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AMD P-State Guided Autonomous Mode Coming For Linux 6.4

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  • AMD P-State Guided Autonomous Mode Coming For Linux 6.4

    Phoronix: AMD P-State Guided Autonomous Mode Coming For Linux 6.4

    While Linux 6.3 adds AMD P-State EPP as the "Energy Performance Preference" mode for enhancing the power/performance on recent Ryzen and EPYC systems on Linux, with Linux 6.4 the P-State Guided Autonomous Mode is coming to round out AMD's current CPU frequency scaling driver efforts...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite

  • #2
    I was really wondered why it got not into the 6.3 Kernel, even if it was ready since a bunch of time.
    Anyways, I run it since a while, together with the schedutil gov. Runs quite good compared to the default amd-pstate.

    Still not sure, which one does suit better to me. amd-pstate-epp (powersave/power) or amd-pstate-guided (schedutil).

    One thing which I also wonder, is that cpupower does report amd-pstate-epp but not amd-pstate-guided. Its simply amd-pstate, even if amd-pstate-guided is running.

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    • #3
      my amd ass burning watching these p-state news floating cant use the driver cause HP disabled cppc from bios.

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      • #4
        So it will be merged for 6.4 but it will only work when passing: amd_pstate=guided
        AMD seems to be a little slow when it comes to supporting their hardware...

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        • #5
          Can we expect TLP or auto-cpufreq likely be a good all-in-one tool that takes care of tuning this stuff?

          Would big distros tweak it for us?

          I'm always scratching my head how my laptop gets way worse battery life on Linux than on Windows. The performance is practically the same. It makes me wonder why this is and. How much power efficiency is left on the table.

          I already know video decoding and things like that are behind, but for basic stuff like documents and web browsing, it's jarring the difference in battery sometimes.

          This is for both a Thinkpad T14 G3 AMD and a MacBook Air

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          • #6
            Let us know when they decide to stick to a set commands for the AMD_pstate driver.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by PAUL007 View Post
              my amd ass burning watching these p-state news floating cant use the driver cause HP disabled cppc from bios.
              Have some Prep-H and remember at least some kernel commands override firmware settings. (BIOS is long since dead, stop calling UEFI "BIOS"!)

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              • #8
                Originally posted by PAUL007 View Post
                my amd ass burning watching these p-state news floating cant use the driver cause HP disabled cppc from bios.
                what zen are you on? with zen 3 and above, cppc is needed by default. at least on windows to help properly keep a thread on a ccd and be driven by the strongest two cores on that ccd.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by PAUL007 View Post
                  my amd ass burning watching these p-state news floating cant use the driver cause HP disabled cppc from bios.
                  You could enable it using this : https://github.com/DavidS95/Smokeless_UMAF

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Mitch View Post
                    Can we expect TLP or auto-cpufreq likely be a good all-in-one tool that takes care of tuning this stuff?

                    Would big distros tweak it for us?

                    I'm always scratching my head how my laptop gets way worse battery life on Linux than on Windows. The performance is practically the same. It makes me wonder why this is and. How much power efficiency is left on the table.

                    I already know video decoding and things like that are behind, but for basic stuff like documents and web browsing, it's jarring the difference in battery sometimes.

                    This is for both a Thinkpad T14 G3 AMD and a MacBook Air
                    Do you use TLP? You could gain a lot of battery life from it.
                    More info here : https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/TLP

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