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Date:      Fri, 26 Dec 2008 19:12:26 -0800
From:      "Garrett Cooper" <yanefbsd@gmail.com>
To:        "David van Kuijk" <dynasore@bigfoot.com>
Cc:        acpi <acpi@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Problem on AMD64
Message-ID:  <7d6fde3d0812261912r1d5abd6cic1513f11cc59f1c5@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <49534F10.7040305@bigfoot.com>
References:  <20081221233822.7E92545020@ptavv.es.net> <49500088.2080609@bigfoot.com> <7d6fde3d0812221315s4d03e15dw4b84679b98a6308f@mail.gmail.com> <49534F10.7040305@bigfoot.com>

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On Thu, Dec 25, 2008 at 1:14 AM, David van Kuijk <dynasore@bigfoot.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks for the responses so far.
>>>>>
>>>>> I would be happy with S3. I am however a little confused about the
>>>>> abilities of  my server as reported by sysctl hw.acpi.
>>>>>
>>>>> As commented below this line suggests that no other states than S4/S5
>>>>> are supported:
>>>>> hw.acpi.supported_sleep_state: S4 S5
>>>>>
>>>>> But this is also listed:
>>>>> hw.acpi.standby_state: S1
>>>>> hw.acpi.suspend_state: S3
>>>>>
>>>>> Are these last two overridden by the first, meaning that S3 is not
>>>>> available from my BIOS???
>>>>
>>>> Yes. FreeBSD, by default, sets up standby as S1 and suspend to S3
>>>> because
>>>> almost all BIOSes support these states. Yours is the first BIOS I have
>>>> seen that does not do S1. That is really odd.
>>>>
>>>> In any case, you have no available ways to cut power when your system is
>>>> really idle other than powering off. Of course, you may be able to do
>>>> some power saving with powerd and EST if your BIOS and CPU support
>>>> those.
>>
>> Look into the following sysctls:
>>
>> hw.acpi.cpu.cx_lowest
>> hw.acpi.cpu.cx_highest
>>
>
> I tried to find out what I can do with those sysctls.
> hw.acpi.cpu.cx_highest is not available on my system.
> hw.acpi.cpu.cx_lowest is available and can be set. Are you suggesting I
> should set it to C2 or C3???
>
> A second question;
> When I use powerd it switches between clock-frequencies of 1800 and 1000
> correctly. Is it possible to set a sysctl so that even lower frequencies are
> supported, or are the supported frequencies simply dictated by the
> processors in my server (in my case Opteron 1.8 GHz)?
>
> Cheers,
> David

Dog gone it I've been typo'ing that for a long time (see
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/cvs-all/2003-November/036370.html).

Try:

hw.acpi.cpu.cx.lowest
hw.acpi.cpu.cx.highest

Note that the underscores were in fact periods.

Cheers,
-Garrett



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