sudo cpupower frequency-info
analyzing CPU 0:
driver: acpi-cpufreq
CPUs which run at the same hardware frequency: 0
CPUs which need to have their frequency coordinated by software: 0
maximum transition latency: Cannot determine or is not supported.
hardware limits: 2.20 GHz - 4.85 GHz
available frequency steps: 3.80 GHz, 2.80 GHz, 2.20 GHz
available cpufreq governors: ondemand performance schedutil
current policy: frequency should be within 2.20 GHz and 3.80 GHz.
The governor "performance" may decide which speed to use
within this range.
current CPU frequency: 3.80 GHz (asserted by call to hardware)
boost state support:
Supported: yes
Active: yes
Boost States: 0
Total States: 3
Pstate-P0: 3800MHz
Pstate-P1: 2800MHz
Pstate-P2: 2200MHz
is there a way/config to have the other scaling driver like amd_pstate_epp made while compiling this kernel mod? amd_pstate_epp seems to give more states and can have lower freq while idle.
Pinned Comments
JeremyStarTM commented on 2024-08-06 19:37 (UTC) (edited on 2025-01-17 17:58 (UTC) by JeremyStarTM)
Information comment
This comment provides useful information about this package. Make sure to read it through, you won't regret it.
Repository URL
This package is hosted at sos!git. If you want to contribute to the package, you can do it here: https://git.staropensource.de/JeremyStarTM/aur-linux-clear
Issue handling
Please only submit issues in the package's repository if they aren't bug reports about the package or help requests. Please keep them to the AUR only. This prevents unnecessary signups.
Updates
I usually publish updates 0-3 days after a kernel release, depending on how busy I am.
If I however get wind of security-relevant updates or any vulnerabilities I will try to update the kernel as soon as possible and write a comment about the vulnerability/update. So make sure to subscribe to this package's comment mailing list.
PKGBUILD environment variable customization
The PKGBUILD file supports customization via environment variables. Here's a list of all of them:
-
_makemenuconfig
: Invokesmake menuconfig
(ncurses-based default configuration menu) before compilation starts-
_makenconfig
: Invokesmake nconfig
(ncurses-based nicer configuration menu) before compilation starts-
_makexconfig
: Invokesmake xconfig
(X11-based GUI configuration menu) before compilation starts-
_use_current
: Will use the configuration of the running kernel, if the running kernel is compiled withIKCONFIG_PROC
-
_optimize_defconfig
: Applies package maintainer-picked configuration changes to your defconfig. Only takes effect with_use_current
being enabled-
_copyfinalconfig
: Copies the final kernel configuration into the repository root askconfig-new
before compilation starts-
_localmodcfg
: Only compiles modules found in modprobed-db's database (which decreases compilation time and kernel size)-
_use_llvm_lto
: Compiles the kernel with LLVM instead of GCC. Should work, if not open an issue-
_subarch
: Specifies the subarchitecture to compile for (see the PKGBUILD file for a list of all subarches). Default is41
/MGENERIC_CPU
(Generic x86-64), which is compatible with all amd64 processors. Must be a number or subarch name-
_subarch_microarch
: Specifies the microarchitecture to compile for. Only applies to and is required by theMGENERIC_CPU
subarch. Must be a number between1
and4
(click for more information)-
_debug
: Force enables debug options when set toy
, force disables debug options when set ton
or uses the config defaults when unset-
_show_compile
: Enables verbose-er compilation output and displays all executingmake
targetsAll of these variables just need to be set for them to apply, except for
_subarch
and_debug
. For more information please check their documentation inside thePKGBUILD
fileGPG errors
If makepkg complains about invalid PGP keys, try running this command first:
gpg --locate-keys torvalds@kernel.org gregkh@kernel.org sashal@kernel.org benh@debian.org
. This command only needs to be executed once.Build tool
If you want a dead simple way to compile this package, you can try out my build tool. It includes a few no nonsense changes to the kernel configuration and allows you to configure the PKGBUILD file in a simple manner and decrease build time. And if you don't want that, using
makepkg
as-is works fine too.