a CPUFreq driver and either APM, ACPI (a recent version) or PMU
 enabled in your kernel in order for this daemon to work.

cpufreqd-dbgsym: debug symbols for cpufreqd