Greg 'groggy' Lehey wrote:
On Sunday,  3 April 2005 at 14:45:40 -0700, Nate Lawson wrote:

Christian Brueffer wrote:

On Sun, Apr 03, 2005 at 12:07:14PM -0400, Pierre-Luc Drouin wrote:

Christian Brueffer wrote:

On Sat, Apr 02, 2005 at 09:16:48PM -0500, Pierre-Luc Drouin wrote:


Since I upgraded from 5.3-stable to 5.4-prerelease, I've noticed that
my computer is hanging badly under load. I've a P4 2.53 GHz without
hyperthreading (no SMP). I use the same kernel configurations than
before. Now when I compile a port for example, the mouse pointer hangs
in Fluxbox and Mozilla takes forever (meaning ~5 sec) to refresh the
screen. Even vi hangs. I do not see any warning/error message. Is it a
known problem with 5.4?

I have experienced something similar, putting the following into rc.conf worked for me:

performance_cpu_freq="HIGH"

Yes, this seams to fix it. I didn't know that I had a laptop? :)

Good to hear.

Nate, this regression was introduced during the cpufreq and friends MFC.
Is switching the performance_cpu_freq default to HIGH the way to go for
5.4-RELEASE?

As you can see from etc/defaults/rc.conf on both -current and RELENG_5, we don't currently change the frequency at all:

performance_cpu_freq="NONE"             # Online CPU frequency
economy_cpu_freq="NONE"                 # Offline CPU frequency

However, it sounds like his system's BIOS is booting up with a low
acpi_throttle setting (probably the lowest one, 12.5% on many systems)
and so he is seeing very slow performance.  (Only the acpi_throttle
cpufreq driver has been MFCd for the 5.4 release and the others will
follow the release.)  Initially, I thought it was safest not to even
touch the frequency but it looks like it is necessary for some systems
to always force it high by default.


I'm experiencing similar issues.  How can I confirm that this is the
case without rebooting the machine (which would be inconvenient)?  Is
there some sysctl that tells me?  I've taken a look, but I don't see
anything obvious.

sysctl dev.cpu and look at the current frequency setting. If low, then your system is affected and will be fixed soon when I mfc. If not, perhaps you have an interrupt storm (vmstat -i)


--
Nate
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