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Power management/Processor/ja

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This article describes the setup of power management for processors.

CPU frequency scaling

CPU周波数スケーリングは、プロセッサの周波数を自動的に電力を節約するために、チップの発熱量を低減するために、「オンザフライ」で調整することができる技術です。

Installation

BIOS

Some functions can be enabled or disabled in the BIOS. Check that the following are enabled:

  • "Processor C1E support"
  • "Enhanced Speedstep (EIST)"

Kernel

Activate the following kernel options:

KERNEL Enabling CPU power management options
Power management and ACPI options  --->
     [*] ACPI (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface) Support  --->
         <*>   Processor
     CPU Frequency scaling  --->
         [*] CPU Frequency scaling
             Default CPUFreq governor (ondemand)  --->
                 Select a default governor; see below table
                 Default is ondemand
             *** CPU frequency scaling drivers ***
                 Select a driver; see below table

A governor is needed, which is responsible for changing the frequency based on its profile:

Default CPUFreq governor
Option Module Supported Processors Note
'performance' governor cpufreq_performance Sets the frequency statically to the highest available CPU frequency. For Intel core processors, this should be selected as default. [1] [2]
'powersave' governor cpufreq_powersave Sets the frequency statically to the lowest available CPU frequency. Can't be set as default.
'userspace' governor for userspace frequency scaling cpufreq_userspace To set the CPU frequency manually or when a userspace program shall be able to set the CPU dynamically.
'ondemand' cpufreq policy governor cpufreq_ondemand Does a periodic polling and changes frequency based on the CPU utilization. For processors other than Intel core, this should be selected as default.
'conservative' cpufreq governor cpufreq_conservative Similar to ondemand. The frequency is gracefully increased and decreased rather than jumping to 100% when speed is required.
CPU frequency scaling drivers
Option Module Supported Processors Note
Intel P state control intel_pstate Newer (SandyBridge+) Intel Core
Processor Clocking Control interface driver pcc-cpufreq
ACPI Processor P-States driver acpi-cpufreq Older Intel Core, Intel Atom, Intel Pentium M
AMD Opteron/Athlon64 PowerNow! powernow-k8 AMD Opteron, AMD Athlon 64, AMD Turion 64
Intel Enhanced SpeedStep (deprecated) speedstep-centrino Intel Pentium M (Centrino), Intel Xeon Deprecated, use ACPI Processor P-States driver instead
Intel Pentium 4 clock modulation p4-clockmod Intel Pentium 4, Intel XEON Causes severe slowdowns and noticeable latencies

Ticks

The processor saves the most energy when the processor stays longer in power savings mode, so reduce the amount of ticks that wakes the processor up.

Installation

BIOS

Some functions can be enabled or disabled in the BIOS. Check that the following are enabled:

  • "HPET"
  • "Multimedia timer"

Kernel

Activate the following kernel options:

KERNEL Enabling tick optimizing functions in the kernel
Processor type and features  --->
   [*] Tickless System (Dynamic Ticks)
   [*] High Resolution Timer Support
   [*] HPET Timer Support
Note
These options now appear to be under "General setup" -> "Timers subsystem".

PowerTOP

PowerTOP is a utility designed to measure, explain and minimize a computer's electrical power consumption.

When it is run, it sorts the running processes in order of how often they cause the processor to wake up. For details on installation, configuration and usage see the separate PowerTOP article.

Hprofile

It is possible to change the active CPU governor using a simple command:

root #for c in $(ls -d /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu[0-9]*); do echo ondemand >$c/cpufreq/scaling_governor; done

Read /etc/local.d/README to learn how to execute this command on startup.

Applications such as sys-power/cpupower do little more than the above but with some interface on top of it. However, having to run certain commands as root depending on the system usage is not efficient for most users. It is better to automate some of the decisions of governing CPU frequency. For instance, when not wired to AC power, most users would like to have the system in a power saving mode.

This is where Hprofile comes into play. Please refer to its article for more information and configuration.

See also

  • ACPI - Advanced Configuration and Power Management Interface.

External resources

References

  1. Dominik Brodowski. Intel P-State driver, CPU frequency and voltage scaling code in the Linux(TM) kernel. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
  2. Michael Larabel. Linux's "Ondemand" Governor Is No Longer Fit. Retrieved 15 October 2016.