On Sun, Apr 3, 2016 at 8:59 PM, Doug Smythies <dsmyth...@telus.net> wrote: > On 2016.04.02 11:21 Sedat Dilek wrote: >> On Sat, Apr 2, 2016 at 7:19 PM, Jörg Otte wrote: >>> 2016-04-02 17:28 GMT+02:00 Srinivas Pandruvada wrote: >>>>
Hi Doug, are you involved in the Ubuntu-OS? Developer for Canonical? >>>> If you are using Ubuntu, the OS has a script which will automatically >>>> change from performance. >>>> Doug can give more information on this script. >> >>> maybe: >>> /etc/init.d/ondemand > > Yes. > >> With CONFIG_CPU_FREQ_DEFAULT_GOV_SCHEDUTIL=y (linux-pm.git#linux-next) I >> get... >> >> $ cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/scaling_driver >> acpi-cpufreq >> acpi-cpufreq >> acpi-cpufreq >> acpi-cpufreq >> >> $ cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/scaling_governor >> ondemand >> ondemand >> ondemand >> ondemand > > Yes, those are the expected results for the acpi-cpufreq CPU frequency > scaling driver. > You should be able to observe the governor set to sched util for the first > minute > after re-boot and/or if you set it yourself after the /etc/init.d/ondemand > script > has finished (i.e. more than 1 minute after re-boot.) > I have hardcoded to use "schedutil" driver after one minute in /etc/init.d/ondemand for testing-purposes and not to fall back to "ondemand". >> ...is there a difference when using intel_pstate as scaling_driver? > > Yes, but only because there are different available governors for the two > drivers. > >> Are the scripts of Ubuntu working properly with acpi-cpufreq (only)? > > As far as I know the /etc/init.d/ondemand is working properly. It sets the > acpi-cpufreq > driver to use the "ondemand" governor and it sets the intel_pstate driver to > use the > "powersave" governor. > I haven't looked at this exactly. The ondemand-script is not saying to fall back to "powersave" in case of intel_pstate-driver (here on Ubuntu/precise). - Sedat -