![]() ![]() The refresh rate is set at 2.5 seconds today whereas in. ![]() ![]() Overall I think powersave mode is the best for most configurations.ĪpSomeone requested conky code so I'm including today's version. It might interest some readers what the conky display looks like when switching off of performance governor back to the default powersave governor:ĬPU% utilization has spiked by 5%, but CPU frequency has dropped by 1500 MHz and temperature has decreased by about 10 degrees. I left the governor set on performance for 30 minutes and it worked just fine. It has stayed in performance mode for 10 minutes now as confirmed by using the appropriate command above and doubly confirmed by conky display above. None-the-less after manually setting the governor to performance mode using the appropriate command above. I have noticed that even when set to powersave mode (as I always use) when Ubuntu first boots it runs in performance mode for 90 seconds before it eventually kicks into powersave mode. You will then notice CPU% utilization drop by about 5% but also notice speed will increase from about 1000 MHz to 3000 MHz and temperatures will spike by ~10 degree, depending on your processor: To change your processor to performance mode use: $ echo performance | sudo tee /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/scaling_governor If you do have more than one governor you can check what is currently in use with this command: $ cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_governor To view available speed governors use this command: $ cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_available_governors ![]()
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