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Date:      Sat, 27 Mar 2010 16:35:36 +1100 (EST)
From:      Ian Smith <smithi@nimnet.asn.au>
To:        Jeremy Chadwick <freebsd@jdc.parodius.com>
Cc:        Alexander Motin <mav@freebsd.org>, FreeBSD-STABLE Mailing List <freebsd-stable@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Powerd and est / eist functionality
Message-ID:  <20100327153102.X30338@sola.nimnet.asn.au>
In-Reply-To: <20100326091447.GA91547@icarus.home.lan>
References:  <5.2.1.1.2.20100324134153.032459d8@mail.sstec.com> <1269310984.00232724.1269300005@10.7.7.3> <1269310984.00232724.1269300005@10.7.7.3> <5.2.1.1.2.20100324134153.032459d8@mail.sstec.com> <5.2.1.1.2.20100325235505.031e8338@mail.sstec.com> <20100326091447.GA91547@icarus.home.lan>

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On Fri, 26 Mar 2010, Jeremy Chadwick wrote:

[ leaving the MB monitoring stuff alone for your expert attention :-]

 > > It jumped up in vcore a little there with powerd. C1E and C2E which
 > > include P-states are what I am really after and I think that the
 > > bios by itself provides those changes better than any other changes
 > > in these settings.
 > 
 > ...and this would fall under the est(4) subset driver for cpufreq(4).

Just checking, I know nothing about these so far, but are you suggesting 
that John having C1E and C2E enabled in BIOS may be affecting ACPI/EST 
detection, and that things may be different were these disabled?

If that's not what you meant, could you expand a little?

John: you may want to explore where this comes together in kern_cpu.c 
where you'll see those cpufreq debugging messages you quoted.  Some of 
the more gritty documentation may be found browsing with something like: 
% less /sys/{sys,kern,amd64/include}/*cpu*.[ch]

cheers, Ian



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