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Re: [Xen-devel] Xen power management default governor



On 11/01/10 23:36, Kaushik Barde wrote:
I believe, userspace governor gives better application control for instance,
controlling P-states through existing userspace frequency scaling daemons.

Just easier to set one's own power management policy.

-Kaushik

Yes, but that's true, but that doesn't explain why userspace is the default, especially as there doesn't seem to be any userspace governor in the distribution and anyway, the userspace default was abandoned in the mainline Linux kernel because ondemand works rather better.

On most machines, "userspace" with no running governor daemon is the same as "performance". However, on some BIOS revisions of some hardware, "userspace" is the same as "powersave" and this basically makes it look as though the system is running rather slower than you would expect.

So while userspace might be good for people who have clear cut ideas of what they think the policy for scaling should be, it's not good for everyone else and, in fact, it might lead people to believe that performance is actually rather poor.

-----Original Message-----
From: xen-devel-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:xen-devel-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of John Haxby
Sent: Monday, January 11, 2010 4:51 AM
To: xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [Xen-devel] Xen power management default governor


Can anyone tell me why the default governor for power management is
"userspace"?   If there any reason why it shouldn't be "ondemand"?

And is there a userspace governor daemon that I've overlooked?

jch



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