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As Butcher said before, never had more than 1.0 with my Phenom II X4.
I'm using dwm + full CLI + firefox. It's very minimal, yesterday I had 1.20 1.14 0.98 just with mumble and firefox (3.3.6).
In idle (disabled everything), watched the load average and it was surprisingly high. With 3.3.4 (solved the issue) I have 0.01 0.03 0.03 in idle.
/var/log/Xorg.0.log seems to be fine, nothing changed. My specs are in my signature but it's AMD + NVIDIA.
Last edited by Ypnose (2012-05-23 10:15:56)
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The high system load fault still exists with Kernel 3.3.7-1-ARCH
Philosophy is looking for a black cat in a dark room. Metaphysics is looking for a black cat in a dark room that isn't there. Religion is looking for a black cat in a dark room that isn't there and shouting "I found it!". Science is looking for a black cat in a dark room with a flashlight.
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Same problem here with kernel 3.4.2-2.
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Same problem with 3.4.2-2-ARCH. Switching to 3.4.2-3-ck fixed it.
It appears to be scheduler related.
Here's a similar Ubuntu bug:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+sour … bug/985661
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Same with 3.4.3-1-ARCH. I'm running a headless server, and am experiencing very high loads.
Edit. Just adding that I'm running 32bit Arch.
Last edited by loofygun (2012-06-25 14:07:42)
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I'm running linux 3.4.3-1 on a 32-bit Arch and thing's are fine here.
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Perhaps its an 64-bit thing then. I am running 3.4.3-1 here on x86_64 and things are NOT fine here
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I'm runing linux-3.4.4-2 and I still get high load even on idle. Can someone confirm that, if X is not running, the idle load is much lower? I'm getting >0.7 idle on X and ~0.2 idle on a tty. Nonetheless, I was averaging 0.02~0.05 a few kernel versions ago (3.3.4, IIRC, was the last version where my loads were "normal" - i.e., low on idle, being on X or not).
#edit
Running linux-lts-3.0.36-1, load is back to normal.
Last edited by esquiso (2012-07-02 14:35:36)
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linux 3.4.4-2 on a 32-bit Arch, no load-related issues neither in X nor in tty.
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@esquiso
A bit far fetched, but maybe http://www.h-online.com/open/news/item/ … 29805.html -> https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/6/30/122 has something to do with it.
Did you test it with base X or were you running e.g. a web browser?
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I've seen abnormally high load averages on my work machine for quite a while now. It happened over the weekend, and it's happening again right now. I can't even SSH into it to get the output of uname, but it's running the 64-bit 3.4.3 kernel on a 3.4Ghz i7 with 16GB RAM. I avoid upgrading the kernel so I don't have to bother with recompiling VMware Workstation garbage for those few occasions when I can't use the ESX server.
I find that Ctrl+Alt+BS'ing X brings my load average back to normal. This is an acceptable solution for not losing my screen/tmux sessions, but it's certainly less than ideal. I would love to find an answer to this problem.
Other than those "spikes", you can see how my load average is relatively high the rest of the time even though my system is mostly idle except for gVim and a bit of surfing during the day.
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I am not sure if I am on the right track or not but I am beginning to suspect either X and/or nVidia rather than the kernel. Why? I run wmii window manager and I have a status bar that shows me CPU Freq for both CPU cores. For over a month now one or other core bumps up from 800 to 2800MHz very quickly on about a 5-7 second interval. When I dropped out of X into runlevel 3 or ran fluxbox instead of wmii the CPU Freq stayed low.
That led me to suspect my status bar code, so I took it apart and I discovered the culprit was the code to show GPU Temp:
nvidia-settings -q=GPUCoreTemp
When I removed that code my CPU Freq stayed low at 800MHz.
Also, I now note that my load averages seem to be back to normal. That is why I am now beginning to suspect either the nVidia module or X - why should simply polling the GPU for its temperature cause the demand for maximum CPU speed and apparent increases in load?
Philosophy is looking for a black cat in a dark room. Metaphysics is looking for a black cat in a dark room that isn't there. Religion is looking for a black cat in a dark room that isn't there and shouting "I found it!". Science is looking for a black cat in a dark room with a flashlight.
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I have the same issue with 3.4 series of kernels. ATI Gfx/AMD CPU, so we can rule out the whole Intel/nVidia theories.
My system is fine with 3.2 kernel, so I'd suggest that the finger is well and truly pointed towards the kernel.
Ryzen 5900X 12 core/24 thread - RTX 3090 FE 24 Gb, Asus Prime B450 Plus, 32Gb Corsair DDR4, Cooler Master N300 chassis, 5 HD (1 NvME PCI, 4SSD) + 1 x optical.
Linux user #545703
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More information from the ubuntu bug:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+sour … omments/70
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+sour … omments/76
It should be fixed in 3.5
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Oddly, after having no problems since dropping to linux-ice (3.2.13-2) I decided to rebuild the linux-ice kernel with ck/bfs patches. After a reboot load averages were sky high again (I waited a good ten minutes leaving the system at idle to let it settle down).
Built back without the patches and load average is normal again. This would suggest that there's also something in those patches contributing to this.
Ryzen 5900X 12 core/24 thread - RTX 3090 FE 24 Gb, Asus Prime B450 Plus, 32Gb Corsair DDR4, Cooler Master N300 chassis, 5 HD (1 NvME PCI, 4SSD) + 1 x optical.
Linux user #545703
/ is the root of all problems.
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I've seen this bug on my server running x64 in every kernel since 3.3.4-2. Right now I'm seeing load averages of 12 when normally it would be 0.5-1.5.
It seems to be having a nasty effect on realtime stuff (SRCDS etc.) so I will be reverting again
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Patch is in 3.5-rc7!
http://marc.info/?l=linux-kernel&m=134231428931763
Peter Zijlstra (1):
sched/nohz: Rewrite and fix load-avg computation -- again
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rc7 does not fix the problem. I am still seeing high load average even at idle.
Ryzen 5900X 12 core/24 thread - RTX 3090 FE 24 Gb, Asus Prime B450 Plus, 32Gb Corsair DDR4, Cooler Master N300 chassis, 5 HD (1 NvME PCI, 4SSD) + 1 x optical.
Linux user #545703
/ is the root of all problems.
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I am seeing decreased load averages with 3.5-rc7 when the system is lightly loaded. This patch fixes the load average calculation issue.
@Boohbah It does lower system load but it doesn't fix higher power consumption and temperature.
donnie: How are you measuring power consumption and temperature between kernel versions? Care to provide some numbers? This may be a separate issue.
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powertop and sensors give you idea and then your fan runs at 4xxx. Right now my system is running 3.3 kernel at 10W and 49C, on 3.4 or 3.5 kernel it's 20W and temp is around 55-65C.
Load average has gone down so low to be true.
I haven't had much time to look into a utility which would graph these results to provide some scientific numbers.
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Also fixed in 3.4.6. Carry on.
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