On Thu, 12 Jan 2006 10:57, Mike Jakubik wrote: > It seems that powerd does very little in terms of reducing heat, and > sacrifices performance while doing so. Am i wrong to assume that > lowering the cpu's frequency should reduce consumed power, and therefore > reduce the amount of heat produced? I have tested with mbmon and i see > no difference between an idle system running with powerd at 75mhz, and > at full rate without. Also, while testing the speed of a php script, i
If you want to test how much heat your system draws for a given clock speed you should dispense with powerd and just set the frequency by hand, ie.. sysctl dev.cpu.0.freq=XXX powerd won't run your CPU at a specific clock frequency - it varies the CPU frequency based on current load conditions. Do you have thermally controlled fans? If so I wouldn't expect the temperature to vary with clock speed very much at all. > found myself refreshing it quickly in the browser to see the results of > the timers. I was getting sporadic results, on an otherwise idle system. > I noticed that if anything cpu intensive ran in the background, my > script would execute quicker. I disabled powerd and restored the > frequency, at this point i got more consistent results, and the script > would execute over 100msec faster. It seems like its not adjusting the The powerd defaults do not change frequency that quickly - every 500ms by default. I run it with '-p 200' and it seems fine although you do notice it 'stick' sometimes (where the CPU change doesn't happen quickly enough). You could try what I do but there are some systems which are very slow to change clock speed so this could be an impediment. > clock fast enough. Are these problems with powerd or just my hardware? > It is an old athlon system, running on the via133 chipset . I'm suprised a system this old even supports a clock speed as low as 75Mhz. -- Daniel O'Connor software and network engineer for Genesis Software - http://www.gsoft.com.au "The nice thing about standards is that there are so many of them to choose from." -- Andrew Tanenbaum GPG Fingerprint - 5596 B766 97C0 0E94 4347 295E E593 DC20 7B3F CE8C
pgp7KSZ1oHHVT.pgp
Description: PGP signature