[code]emeraude:~/public_html/debian/sources/m$ wajig show cpufreqd
Package: cpufreqd
Priority: optional
Section: admin
Installed-Size: 204
Maintainer: Mattia Dongili malattia@debian.org
Architecture: i386
Version: 2.2.0-2
Depends: libc6 (>= 2.3.6-6), libcpufreq0, libsensors3 (>= 1:2.10.1), libsysfs2, lsb-base (>= 3.0)
Recommends: acpid
Suggests: cpufrequtils
Conflicts: cpudyn, powernowd
Filename: pool/main/c/cpufreqd/cpufreqd_2.2.0-2_i386.deb
Size: 78146
MD5sum: 7a2b2aa8785aa54024260233ae53baca
SHA1: 4fd1a486a0eef952b7796bbb1a6002e9d1289696
SHA256: 28e991ee4fcc875d61c738d7945bf747d80eefd16efbcdaa7aba0a76ab036a7e
Description: 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.
.
Homepage: http://sourceforge.net/projects/cpufreqd
Tag: admin::boot, admin::hardware, hardware::laptop, hardware::power:acpi, hardware::power:apm, interface::daemon, role::sw:utility, use::configuring
Package: cpufreqd
Priority: optional
Section: admin
Installed-Size: 148
Maintainer: Mattia Dongili malattia@debian.org
Architecture: i386
Version: 1.2.3-2
Depends: debconf, libc6 (>= 2.3.2.ds1-21)
Conflicts: cpudyn, powernowd
Filename: pool/main/c/cpufreqd/cpufreqd_1.2.3-2_i386.deb
Size: 36288
MD5sum: 9304fc49f3365ed7c2ff3eee89c7f317
SHA1: a31c19c7b2058be318849f8305542100b21d57c5
SHA256: 6d1c8af91f06195056bf7fe120b6a3c9c220f593b9d1612f8b3b6905788e6417
Description: A speedstep applet clone
cpufreqd is meant to be a replacement of the speedstep applet you
can find on some other OS, it monitors CPU usage, battery level, AC
state and running programs and adjusts the frequency governor according
to a set of rules specified in the config file.
.
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.
You can find a functional ACPI in 2.4.22-pre1 or later or as patches at
http://sf.net/projects/acpi while CPUFreq is available in 2.6 kernels or as
patch at ftp://ftp.poupinou.org/cpufreq/.
.
Homepage: http://sourceforge.net/projects/cpufreqd
emeraude:~/public_html/debian/sources/m$ wajig show cpudyn
Package: cpudyn
Priority: optional
Section: admin
Installed-Size: 120
Maintainer: Celso González celso@bulma.net
Architecture: i386
Version: 1.0-2
Depends: libc6 (>= 2.3.2.ds1-4)
Conflicts: cpufreqd, powernowd
Filename: pool/main/c/cpudyn/cpudyn_1.0-2_i386.deb
Size: 23860
MD5sum: f00acb7da060f486024496fff79d800a
SHA1: d05225794e6725f88e8d92adf7d155e857a5c85f
SHA256: ca4814363faeab025a3bf2449ca09f4f8aff756d9813b704de781c442dca925d
Description: CPU dynamic frequency control for processors with scaling
cpudyn controls the speed in Intel SpeedStep, Pentium 4 Mobile,
AMD Powernow, PowerPC, Crusoe LongRun machines with the cpufreq compiled
in the kernel, or with machines that support ACPI throtling. It saves
battery, lowers temperature, and can put the computer disks in standby
mode if a given period has passed without any I/O operation. It works
well even with journaled file systems such as Ext3, XFS, or ReiserFS.
Even supports the new interface for kernels 2.6.x
Tag: admin::boot, admin::hardware, hardware::laptop, hardware::power:acpi, hardware::power:apm, interface::daemon, role::sw:utility, use::configuring
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