> On 1 Aug 2017, at 20:45, Ian Smith <smithi at nimnet.asn.au> wrote:
>
> On Mon, 31 Jul 2017 12:03:27 -0700, Kevin Oberman wrote:
>> On Mon, Jul 31, 2017 at 3:48 AM, Ian Smith <smithi at
nimnet.asn.au> wrote:
>>
>>> On Mon, 31 Jul 2017 10:09:11 +0300, Daniel Braniss wrote:
>>>
>>>> I am trying out PCengines latest apu2 boards, and I just
noticed that
>>> with different Freebsd versions I get
>>>> different freq_levels, and so when idling, each box (have 5)
has a
>>> different freq/temperature value, ranging
>>>> from 125/69.1C, 600/59.0C to 75/56.0C
>>>>
>>>> FreeBSD apu-4 11.1-STABLE FreeBSD 11.1-STABLE #5 f565b5a06ab3
(11) tip:
>>> Mon Jul 31 09:36:33 IDT 2017
>>>> apu-4# sysctl dev.cpu.0.freq_levels
>>>> dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 1000/980 800/807 600/609
>>>
>>> That looks about right. On a Core2Duo (still on 9.3) I get:
>>> dev.est.1.freq_settings: 2401/35000 2400/35000 1600/15000 800/12000
>>> dev.est.0.freq_settings: 2401/35000 2400/35000 1600/15000 800/12000
>>> dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2401/35000 2400/35000 1600/15000 800/12000
>>> dev.cpu.0.freq: 800
>>>
>>> But only because I'd added to /boot/loader.conf:
>>>
>>> hint.p4tcc.0.disabled=1
>>> hint.acpi_throttle.0.disabled=1
>>>
>>> which became the defaults sometime, maybe not before 11.0?
Otherwise
>>> mine would look more similar to the one below, with all 12.5%
increments
>>> in frequency enabled, which doesn't actually save any power at
all.
>>>
>>>> FreeBSD apu-5 11.1-PRERELEASE FreeBSD 11.1-PRERELEASE #0
21e9d1ca9b80
>>> (11) tip: Tue May 30 11:51:48 IDT 2017
>>>> apu-5# sysctl dev.cpu.0.freq_levels
>>>> dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 1000/966 875/845 800/795 700/695 600/600
525/525
>>> 450/450 375/375 300/300 225/225 150/150 75/75
>>>
>>> Looks like either p4tcc or acpi_throttle is enabled? See
cpufreq(4).
>>> As above, these don't buy you anything but extra busyness for
powerd.
>>>
>>> Also noticed that the (nice, low!) milliwatt figures for
1000/800/600
>>> freqs are a bit different to the -stable one. Slightly Different
model?
>>>
>>>> FreeBSD apu-1 10.3-STABLE FreeBSD 10.3-STABLE #4 267788fd852c
(10) tip:
>>> Tue Jan 10 09:09:00 IST 2017
>>>> apu-1# sysctl dev.cpu.0.freq_levels
>>>> dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 1000/-1 875/-1 750/-1 625/-1 500/-1
375/-1
>>> 250/-1 125/-1
>>>
>>> And that looks like est(4) isn't enabled/attaching at all ..
see dmesg
>>> on all of these for clues.
>>>
>>>> so, any ideas as to what is going on?
>>>
>>> Pure guesswork on experience with older versions, I'm not up to
date.
>>>
>>
>> Very odd. Are all systems running identical CPUs and BIOSes? Identical
>> loader and sysctl configurations? Look at /var/rn/dmesg.boot for CPU
>> information. Is EST being detected? It used to be early in the boot
>> process, but is now fairly late. (In my case, about 2/3 through the
>> dmesg.boot file.
>
> Hi Kevin, it's been a while ..
>
> Danny, can you put up a verbose boot dmesg.boot of one(?) for a browse?
> Or maybe apu-4 and -1, if not all. I'd expect error msgs on -1 anyway.
they are now available at:
http://www.cs.huji.ac.il/~danny/pcengines/
<http://www.cs.huji.ac.il/~danny/pcengines/>>
>> I have p4tcc and throttling explicitly turned off (which should now be
the
>> default), but my Sandy Bridge Core i5 still shows:
>> dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2501/35000 2500/35000 2000/26426 1800/23233
>> 1600/20164 1400/17226 1200/14408 1000/11713 800/9140
>
> All truly available I see on more recent processors. Certainly not 1/8
> duty-cycle multipliers as p4tcc and maybe? acpi_throttle (not seen here)
>
>> The first is really bogus to indicate "turbo" mode.
>
> Usefully bogus, in that you can flag powerd to (in your case) -M 2500 to
> prevent it engaging "turbo" mode, as I do on my old Core2Duo, as
advised
> by Warner years ago to avoid overheating on buildworlds and such - but
> more recent incarnations of "turbo" are supposedly far more
functional.
>
> Admittedly a digression .. mostly coming from wondering about data Karl
> posted in response, indicating different Cx levels available and so used
> by the latter 3 AP cores, which was news to me. I'd like to know more,
> if only for gratuitous curiosity. Others can tick their TL;DR box :)
>
>> Temperature is a totally separate issue. It is VERY sensitive to
external
>> issue like airflow and position of the CPU in relation to other
components
>> in the chassis Also, unless you have a lot of cores, you probably
should
>> set both economy_cx_lowest and performance_cx_lowest to Cmax. Economy
>> should default to that, but performance will not as that can cause
issues
>> on systems with large numbers of cores, so is set to C2. Many such
system
>> used to disable deeper sleep modes in BIOS, but I am way behind the
times
>> and don't know about the current state of affairs. Certainly for
systems
>> with 32 or fewer cores, this should not be an issue. In any case, Cx
state
>> can sharply impact temperature.
>
> Indeed. But as these are low-power devices already, it's likely less
of
> a concern, but maximising efficiency and minimising stress never hurts.
>
>> Finally, the last case with power levels of -1 for all frequencies is
>> probably because the CPU manufacturer (Intel?) has not published this
>> information. For a while they were treating this as
"proprietary"
>> information. Very annoying! It's always something that is not
readily
>> available. Thi is one reason I suspect your CPUs are not identical.
>
> Hmm, bought as a batch, that sounds unlikely, though their BIOSes (ono)
> may vary, and would be worth checking on each - and BIOS settings, too.
>
> Danny, is powerd running on all these? I doubt it would load on apu-1
> as it stands.
it is working on the apu-1!
> Note these are 'pure' 1/8 factors of 1000,
p4tcc-alike,
> and I think quite likely indicate that cpufreq(4) failed to initialise?
> debug.cpufreq.verbose=1 in /boot/loader.conf might show a clue, with a
> verbose dmesg.boot anyway.
>
> Later: oops, just reread Karl's message, where I was unfaniliar with
> different CPUs showing different C-states, and noticing that despite
> cpu0 showing C2(io) available, and cx_lowest as C2, yet it used 100% C1
> state, which was all that was available to cpu1 to 3.
>
> But then I twigged to Karl's hwpstate errors, so with 'apropos
hwpstate'
> still showing nothing after all these years, along with other cpufreq(4)
> drivers, I used the list search via duckduckgo to finally find one (1)
> message, which lead to one detailed thread (that I even bought into!)
>
> https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2012-May/subject.html
<https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2012-May/subject.html>
> https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2012-June/thread.html
<https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-stable/2012-June/thread.html>
>
> /hwpstate Note the May one needs following by Subject, else it splits
> into 5 separate threads (?)
>
> Which may be interesting to cpufreq nerds, but had me remember that
> hwpstate(0) is for AMD not Intel CPUs. So now I'm totally confused :)
>
> Danny, do your results from Karl's sysctl listings agree with his?
yes, except mine seem to be running at a higher temperature.
thanks,
danny>
> cheers, Ian