Gosh, it looks so dangerous!
I think I'll wait for a .deb or something like that.
A Proper Solution To The Linux ASPM Problem
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Originally posted by quarara View PostHi,
Could someone please explain me how to apply this patch? I use my UbuntuOneiric-powered pc just for "regular" activities like typing, surfing and listening to music. Not definitely the kind of power user you usually find on Phoronix. I've enabled RC6 in the grub file - it actually stretched my battery life, but - like several Sandy Bridge users - after this mod I'm experiencing video corruption. Does this patch will help me dealing with this disappointing issue?
Thanks in advance,
Luigi
As for applying it, you need to compile your own kernel. Here are some references:
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Hi,
Could someone please explain me how to apply this patch? I use my UbuntuOneiric-powered pc just for "regular" activities like typing, surfing and listening to music. Not definitely the kind of power user you usually find on Phoronix. I've enabled RC6 in the grub file - it actually stretched my battery life, but - like several Sandy Bridge users - after this mod I'm experiencing video corruption. Does this patch will help me dealing with this disappointing issue?
Thanks in advance,
Luigi
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Originally posted by LinuxID10T View PostI am pretty sure other people bitch about it too. As to the kernel devs reaction to Michael's article wasn't great. I will admit, Michael does sometimes blow an issue out of proportion, however, as a laptop user, in this case I completely agree with him. It was a pretty damn major regression and the kernel devs sat there scratching their asses for months rather than fixing the damn issue. I know there was questions as to how to go about fixing the issue, but in all reality, it was placed on the backburner. The fact that a mere 60 lines of code fixed this goes to show how easy it should have been.
See here for a non-fud ridden explanation of the issue: http://www.fewt.com/2011/09/about-ke...sion-myth.html
As for the "bug" - my thinkpad t420 - with the "regression" runs under 8 watts on battery.
My new Asus U56E, also with the regression is closer to 6 watts.
Simple configurations people, learn to Linux.
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Originally posted by GreatEmerald View PostThat's nice. Now the question is, when will it get merged? To which version of the kernel?
I am sure there will be people adapting these patches to the 2.6.38, 2.6.39 and 3.0 series as well so then people who want to tinker with the patches could apply them and build the kernels.
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That's nice. Now the question is, when will it get merged? To which version of the kernel?
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This is a BIOS-related problem which can happen on any CPU or chipset with PCIe support. For example there are Sandy Bridge computers without ASPM problems and Sandy Bridge computers with ASPM problems.
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Originally posted by felipevsw View PostJust to clarify this to me, and many others: I thought this was a Sandy Bridge problem, but I saw here that the test was not done on a Sandy Bridge processor, right?
At what point older family of processors this ASPM issue began? Or should I look to my motherboard to see if it has PCI Express slot, so it is affected?
For exemple I have a ThinkPad T61 with a Core 2 Duo T7300, do I get affected by this issue?
I have a ThinkPad T61 that's affected with its power consumption being off by a few Watts (slightly different CPU and NVIDIA quadro graphics).
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