Sure, but in this case, I would have expected "protecting itself" to mean "shutting down." Can a server CPU—or any x86 cpu, for that matter—actually downclock itself enough to run without any sort of cooler?
486s were sometimes passively cooled. A room full of hardware replaced by a very early virtualization setup lines up reasonably well.
I did one of these in the early naughts. Something like half a rack of old pentium 2-3 era boxes running non-prod — back office, network share storage, dev, staging — to a single beefy server running some flavor of vmware. We had all the older gen hardware for isolation and convenience, not because we needed the compute so I specced a “big” box that could hold a lot of storage (for the time) and performance was a non-issue. I think I also saved a lot on Microsoft licensing which made budget for the hardware.
In the early 2000s we had a mail server running on an old recycled Cyrix 5x86. When we had to move offices someone knocked down the wall next to the server but as it turned out the Ethernet cable was stapled to the wall and the machine went flying. Whatever, pack it up and move to the new office, plug it back in and it works fine.
About a year later we were rearranging some stuff and someone powered it off and picked it up to move it… and heard a rattle inside. Pop the cover off and the CPU cooler is sitting in the bottom of the case and the CPU is just sitting there naked. Had absolutely no problem running without the fan at all. We clipped it back on anyway just to be safe :)
There are a few videos on YouTube showing CPUs running without a heatsink. I haven't watched them to see how long they can run for, or if any BIOS changes were needed (I noticed the first mentions a lower voltage needs to be set to boot into Windows), but it seems possible at least.
There are also comments that claim to have done this (the oldest I saw was a Q8200, and someone said a 3000G could be run indefinitely without a heatsink).
I was playing Cities: Skylines on my old desktop PC a couple of years ago and the frame rate was really low. Windows was running sluggishly but mostly fine. I downloaded CpuZ to figure out what was going on with Skylines, and noticed that the core frequency was way lower than it should have been. I poked around in software for a while but couldn't figure out what was going on ... until I opened my case and realised that my CPU heatsink was dangling off the CPU, the top mounting pins having come loose.
So, yep, CPUs - at least 2014-vintage Intel Core i5s - can run surprisingly well without cooling!
I've heart that Intel CPUs can (often?) function (sloooowly?) without a cooler, while AMD CPUs will burn up. Perhaps the latter's temperature sensors aren't necessarily close to the major sources of heat, so the chip burns up before it notices that it's burning up. (And a cooler spreads the heat out so that the temp sensors see the real temperature.)
> CPUs are very good about protecting themselves, but I'm shocked no one noticed that they took many hours to boot up or to do anything at all.
Why would they take hours? Something something about energy consumption (and heat) growing to the square of the clock speed. You take a server that can go to, say, 3.2 Ghz and limit it to, say, 0.8 Ghz, it's going to be cool to the touch. And at 25% the speed, something taking ms or seconds, won't suddenly take hours.
That's why nobody noticed: because they didn't take hours neither to boot nor to do something.
Thermal throttling. I have personal experience with that: once I received a laptop which was missing the four screws holding the heatsink. It took over half an hour trying to boot Windows before powering down due to overheating. Since I'm not used to Windows, I thought it being very slow (on the first boot, which sets things up) might be normal, but suddenly powering down certainly wasn't, and the BIOS event log pointed to the culprit.
The issue is that AFAIK it does not reduce the clock rate; it runs at the normal full clock rate, then when it detects the temperature went over the limit, it pauses the CPU for a while to let it cool down. With a missing CPU fan, that might be enough, but it wasn't enough with the heatsink detached.
> That's why nobody noticed: because they didn't take hours neither to boot nor to do something.
It's normal for servers to take a while to boot (before even getting to the operating system).
> The issue is that AFAIK it does not reduce the clock rate; it runs at the normal full clock rate, then when it detects the temperature went over the limit, it pauses the CPU for a while to let it cool down.
I'm 99% confident that that is not a thing, pausing the cpu. The closest thing that exists is sleep/suspend/hibernate, but those don't work like that (on temperature triggers). Other than those, if the machine is on: the cpu is always doing _something_.
> Other than those, if the machine is on: the cpu is always doing _something_.
That used to be the case back in the 1990s when running MS-DOS. Nowadays, every operating system "pauses" the CPU when nothing is going on. The traditional way on x86 was to use the HLT instruction, which stops the processor until an interrupt happens; other architectures have their own equivalents (for instance, ARM has the WFI and WFE instructions), and x86 has more modern ways to do the same thing (like the MONITOR/MWAIT instructions). These instructions allow the processor to dynamically enter lower power modes, for instance by blocking the clock and/or power going into parts of the processor core (that is, "gating" the clock or power).
Isn't that just parts of the cpu and at the OS level though? I don't think that happens for thermal reasons, more for "welp, nothing worth doing" reasons.
Maybe I'm wrong, looking back at what I said I'm having a hard time explaining what my objection is, but I just don't know of a mechanism that's like "welp, I'm too hot, pausing for a few seconds, see you then!". Aren't there buses and caches and etc. that need constant attention whenever the machine is on? The cpu can't just tell everything to wait for a bit.
...I'm pretty surprised these systems booted at all without CPU coolers?