On 08-08-19, 23:35, Doug Smythies wrote:
> O.K. While I understand the explanations, I still struggle with
> this scenario:
>
> doug@s15:~/temp$ cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/intel_pstate/max_perf_pct
> 50<<< Note: 50% = 1.9 GHz in my system)
> doug@s15:~/temp$ grep .
> /sys/devices/system/cpu
On 2019.08.08 19:16 Viresh Kumar wrote:
> On 08-08-19, 09:25, Doug Smythies wrote:
>> On 2019.08.07 00:06 Viresh Kumar wrote:
>> Tested by: Doug Smythies
>> Thermald seems to now be working O.K. for all the governors.
>
> Thanks for testing Doug.
>
>> I do note that if one sets
>> /sys/devices/sy
On 08-08-19, 09:25, Doug Smythies wrote:
> On 2019.08.07 00:06 Viresh Kumar wrote:
> Tested by: Doug Smythies
> Thermald seems to now be working O.K. for all the governors.
Thanks for testing Doug.
> I do note that if one sets
> /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpufreq/policy*/scaling_max_freq
> It seems
, On Thu, Aug 8, 2019 at 6:25 PM Doug Smythies wrote:
>
> On 2019.08.07 00:06 Viresh Kumar wrote:
>
> Thanks for your work on this.
>
> > Intel pstate driver exposes min_perf_pct and max_perf_pct sysfs files,
> > which can be used to force a limit on the min/max P state of the driver.
> > Though t
On 2019.08.07 00:06 Viresh Kumar wrote:
Thanks for your work on this.
> Intel pstate driver exposes min_perf_pct and max_perf_pct sysfs files,
> which can be used to force a limit on the min/max P state of the driver.
> Though these files eventually control the min/max frequencies that the
> CPUs
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