On Sunday 13 May 2007 15:18:40 Rui Paulo wrote: > At Sun, 13 May 2007 12:25:53 +0100, > Thomas Sparrevohn wrote: > > > Nice - Have you looked at using the mwait deeper C-States rather > > than halt? > > Nop. > > > I think the "msr" portion looks like it will handle the entire Micro > > Core architecture that would be really nice - Judging from the > > papers published by intel and from the general discussions on the > > net - it seems like > > Are you refering to msrtemp driver? Yes, it only works on Intel's Core > Architecture, at the moment. > > > Would it be possible to seperate the "ACPI" part from the other "Mac > > patches" as I think its of more general use? > > Well, if someone really needs it (besides for MacBooks), we can > discuss what should be done. Using a quad-core - Desktop - I need it - Normally the cores runs at 45C - under freebsd it more like 51-55C and its giving me heat burns on my feet ;-) All the Core Micro architecture uses TM2 approach and ODCM as secondary. The Xeon's systems seems as a rule to have reasonable APCI implementations - however quite a lot of Desktop systems does not really and depends upon OSPM to give the information - Judging from the Linux implementation that is the approach they have taken - eg. cstate.c etc - A quad core system are in idle wait quite a lot due to the way that portupgrade etc. works but I don't think that the system enters "C1 Auto Halt Stop Grant" which in it self would half the power used. From a linux presentation it looks like the Power Usage swings between 31Watt - down to 1.8Watt in DC4 state so there a lot of heat and power to be saved ;-) So I think there are good reasons to look at TM2 and Mwait etc > > -- > Rui Paulo > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-current_at_freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-current > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-current-unsubscribe_at_freebsd.org" >Received on Sun May 13 2007 - 13:17:57 UTC
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