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Intel Skylake Performing Better With CPUFreq Than P-State For Linux Gaming

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  • #11
    Originally posted by brauliobo View Post
    there is something wrong with the benchmarks, there is no difference between powersave and performance, even for cpu intensive benchmarks. the cpufreq setting is not working
    Well, "ondemand" should give the same performance as "performance" (but then so should P-state), "powersave" could give the same performance but usually won't. Yes, it looks a bit odd.

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    • #12
      By default, intel_pstate's HWP mode is disabled with Ubuntu Wily on skylake due to instability with certain systems. It would be interesting to see what the results are if you pass "intel_pstate=skylake_hwp" as a kernel boot arg to override that.

      EDIT: Now that I read the article again, I can see he is using an apparently-upstream kernel that probably doesn't have the HWP-disabling patch in it. Nevermind.
      Last edited by thefirstm; 16 October 2015, 09:38 PM.

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      • #13
        Perhaps a bit off topic but what really makes articles on phoronix featured. Is it just the author (in this case Michael) who decides this?! I would assume the number of viewers who clicked on the article would eventually give it it's featured icon. I have seen articles marked as featured apparently seconds after they have been posted. I am aware that featured means prominent stuff and something that "stands out". Don't get me wrong - I appreciate the articles, but on the other hand I would not want something marked featured based on just one persons view.

        http://www.dirtcellar.net

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        • #14
          I'm guessing "Featured" is when the information comes from Phoronix/Michael, and is not a repost of something he read somewhere else.

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          • #15
            Basically p-state is outdated for Skylake, Windows 10 would use Speed Shift. No idea how to use that with Linux.

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            • #16
              Originally posted by geearf View Post
              I'm guessing "Featured" is when the information comes from Phoronix/Michael, and is not a repost of something he read somewhere else.
              Yeah, I think it's just related to how much time Michael spends on them. Copying a news release from somewhere is fast, so it's non-featured. Most things where he runs benchmarks takes him time to do that, so he marks it as featured.

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              • #17
                Originally posted by Kano View Post
                Basically p-state is outdated for Skylake, Windows 10 would use Speed Shift. No idea how to use that with Linux.
                After reading about "Speed Shift", I am 99.9% sure that it is just a marketing name for HWP (Hardware P-States). intel_pstate already supports it, and in fact supported it before Windows 10 was a thing.

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                • #18
                  Originally posted by waxhead View Post
                  Perhaps a bit off topic but what really makes articles on phoronix featured. Is it just the author (in this case Michael) who decides this?! I would assume the number of viewers who clicked on the article would eventually give it it's featured icon. I have seen articles marked as featured apparently seconds after they have been posted. I am aware that featured means prominent stuff and something that "stands out". Don't get me wrong - I appreciate the articles, but on the other hand I would not want something marked featured based on just one persons view.
                  Featured is always for the long, multi-page articles to differentiate it from the quick news posts.
                  Michael Larabel
                  https://www.michaellarabel.com/

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