How to configure cpufreqd
Revision as of 23:11, 9 May 2005 by 217.93.8.111 (Talk)
In Debian, all you have to do is:
apt-get install cpufreqd
And in most cases it will work out of the box.
This is the default Debian config, but works well out of the box:
# this is a comment # # you need: 1 [General] section, # 1 or more [Profile] sections # 1 or more [Rule] sections # # a section ends at the first blank line # # [Rule] sample: # [Rule] # name=sample_rule # ac=on # (on/off) # battery_interval=0-10 # cpu_interval=30-60 # programs=xine,mplayer # profile=sample_profile # # [Profile] sample: # [Profile] # name=sample_profile # minfreq=10% # maxfreq=100% # policy=performance # # see CPUFREQD.CONF(5) manpage for a complete reference [General] pidfile=/var/run/cpufreqd.pid poll_interval=2 pm_type=acpi #(acpi, apm or pmu) # Uncomment the following line to enable ACPI workaround (see cpufreqd.conf(5)) # acpi_workaround=1 verbosity=4 #(if you want a minimal logging set to 5) [Profile] name=hi_boost minfreq=66% maxfreq=100% policy=performance [Profile] name=medium_boost minfreq=33% maxfreq=66% policy=performance [Profile] name=lo_boost minfreq=0% maxfreq=33% policy=performance [Profile] name=lo_power minfreq=0% maxfreq=33% policy=powersave # conservative mode when not AC [Rule] name=conservative ac=off # (on/off) battery_interval=0-100 cpu_interval=0-40 cpu_nice_scale=1.5 delay_cycles=3 profile=lo_boost # need some power [Rule] name=lo_cpu_boost ac=off # (on/off) battery_interval=0-100 cpu_interval=30-80 profile=medium_boost # need big power (not if battery very low) [Rule] name=hi_cpu_boost ac=off # (on/off) battery_interval=50-100 cpu_interval=70-100 profile=medium_boost # full power when AC [Rule] name=AC_on ac=on # (on/off) profile=hi_boost # full power when watching DVDs and not AC: # this is the last rule and takes less # precedence with respect to the others [Rule] name=dvd_watching ac=off # (on/off) battery_interval=0-100 programs=xine,totem,vlc,avidemux cpu_interval=0-100 profile=hi_boost