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PowerTOP Can Still Extend Battery Life On Linux

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  • PowerTOP Can Still Extend Battery Life On Linux

    Phoronix: PowerTOP Can Still Extend Battery Life On Linux

    Following the recent release of PowerTOP 2.1 I did some testing from a modern Intel notebook to see what kind of power-savings one can expect from running the open-source PowerTOP software on a modern notebook running Ubuntu...

    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
    Am I missing something about powertop? I thought one of the main features was the tunables page. IIRC, powertop used to tell you how to permanently configure these tunables. With this version, I can toggle them, but there's no indication of a /proc, /sys, etc entry that's used for configuration.

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    • #3
      I'm in the same boat as Roland, its great that PowerTOP can set them via /proc or /sys but if they dont survive reboot its fairly limited in usability. What im wondering is why we cant make /sys be able to survive reboots. Fedora has /etc/sysctl.conf (dont know if other distros also use it) so I'd think PowerTop could set the appropriate sys calls there if you change anything under the Tunables tab
      All opinions are my own not those of my employer if you know who they are.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Ericg View Post
        What im wondering is why we cant make /sys be able to survive reboots. Fedora has /etc/sysctl.conf (dont know if other distros also use it)
        This doesn't really need to be standard. I have a script that runs at boot which sets a number of /sys parameters, I just want to know what powertop is doing.

        sysctl is for /proc/sys, and other distros use it either as part of the procps package or through systemd.

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        • #5
          Now if only Intel updated their Linux-ready Firmware Developer Kit... It's already been 5 years since the last release, and I can see a whole lot of <NOT ON SPEC> entries with current hardware

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          • #6
            Installing laptop-mode-tools does all the tricks

            If you install laptop-mode-tools your machine toggles all the optimizations by itself depending on power state. At least that's how it works with pure Sandy Bridge (my one's a Lenovo X220 with i5-2520). Only the VM writeback time-out isn't toggled, but that really doesn't matter much.

            I'm wondering why Ubuntu doesn't install this package by default if a battery is present.

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            • #7
              [off topic]

              Michael the phoronix watermark comes a bit in your face in many cases -and there have been complains-.

              If you want you can use the two below which i think are more subtle.





              if you want it in svg just tell me.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by roland View Post
                Am I missing something about powertop? I thought one of the main features was the tunables page. IIRC, powertop used to tell you how to permanently configure these tunables. With this version, I can toggle them, but there's no indication of a /proc, /sys, etc entry that's used for configuration.
                It's not intuitive but if you run powertop with the --html arg it will take a snapshot and print out the available power toggles and how to do them. However it will not tell you how to do them if within powertop it says good for the various power settings listed, only if it says bad.

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                • #9
                  Does powertop get it right anyway?

                  I've looked at setting some of powertop's recommendations by hand recently and found that many of them were already set to a suitable power saving mode despite what powertop was saying. So does powertop just get it wrong sometimes?

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                  • #10
                    Michael, as the argument against too aggressive powersavings by default usually is "it kills performance!!!11!" and such I would really like you to perform benchmarks where you test this out.
                    With other words, try out the different benchmarks you usually run with stock setup and with powertops suggestions. Could be cool if you also tested if there was any changes in power consumption during the tests.

                    Is that possible?

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