On Thu, 07 Jun 2018 23:35:17 +0200, Michael Jarosch wrote:
Am Donnerstag, den 07.06.2018, 19:36 +0200 schrieb Ralf
Mardorf:
You could use command line without a tool.
Set the governor to performance by running
echo performance | sudo tee /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/scaling_governor
[snip]
That's the old way you did it, but you can't do that with debian and
ubuntu, nowadays.
[snip]
As of what Ubuntu release it's not working anymore and what's the
cause that it doesn't work anymore?
IIRC it still works for 16.04 LTS...
[root@archlinux rocketmouse]# systemd-nspawn -qD /mnt/moonstudio lsb_release -a
LSB
Version: core-9.20160110ubuntu0.2-amd64:core-9.20160110ubuntu0.2-noarch:security-9.20160110ubuntu0.2-amd64:security-9.20160110ubuntu0.2-noarch
Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Description: Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTS
Release: 16.04
Codename: xenial
[root@archlinux rocketmouse]# systemd-nspawn -qD /mnt/moonstudio apt list -qq
linux-lowlatency
linux-lowlatency/xenial-updates,xenial-security,now 4.4.0.127.133 amd64 [installed]
...without doubts it works for my Arch Linux install, so I wonder about the cause for the
[root@archlinux rocketmouse]# lsb_release -a
LSB Version: 1.4
Distributor ID: Arch
Description: Arch Linux
Release: rolling
Codename: n/a
[root@archlinux rocketmouse]# pacman -Q
linux{,-rt{-securityink,-cornflower,,-pussytoes}}|cut -d\ -f2
4.17-1
4.16.12_rt5-1
4.16.8_rt3-1
4.16.7_rt1-1
4.14.34_rt27-1