1) use cpufreq-applet to set cpu freqency to a fixed value (userspace governor) that is not maximum (e.g. 800mhz on a 1.7ghz cpu)
2) suspend
3) resume
4) see that cpu freqency governor is still userspace but frequency is maximum (e.g. 1.7ghz, userspace)
i use the cpufreq-applet for all monitoring and manipulating cpu frequency scaling, but i don't think this is a bug of the applet itself. i didn't select any package because i don't know which one. ubuntu version is 9.04. please tell me which further information i should provide.
steps to reproduce:
1) use cpufreq-applet to set cpu freqency to a fixed value (userspace governor) that is not maximum (e.g. 800mhz on a 1.7ghz cpu)
2) suspend
3) resume
4) see that cpu freqency governor is still userspace but frequency is maximum (e.g. 1.7ghz, userspace)
i use the cpufreq-applet for all monitoring and manipulating cpu frequency scaling, but i don't think this is a bug of the applet itself. i didn't select any package because i don't know which one. ubuntu version is 9.04. please tell me which further information i should provide.