Originally posted by RealNC
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Radeon Driver Power Management Has Room For Improvement
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Originally posted by joepjoosten View PostI had also the same experience of slow switching between profiles with dynpm, and sync in blancing period is off when in low profile.
You have to switch between profiles manually.
What dynpm does is it adjusts the clocks and voltages on the fly, trying to exactly match the expected workload. It does not switch between predefined profiles. This means that it's more flexible, but also far harder to implement.
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The article has a funny title. "Room for improvement". lol. Seeing the performance and power consumption charts, the only conclusion is: the open drivers totally suck ass.
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Legacy cards
Thanks for the article. As an owner of a legacy card (X1600 Mobility, upgrading means upgrading the laptop which is not an option atm), I wish that a similar test could be made to legacy cards as well (you could use Debian Lenny or Ubuntu 8.04 as a base for Catalyst and a recent distro for Radeon, these are the real alternatives for us financially restricted ).
Personally I am interested only in power consumption, but it might be interesting to see the different framerates the Catalyst gives with its different power profiles, too.
I am inclined to believe the differences are smaller for R300(-R500) cards, but I am still playing it safe and using a "legacy" distribution, until convinced otherwise (for example by a Phoronix article).
If I had any free time of if the testing could be fully automated (I have a plenty of computing time available), I would be glad to contribute (HP Compaq NC8430).
BR,
piete
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I had also the same experience of slow switching between profiles with dynpm, and sync in blancing period is off when in low profile.
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I think that dynpm is simply extremely slow at switching, probably because it's hard to do all the work during blanking periods or something.
I've had the opposite experience. If I run an idle system with dynpm, it consumes little stuff, but games are really slow. It's like running them with the low profile. It takes quite a while before it adjusts to the load, it seems.
I did some tests when this stuff was new, and it took a few minutes of running gears or something for the frequencies to ramp up, and a few minutes of idling for them to drop to idle levels again. If Michael did the switch from default profile to dynpm and tested immediately, then this would explain why he was getting basically the default profile performance.
I agree that dynpm could use lots of tweaking, but apparently, this is far from easy.
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DynPM does work, but not well...
I have a HD 5400 card, and with power management set to DynPM, it switches between High profile en Mid profile.
Problems (black screens) occur with refreshes of the screen on lower (low, mid) profiles because of sync problems.
High profile makes the card hot, and makes the fan spin loudly even when your compositing desktop is not doing anything.
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Thanks Michael, very interesting. Seems the biggest conclusion is that dynpm doesn't work, period.
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The other thing I find bizzar is that according to the DRM, my card doesn't have a low profile (or at least, it's the same as mid) but according to the benchmarks (comparing voltage) it's the mid profile that my card is lacking.
Being on a laptop, these things have increased importance.
David
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