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http://www.gpsdrive.cc/speedstep.shtml
what do you think? is this a save tool? i dont want to kill my cpu, but on the laptop it would be nice saving power with something like this --- now my intel p4m runs all the time on 2GHz
any success-story with something like this or simmilar things?
thanx in advance
The impossible missions are the only ones which succeed.
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I already have a package for this. I've been using it on my laptop for quite some time now.
I have discovered that all of mans unhappiness derives from only one source, not being able to sit quietly in a room
- Blaise Pascal
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do you mind posting it in your TUR? ... i want to try saving power :-)
i can also built it, but it saves also 2-5 min of time using already built pkgs
thanx in advance --- i'm much nearer the solution
The impossible missions are the only ones which succeed.
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I'll get it up there after school... which is like 6 or 7 hours from now. If you don't want to wait, feel free to build it yourself.
I have discovered that all of mans unhappiness derives from only one source, not being able to sit quietly in a room
- Blaise Pascal
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ok mr cranky
AKA uknowme
I am not your friend
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in the meantime i built it myself ... can be found in my TUR ...
but it seems it do not work:
i start it as root with autospeedstep start
but my cpu stays on 1998.52MHz the whole time of 10min@1.3% ... any ideas?
what does "cranky" mean?
The impossible missions are the only ones which succeed.
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I found I had to let it run for a while. I think it's not great at remembering what state it's in (fast or slow).
I have discovered that all of mans unhappiness derives from only one source, not being able to sit quietly in a room
- Blaise Pascal
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Another great program for auto-cpufreq manipulation is cpudfreqd (included in extra) & it's really customizable. However I'm having a hard time running it in 2.6.x kernels. When more than one progs (in my case cpufreqd & gkrellm) try to access /proc/acpi/battery/BAT1, acpid woes & I get 0% battery status, no matter if I run through ac adapter or battery. The only solution is restart.
In 2.4.x it works ok (with cpufreq patches).
Anyone else having such problems with 2.6.x kernels ?
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Another great program for auto-cpufreq manipulation is cpudfreqd (included in extra) & it's really customizable. However I'm having a hard time running it in 2.6.x kernels. When more than one progs (in my case cpufreqd & gkrellm) try to access /proc/acpi/battery/BAT1, acpid woes & I get 0% battery status, no matter if I run through ac adapter or battery. The only solution is restart.
In 2.4.x it works ok (with cpufreq patches).
Anyone else having such problems with 2.6.x kernels ?
using kernel 2.6.1
[root@Asteraceae damir]# cpufreqd -D
find_cpufreq_interface(): no cpufreq interface found.
Unable to find a cpufreq interface, please ensure to have cpufreq enabled in the running kernel.
Exiting.
any idea if i have to load a module or so?
The impossible missions are the only ones which succeed.
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You need to enable cpufreq in kernel, maybe that's why autospeedstep didn't run on your system in the first place.
For cpufreqd & 2.6.x you need to replace % lines in /etc/cpufreqd.conf with the actual cpu speed you want, btw. As example if your cpu is 2000 MHz, replace 66% with 1200. Just do the math .
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cpufreqd works fine for me, in the 2.6 kernel, the only problem is it doesn't do what i want it to: it slows/speeds up based on battery life. something like autospeedstep would be good, but autospeedstep doesn't work, it spits out an error about no /proc/acpi/processor/CPU0/performance. I was looking at cpudynd, but that doesn't work either. Any other suggestions?
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cpufreqd works fine for me, in the 2.6 kernel
Which kernel version are u using, btw ?
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You need to enable cpufreq in kernel, maybe that's why autospeedstep didn't run on your system in the first place.
is this not enabled in the 2.6.1 stock-kernel?
For cpufreqd & 2.6.x you need to replace % lines in /etc/cpufreqd.conf with the actual cpu speed you want, btw. As example if your cpu is 2000 MHz, replace 66% with 1200. Just do the math .
what do you do with 0%? what if this speed is not supported? i read that some p4m can only do some speeds longterm ... i dont want to break my cpu only to save a little battery
but thanx a lot for the answer; we are closer the solution i want
The impossible missions are the only ones which succeed.
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i am using kernel 2.6.0, but custom build.
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I switched to 2.6.1 (from 2.6.1-mm1) it works again . it seems like -mm kernels don't like cpufreqd...
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Check the new cpudyn pkg. It's the best speedstep solution I've ever used (so far at least ).
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