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On 05/10/2011 09:34 AM, James wrote: |
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> Alan McKinnon <alan.mckinnon <at> gmail.com> writes: |
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>> otherwise. Just enable ondemand, disable everything else, and et the kernel |
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>> get on with doing what it does best: |
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> So this is what you are saying? |
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> [*] CPU Frequency scaling │ │ |
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> │ │ [*] Enable CPUfreq debugging │ │ |
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> │ │ <*> CPU frequency translation statistics │ │ |
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> │ │ [ ] CPU frequency translation statistics details │ │ |
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> │ │ Default CPUFreq governor (performance) ---> │ │ |
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> │ │ -*- 'performance' governor │ │ |
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> │ │ < > 'powersave' governor │ │ |
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> │ │ < > 'userspace' governor for userspace frequency scaling│ │ |
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> │ │ <*> 'ondemand' cpufreq policy governor │ │ |
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> │ │ < > 'conservative' cpufreq governor │ │ |
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> │ │ *** CPUFreq processor drivers *** │ │ |
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> │ │ < > Processor Clocking Control interface driver │ │ |
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> │ │ <*> ACPI Processor P-States driver │ │ |
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> │ │ < > AMD Opteron/Athlon64 PowerNow! │ │ |
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> │ │ < > Intel Enhanced SpeedStep (deprecated) │ │ |
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> │ │ < > Intel Pentium 4 clock modulation |
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Yes but no. Yes, those are the correct choices, but the default governor |
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should be ondemand. |