看板 DFBSD_kernel 關於我們 聯絡資訊
Hi, I've been playing around today to see the our power efficiency on my ThinkPad. I have been using acpiconf -i 0 to see the discharge rate, and it seems we can't get below 19W. On linux and Windows I can get as low as 10-12W. I've set the brightness to the lowest level. I didn't enable any wifi power management, but on linux I can't do that either since it has been marked as broken for my card on linux (iwl3945). I've set the P-State to be fixed at 1GHz (the lowest), since powerd doesn't seem to work correctly; it didn't seem to scale down from 2GHz anymore after a while on an idle system. FWIW, estd seems to do a better job, though. In any case discussing the sense or lack thereof behind powerd is not the subject of this mail. I've also set the lowest C-state to C3 and according to hw.acpi.cpu*.cx_usage, it is actually spending most of the idle time in C3 (around 75%). Additionally I've set the ahci link power management to aggressive. This is the biggest problem. While it seems to save another watt or so, it also causes a long wait for even a simple ls if the stuff isn't cached. dmesg shows timeouts: ahci0.0: CMD TIMEOUT state=5 slot=22 cmd-reg 0xc00d617<ASP,ALPE,CR,FR,FRE,POD,SUD,ST> sactive=00400000 active=00000000 expired=00000000 sact=00400000 ci=00000000 STS=150 ahci0.0: disk_rw: timeout This definitely doesn't occur on linux with ahci aggressive link power management, and would seem like quite a big issue. Anyone knows why these timeouts occur with aggressive link power management? I'm also wondering what we need to do to increase our power efficiency to a Linux-like level, or at least down to 15W on this ThinkPad. It would also be helpful if we could gather more information on why we are so power inefficient. Can we see the number of wakeups per second and what causes the wakeups, much like powertop on linux does? Regards, Alex Hornung