Acpi Smo8800 1 -
If you’ve spent any time digging through dmesg or journalctl on a modern Linux laptop (especially a Dell, Lenovo, or HP), you’ve likely stumbled upon a cryptic set of lines that look something like this:
Unless your laptop has a spinning hard drive and you frequently drop it, these errors are purely cosmetic. They don’t represent data loss, system instability, or a failing sensor. They just mean the kernel tried to configure a safety feature and the firmware shrugged. How to Silence the Logs (If They Annoy You) If you’re like me and hate seeing red/purple errors in dmesg , you have two options. acpi smo8800 1
blacklist hp_accel blacklist lis3lv02d Then update your initramfs: If you’ve spent any time digging through dmesg
ACPI: SMO8800:00: Failed to write error status (ae_error) acpi smo8800 1: write failed (cmd=0x...) At first glance, it looks like a hardware failure—maybe a dying motherboard or a corrupted BIOS. But in 99% of cases, it’s neither. Today, we’re going to demystify what SMO8800 actually is, why it’s trying to "write" something, and why you can (probably) ignore it safely. SMO8800 is the ACPI device ID for a STMicroelectronics accelerometer (usually the LIS3DVH or similar). This tiny chip is not for rotating your screen or detecting falls on a smartphone. In the laptop world, it serves one very specific purpose: Free Fall Protection . How to Silence the Logs (If They Annoy
Create a file: /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-smo8800.conf
