![]() I feel super stupid but super relieved at the same time. Turns out all I had to do was disable auto-cpufreq. I tried various applications like cpupower to change stuff, tried monitoring the udev monitor and hunting for a udev rule that was maybe running some script to change those files every time a battery event was fired, etc. What resulted was 40+ browser tabs in my quest to find out what process was constantly updating the files. I am pretty new to Linux, but I would still like to have turbo boost working as intended. in your BIOS, it is either enabled or disabled. this isn't something you can control, and you can't tell it when/how to boost up. ![]() when one core is under 100 load, and others are at a low load (when a single-threaded application is running) the CPU will slow the other cores down to bring a single core up in clock speed. My main motive was to stop the governor from automatically getting switched to performance whenever I plugged in my charger, and also prevent intel turbo from being enabled. sudo touch /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpufreq/boost: touch: impossibile fare touch di '/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpufreq/boost': Permesso negato. Turbo boost isn't something that brings your CPUs base clock up. Some process was constantly writing to the cpu files in /sys at fixed intervals. boost state support: Supported: yes Active: yes. The problem I had was, I couldn't manually set the cpu governors for my cpus and the intel turbo boost. Is there a nice way to monitor and/or control Intel Turbo Boost technology on Nehalem processors from a Linux host Im looking to do this RHEL/CentOS 5.5 hosts running stock or Realtime MRG kernel. The governor 'ondemand' may decide which speed to use within this range. Click on the icon that Turbo Boost added to your Mac’s menu bar automatically. And now I'm in love with the community since I got the answer to a question I had without even having to make a post. Once you’ve installed Turbo Boost Switcher, launch the application. ![]() It has successfully dethroned EndeavourOS as my #1 distro of choice. I had already fallen in love with Garuda (i3) ever since I installed it a couple of weeks ago.
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