[Q] GT-i9195 SET CPU your settings? - Galaxy S 4 Mini Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

Ok so I am experimenting with Set CPU app
Can you guys tell me what Profiles you run or prefer
Thanks

EwOkie said:
Ok so I am experimenting with Set CPU app
Can you guys tell me what Profiles you run or prefer
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't use SetCPU (way over complicated for no good reason) but Kernel Tweaker. With my experience on the F4k kernel:
JB - Interactive
KK - Smartass V2
IO Scheduler: normal phone use ROW. If you have some regular write operation, CFQ. I've tried SIO, ZEN and NOOP, overrated. While NOOP and ZEN feels really responsive (like mininium lag) but it unstable. As for SIO I don't see what people see in it. It not particularly faster, and nor battery friendly. At least that what I saw on my S3 with Pegasus governor. And I don't use benchmark, this is a pure observe from normal day-to-day use on open app, multi-tasking, browsing, etc. I've tried all mention governor for at least a week.
As for UV, I've done -1.5V (yes, not a typo) on my phone. Again, I don't bench or play games, just regular day-to-day email, browsing, photo, etc.

I'm on JB 4.2.2 Stock and using SmartAssV2 + ROW. Max freq. on 2.05Ghz. Working fine so far.

Check out this thread: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2686845 for undervolting results part (I'm guessing it's in your SET CPU too).

jorgeealdunate said:
I'm on JB 4.2.2 Stock and using SmartAssV2 + ROW. Max freq. on 2.05Ghz. Working fine so far.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
wich kernel do you have bro?

blake2893 said:
wich kernel do you have bro?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm using f4ction kernel 1.3.0 with 90hardlimit_2.05Ghz.zip flashed after the kernel with TWRP.
Also, i like CPU Control, which is very easy to use.

I don't need set cpu anymore. I turn on air plane mode at night so battery life can be longer.
And checked on cpu's cores, system automaticly control frequences.

Using SetCPU the Charging with USB takes ages
Do I need to set a profile as I have tried other apps to change stuff but this seems to be the only option for me with a modified Stock Rom
Have used these settings so far with no lags or issues .. can someone pease clarify if this is ok...
SET SCREEN OFF
CPU - 810 - 384 Gov: Interactive / Priority 100
SCREEN ON
CPU - 1566 -384 Gov : OnDemand / Deadline / Priority 52
BATTERY <45
CPU - 1026 - 394 Gov: OnDemand / CFQ / Priority 50
SLEEP 00:45 - 08.25
CPU - 584 - 384 Gov: Powersave / CFQ / Priority 49
What about Battery or CPU Temp?

EwOkie said:
Using SetCPU the Charging with USB takes ages
Do I need to set a profile as I have tried other apps to change stuff but this seems to be the only option for me with a modified Stock Rom
Have used these settings so far with no lags or issues .. can someone pease clarify if this is ok...
SET SCREEN OFF
CPU - 810 - 384 Gov: Interactive / Priority 100
SCREEN ON
CPU - 1566 -384 Gov : OnDemand / Deadline / Priority 52
BATTERY <45
CPU - 1026 - 394 Gov: OnDemand / CFQ / Priority 50
SLEEP 00:45 - 08.25
CPU - 584 - 384 Gov: Powersave / CFQ / Priority 49
What about Battery or CPU Temp?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Powersave governor is a governor that locks on the lowest possible speed provide by the kernel. No point on setting a speed range since it doesn't dynamically switch between them.
Well as I mention above, I don't recommend using schedule beside ROW or CFQ. If anyone still thinks SIO, NOOP, Deadline is significantly faster/better than CFQ this is a very interesting test: http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=linux_iosched_2012

Related

[Q] SETCPU GOvernOrs

okay i have a huge question about this... PLease Share YOUR Thoughts and experiences TOoOO!
we are using custom kernels right? but sometimes the developer/creator of the kernel doesnt mention on what recommended usage of the main profile and profile..
so i decided to put some description about this governs that i have gathered around in XDA FORUM so we can share our knowledge on this GOverns.
okay first.. i found this..
smartass governor - is based on the concept of the interactive governor.
I have always agreed that in theory the way interactive works - by taking over the idle loop - is very attractive. I have never managed to tweak it so it would behave decently in real life. Smartass is a complete rewrite of the code plus more. I think its a success. Performance is on par with the "old" minmax and I think smartass is a bit more responsive. Battery life is hard to quantify precisely but it does spend much more time at the lower frequencies.
Smartass will also cap the max frequency when sleeping to 352Mhz (or if your min frequency is higher than 352 - why?! - it will cap it to your min frequency). Lets take for example the 528/176 kernel, it will sleep at 352/176. No need for sleep profiles any more.
ondemand
Available in most kernels, and the default governor in most kernels. When the CPU load reaches a certain point (see "up threshold" in Advanced Settings), ondemand will rapidly scale the CPU up to meet demand, then gradually scale the CPU down when it isn't needed. - SetCPU website
conservative
Available in some kernels. It is similar to the ondemand governor, but will scale the CPU up more gradually to better fit demand. Conservative provides a less responsive experience than ondemand, but can save battery. - SetCPU website
performance
Available in most kernels. It will keep the CPU running at the "max" set value at all times. This is a bit more efficient than simply setting "max" and "min" to the same value and using ondemand because the system will not waste resources scanning for the CPU load. This governor is recommended for stable benchmarking. - SetCPU website
powersave
Available in some kernels. It will keep the CPU running at the "min" set value at all times. - SetCPU website
userspace
A method for controlling the CPU speed that isn't currently used by SetCPU. For best results, do not use the userspace governor. - SetCPU website
interactive
Advantages:
+ significantly more responsive to ramp cpu up when required (UI interaction)
+ more consistent ramping, existing governors do their cpu load sampling in a workqueue context, the 'interactive' governor does this in a timer context, which gives more consistent cpu load sampling.
+ higher priority for cpu frequency increase, rt_workqueue is used for scaling up, giving the remaining tasks the cpu performance benefit, unlike existing governors which schedule rampup work to occur after your performance starved tasks have completed.
SOURCES:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=969477
https://github.com/CyanogenMod/cm-kernel/commit/255f13bf41f368aa51638a854ed69cfc60f39120
Nice thread. I am new to this stuff (I learned just yesterday what governors are) and all this will be very usefull for people like me. Thanx.
In the SetCPU app, if you press About and then click the link you can get all this info there too
So Guys,
Im using Buzz 1.3.5 kernel at 1.2 Ghz (1.6 Ghz max), with ARHD rom.
What the best processor type to battery life \ performance ?
Any kind of values to screen of and temp > 50º or 40º ?
Thank you , lets share our configurations and post results !
so how do we get smartass? Im currently trying out interactive.
So guys, no one can put here some configurations?
Like, screen off values, > 50º temp, and others ?
Come on, share pls..

-THE ULTIMATE =BATTERY LIFE + GAMING PERFORMANCE=[setup/guide/UNDERVOLTING-explained]

Hello everyone i know there are few threads about battery/gaming so i tought to make a thread with a review about battery life + gaming performance and add guides along with it.
Ok 1st i'd like to say i've pretty much flashed every single rom ,kernel, battery saving apps, performance boost apps, mods etc that are currently avilable so trust me i know what i'm writing here.
THREAD NAVIGATION:
Post 1 contains: Undervolting guide & everything related to undervolting CPU & GPU, EMC Overclocking, Rom setup guide, kernel setup (gaming / battery ), kernel settings list of updates
Post 2 contains: Rom & kernel battery life reviews + benchamrks , Performance may cry setup added (battery life settings)
Post 3 contains: Additional info about kernels / governors and what they do , schedulers and what they do & additional scrips.
FAQ Link for rookies and EVERY other question / guide about your HTC One X - Thx to Geko95 = HERE
Wakelocks guide for those with bad battery life - Thx to Goku80 = HERE
=========================================================================
First of all i'd like to give credits and massive thank to these guys who made all this possible:
- Hamdir - for all his guides and contribution for One X , he is one of the main reasons why we have smooth gaming !
- Xmister - kernels ( xm106 )
- Maxwen - the battery saving governor - Smartmax Governor
- Mwilky and his team for Renovate rom
- Patrics83 and his team for RomCleaner tool
- RichmondUK and his venom team for ViperX Rom
- n3ocort3x Kernels
- TripNdroid Kernels
---Excuse me if i've forgot someone.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thread Updates:​
FInally cleaned the whole damn thread , still some left overs
PMC v8 interactive/battery setups added @ post 2. UPDATED 15.5.2013 ///bottom of the post 2
Added New SetCPU v2 profiles Read post 2 at the bottom UPDATED 15.5.2013 ///bottom of the post 2
Added AOSP/AOKP/CM SetCPU , profiles Read post 2 at the bottom UPDATED 2.4.2013 ///bottom of the post 2
Added NEW SetCPU , profiles Read post 2 for changelog ( everything fixed ) UPDATED 25.3.2013 ///bottom of the post 2
Added SetCPU GUIDE and my Save with SetCPU Profiles BALANCE Version this is only for those who have SMARTMAX & PMC GOVERNORS in their kernel UPDATED 25.3.2013 ///bottom of the post 2
Added EMC OC Guide, this is only for those who use XM kernel 235# and above UPDATED 12.3.2013 /// post 1
Added PMC v5 this is only for those who use XM kernel 226# and above (PMC is now the new governor at XM kernel read post 2 for more info ) UPDATED 10.3.2013 /// post 2
Added *Performance may cry setup v2* (battery life setup)- UPDATED 3.3.2013 /// post 2
Added info about schedulers and what they do - UPDATED 22.2.2013 /// post 3
Added info about governors and what they do - UPDATED 26.2.2013 /// post 3
Kernel updates:
XM kernel beta version(s) :
#304
Disable JRCU, according to maxwen it caused lockups.
#303 cpu clock changes reverted.
Switching governors will no longer update calibration control.
Touch-screen updates(S2W,DT2W) from maxwen.
Variant info added back.
#303
Included maxwen's double-tap to wake (needs sysfs enable), and inner CPU clock changes.
#302
Included maxwen's fixes for freq. locks and LP mode switch with OC.
#301
Default UV removed.
​Xm-Kernel STABLE version(s) :
#106
#106v2
#106v3
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------​
Kernel reviews @ Post 2​
========================================================================================[/CENTER]
- If you'd like to donate to any of these ppl please do so because they're the ones who made this possible, i'm just making it simple and hopefully preventing questions from everywhere about battery/kernels/roms , which is the best etc etc. And remember the kernel is most responsable for your battery life. So the point is you can use any rom of your choice with this kernel as long as you do things right. And follow what i wrote down there.
As for me i'd be happy just with simple *thanks* button if this was helpful to you in any way.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ROM, Kernel, Undervolting, underclocking, overclocking settings:
ROM Settings:​
Roms should be cleaned with RomCleaner tool just i used my own scrip since i wanted to keep some apps and widget, after cleaning i had 114 system apps on my hox , Renovate rom comes with around 200 or so + the apps you'll install. (rom cleaner also improves the battery and rom speed a little) Other then that nothing else changed except i added tons of mods but thats up to you what you'll add. And the only setting you'll need to enable in Renovate rom is 2d rendering This improves alot scrolling times in apps especially the ones like *Advanced system care and Rom Toolbox lite*​
Kernel settings: ​
Battery settings​
the only thing you'll have to do manualy is switch the governor after flashing Xm kernel onto Smartmax And thats all you have to do to have great battery life, in my case i underclocked my CPU to 1200mhz with smartmax governor + RoW scheduler , if you want to keep it faster (but you don't really need any more speed with this governor) leave it as it is, or to make it even faster use Smartmax + deadline + sampling rate 30000 + touch poke freq 1500000 ] , you can make it even faster but trust me no need for that. Use this governor and it's settings as daily settings for light tasks and light usage of your phone.
Gaming settings:​​​
For this you should be using interactive / gaming governor + deadline scheduler and that's all you need to do of course if you do underclock your CPU make sure you reset it back to 1500 after you change the governor , no need for apps that boost your phone, if you wanna make things even faster and governor more aggressive change this value in governor settings : go max speed load 45 this will increase speed ( remember this will make battery drain even faster ) , and if you wanna push max performance that your hox can deliver at current time change min frequency 1500 as well remeber THIS will make your hox battery drain fast as hell ! And sd card read ahead speed should be 4096 if is not set like this by default you can use system tuner and change it. For tuning governors and freqs you could use SetCPU easier and faster to do so.
Games that i used for testing are: NFSMW, MC4 , Shadown gun deadzone, Wildblood.
Each of this games were incredibly smooth and playable like never before.
Undervolting​
Ok so as many of you heard undervolting should improve your battery life and it does by maybe 5% tops 10% if you're lucky.
But the main reason why i undervolt is so i keep my phone cooler when gaming you wont notice big difference in avarage daily use without gaming but with gaming you should notice the difference but again this mainly depends on your CPU variant, in my case i have variant 3 which means i can undervolt more then variant 2-1-0 , thats the only good thing about undervolting , of course i could overclock more then other variants but we don't need overclocking with this kernel and rom.
The difference and battery improvement you'll be able to see only this way really and none other this is how : without undervolting and lets say playing NFSMW my phone ON charger reaches around 55c TOPS ( which is overheating and you lose more battery then what your charger can recharge for you ) but with undervolting my phone is reaching TOPS 45C and avarage 40C ( this also depends on the room temperature and your hands body temperature ) The reason why i did tests on charger is because thats the fastest way to test overheating and undervolting and NO do NOT play heavy games while charging this is KILLING your battery and lowering it's life cycle ! it's like eating while sh1tting !!!
Now i can't tell you which values to use since like i said above none chip is the SAME nor the variant so you'll have to figure out this on your own but i can give you the ROUGH idea how-to.
Update - rough idea how to undervolt​ CPU​ properly:​
ok i'll mark frequencies with colors:​
Before we start remember this: Undervolting depends mostly on your ROM , Kernel , USAGE !​
RED = Don't undervolt too much
BLUE = Undervolt normally as you do
BLACK =Don't undervolt or undervolt just a little this will depend on your variant and rom mostly
1500+ , 1400,1300,1200,1100,1000 e.g 1500mhz freq. has 1237mV by default if you're a gamer you can undervolt this one to lets say -50-100 (up to the variant) if you're not a gamer you can go even up to -125/150 , now this can depend also on which freq do you use the most in gaming lets say , if you're using quad lock e.g 1500 , -75 should be enough, === freqs under 1500 can be undervolted more since they wont be used, but if you don't use quad locking then you need to balance the undervolting between -50-100 (this depends on the game and which freq it uses the most)
860 , 760, 640 are the freqs in the *middle* those can be undervolted even more , up to -150 (default UV should be around -100 here) since they are barly used but you can use cpySpy to check which freqs your device uses the most and then use that info to balance your undervolting and find right freqs.
475,340,204,102,51 are the freqs more like *screen on standby freqs, mostly 340/51* or the LP core freqs, these should be undervolted MAX -50/75or not at all these freqs are used also for e.g. listening to music while screen off , if you undervolt too much you can experience laggs etc.
Important: Variant 3 can undervolt more then this but it *shouldn't* really up to you to decide​
IMPORTANT: Those who use XM kernel USE TRICKSTER MOD APP ONLY !
First of all you can use guide what i made above for undervolting but since we have accurate undervolting now you SHOULD undervolt THIS way and this way only:
Variant 0 = you can use undervolting max up to -50 MAX ! or if you're doing step by step undervolting you might push some freqs -75
Variant 1/2: You can undervolt MAX up to -75 or at some steps -100 tops.
Variant 3: you can undervolt MAX -100/125 and on some freqs MAYBE -150 , but of course you need to do step by step.
Remember: this are the SAFE undervolting values for all 4 variants You can try undervolting more if you like but i wouldn't recommend it since i'm sure it will most likely cause issues for you.
Remember: The UV values i've used above are supposed to be *DEFAULT* uv you should use , but users with variant 0 MIGHT suffer and have to use lower values
Note: I guess 90% of ppl are lazy to mess with per freq undervolting and finding what works for them and what not since consumes alot of time, anyway you guys should be good with -50-75 variants 0, 1 ,2 , as for variant 3 you should be able to go up to -100-125 on all freqs.[/SIZE]
GPU - Undervolting - Safe values​
[*]Ok so for GPU undervolting you need to be on XM #153 kernel and above and follow this steps:
Use some root explorer to enable GPU undervolting and navigate here:
sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/gpu_voltage
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
, open it , the default value is
0 to enable GPU undervolting type 1
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
and SAVE make sure to enable *system as writable*
After you do that you need to download this app from playstore *Trickster MOD* This is the ONLY app whit which GPU undervolting works for now. After that install app and you'll see GPU freqs like this: For e.g. *520000, 484000* etc those are the GPU freqs and their voltage.
The safe values:
Variant 0 = -25MV on all freqs.
Variant 1/2 = -25/50 on all freqs.
Variant 3 = -50-100 on all freqs.
The 1st freq i wrote is 100% safe, the second is ASSUMED to be safe as well, but you wont know unless you try it :cyclops:​
How to test are these values safe and wont freeze/reboot your phone.​
Probably many of you know when you undervolt too much your phone eventually feezes and reboots this happens because phone can't give enough of voltage to the certain frequency that is in that time used mostly so it has no other way out but to freeze and reboot. and the way to test this is it *safe* is either to use *antutu bechmark app* , *epic citadel* or *stability test* Those 3 tend to push max performance very fast and easy out of your phone so if any app gonna show you is it safe it's these , tho sometimes but rarely your phone will run them both without reboots so i suggest you do each of them 2x just to be sure, and even if then sometimes very very rarely if your phone doesn't reboot the last way you could've find out is it gonna reboot is by playing NFSMW for 10mins.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------​
GPU Overclocking & underclocking - Safe freqs​
For this to work use some root explorer and navigate here: sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/gpu_oc , open it there you'll see default GPU freqs like this: 520 520 520 520 484 400 304 267 247 those are the DEFAULT freqs on XM kernel and make sure to enable *system as writable* before you start doing anything. Those freqs are great balance for GAMING and BATTERY but if you're an ADVANCED USER you might wanna make those freqs EVEN HIGHER for better performance (not needed imo ) or LOWER for better battery life
- Maximum performance freqs that works for everyone: 560 560 560 560 560 484 400 304 247
- Freqs for battery life while keeping some poor performance (gaming speaking): 304 304 304 304 304 304 304 304 247
- Default freqs ( battery & gaming ): 520 520 520 520 484 400 304 267 247
Thx to Neo for this freqs. ​
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------​
All kernel settings: S2W Configs: , DoubleTap2Wake Configs: , Activate fast charge: , Enable smartdimmer: , To get your variant: , 3D Tuning: , 2D Tuning: , EMC Tuning ( ram ): , Auto-BLN Control: , Backlight button brightness: , GPU Voltage control: , LP OC: , Audio Min. Freq.:​
Thx to Xmister for this.
S2W Configs:​
Turn off:
Code:
echo "0" > /sys/android_touch/sweep2wake
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Or you can download "Sweep2Wake-Widget" from Google Play.
Button panel locks to s2w after this distance:
Code:
/sys/android_touch/s2w_register_threshold
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Screen turns on/off after this distance:
Code:
/sys/android_touch/s2w_min_distance
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Direction independent(1 - Yes, 0 - No):
Code:
/sys/android_touch/s2w_allow_stroke
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
DoubleTap2Wake Configs:​
Turn on:
Code:
echo "1" > /sys/android_touch/s2w_allow_double_tap
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Activate fast charge:​Code:
echo '1' > /sys/devices/platform/htc_battery/fast_charge
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Enable smartdimmer:​Code:
echo "1" > /sys/devices/tegradc.0/smartdimmer/enable
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
To get your variant:​Code:
cat /sys/kernel/debug/t3_variant
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
(Or see it in a root explorer)
cpu_process_id is your variant.
3D Tuning:​If you want to change clocks, you have to write the whole clock table again, from up to down. In case you want to reset to default, this is it:
Code:
echo '520 520 520 520 492 484 380 247' > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/gpu_oc
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you want to set them at boot, use an init script. Here is one. Just copy to /system/etc/init.d and set the permissions to executable by everyone with a root explorer. (Thx to Byrana)
Here is a flashable script that will work on newer kernels too for everyone. It also enables fast_charge. (Thx again Byrana)
2D Tuning:​If you want to change clocks, you have to write the whole clock table again, from up to down. In case you want to reset to default, this is it:
Code:
echo '520 520 520 520 492 484 380 247' > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/two_d_oc
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You should NOT OC this higher than 3D.
EMC Tuning:​If you want to change clocks, you have to write the whole clock table again, from up to down. In case you want to reset to default, this is it:
Code:
echo '667 667 667 667 408 408 408 408' > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/emc_oc
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you want to OC let's say to 800MHz:
Code:
echo '800 800 800 800 667 667 408 408' > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/emc_oc
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Auto-BLN Control:​​Interface:
/sys/class/leds/button-backlight/auto_bln
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Values:
0: BLN OFF/Green led ON
1: BLN ON/Green led ON
2: BLN ON/Green led OFF
Example:
Turn off Auto-BLN:
Code:
echo '0' > /sys/class/leds/button-backlight/auto_bln
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The changes will apply from the next notification.
Backlight button brightness:​Interface:
/sys/class/leds/button-backlight/button_brightness
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Values:
0-255: 0 is off, 255 is the maximum possible.
Example:
Code:
echo '50' > /sys/class/leds/button-backlight/button_brightness
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The changes will apply from the next backlight turn on.
GPU Voltage control:​If you want to enable this you should write '1' to /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/gpu_voltage.
In command line that is:
Code:
echo '1' > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/gpu_voltage
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
After that you need to restart your voltage control app (Trickster Mod).
Now you will see the GPU frequencies multipled by 1000 to separate them from the CPU frequencies. So you will see 520000MHz, etc.
Be advised that there are a really few HOX's that can handle more UV on Core, than the preset 50.
Also incrasing your Core voltage over 1300mV is NOT ADVISED AT ALL. Almost everything uses this voltage on your motherboard.
If you want to enable the values at boot, you need an init script that enables it, so later Trickster mod or anything can set them.
LP OC:​Interface:
/sys/module/cpu_tegra/parameters/enable_lp_oc
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Values:
0: LP OC OFF
1: LP OC to 620MHz
Example:
Turn on LP OC:
Code:
echo '1' > /sys/module/cpu_tegra/parameters/enable_lp_oc
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Audio Min. Freq.:​Interface:
/sys/module/snd_soc_tlv320aic3008/parameters/audio_min_freq
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Example:
Change audio min. freq. to 204MHz:
Code:
echo 204000 > /sys/module/snd_soc_tlv320aic3008/parameters/audio_min_freq
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Save settings:
If you want any of the above settings saved, you can use Ibas21 recovery package
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
=======================================================================​
Remember you wont probably get same screen on time as i did , you could get even more then i did or less, it ALL DEPENDS on your USAGE/Screen brightness!
That should be all enjoy.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------​The screenshots and my usage are in post 2, hope this helps , if not sorry for wasting your time if you read this , cheers and good luck to everyone
If you have any question please feel free to post them and i'll give my best to answer them.
Also as the kernel updates and rom updates go i'll try to update in here as well.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------​
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------​
And lastly i will not be held responsible for anything that may or may not happen to your device ! All you do you do at your own risk.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------​
And of course please hit *thanks* button if this was helpful​ :highfive::good:
==================================================================================​
Bechmarks - updated.
------------
------------
Viper X Rom 3.3.7 XM Kernel 139#[Beta]
Usage:
Somewhere between normal and heavy , battery life was great, not so much on the wifi this time, and all in all great kernel with one tiny bug, if you use autobrightness you'll see flickering , tho this got fixed in 147#. And i plugged the phone right before screen shots for maybe a minut to put pics on the pc and in the meantime i made those screenshots, you can see that in the usage. Brightness varied between low (15%) and maximum. The most used brightness used was 35%.
-----------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------
Black Pearl unofficial beta Rom 4.0.4 - XM Kernel 188#[Beta]
Usage:
- 1st of all , extreme undervolting and underclocking was done for this test.
- The rom and kernel were also flashed for the very 1st time.
--------
--------
================================================================================================
1st how PMC works:​
Well simply i made it use as *ideal_freq* 340mhz , minimum freq is 51mhz , the freq you'll be using alot would be 340/475 , that is your main freq on PMC for boost to avoid huge laggs, another thing is it will try and use most of the time only 1 core unless that core is at 90% cpu load , and min cpu load is 50 to make sure you don't get frequent wakes of 2nd/3/4th cores.​
Interactive PMC Version:
This version is 90% similar to PMC Battery setup except this version is much faster since it acts like INTERACTIVE Governor.
@ Those who don't have PMC Governor in their kernel until / if their kernel dev includes it use *Smartmax governor* for tunning and using my setup
Important ! : While setting your CPU/GPU values don't enable *Set on boot* unless the values are 100% safe for you and by ALL MEANS DO NOT USE MY CPU/GPU VALUES even if you're VARIANT 3 i wouldn't advise it , if you DO USE my values you will 99.9% end up in freeze or reboot !
GPU UV For max battery
2d GPU Underclocking: 304 304 304 304 267 267 267 200
3d GPU Underclocking: 247 247 247 247 247 200 200 200
As for GPU uV i'd suggest -50mv if you're not variant 3. Try first -25 then -50.
NOTE:
Don't even think about gaming with this setup , you'll notice laggs mainly at loading apps and speed of loading apps and mainly speed reduction overall in system , but not so much , the main slowdown is with loading apps and when multitasking you'll see some laggs as well, or for e.g. when playing music and then using volume up/down , that will lagg as well, if you wanna keep it *smoother* you can set *Ideal freq to 475000*
Performance may cry - setup v8a( XM Kernel 302# + ONLY or Kernels with latest Maxwens updates)​
A This settings of PMC Governor should / will deliver you the performance 90% identical to Interactive governor with much much less battery drain ! , this settings can be / should be used for those who MULTITASK alot , this settings/governor should give you 95% lag free experience whatever you do except gaming ! [/I][/B]
PMC v8 INTERACTIVE SETUP for EVERYONE ( Xm kernel users don't need this since PMC governor is in the kernel by default with these values ):​
awake_ideal_freq 475
boost_duration 0
boost_freq 760000
debug_mask 0
down_rate 60000
ignore_nice 1
input_boost_duration 90000
io_is_busy 1
max_cpu_load 75
min_cpu_load 40
ramp_down_step 200000
ramp_up_during_boost 1
ramp_up_step 300000
sampling_rate 20000
suspend_ideal_freq 340
Touch_poke_freq 620000 ( 640 if your kernel kept the old freq table )
up_rate 20000
Cpu freqs:
Min CPu freq : 51
[*]Max Cpu freq: 1100
[*]Scheduler: RoW
Multicore power saving : 2
GPU max frequency : 416
Undervolting: At your choice and how much your variant can support:
Suggested SAFE values for all 3 variants NO GAMING for gaming use +25 more then my values under, example : if variant 1 is -100 NON GAMING , for gaming use -75.
This goes for both INTERACTIVE and BATTERY PMC setups.​
variant 0 : -75
[*]variant 1/2: - 100 ( use -75 if you experience reboot )
[*]variant 3: - 150 / -175 in my case.
PMC BATTERY SETUP v8 For everyone with TUNNABLE Smartmax/PMC governors:​
awake_ideal_freq 204000
boost_duration 0
boost_freq 760000
debug_mask 0
down_rate 60000
ignore_nice 1
input_boost_duration 90000
io_is_busy 1
max_cpu_load 90
min_cpu_load 50
ramp_down_step 200000
ramp_up_during_boost 1
ramp_up_step 300000
sampling_rate 40000
suspend_ideal_freq 204000
Touch_poke_freq 620000 ( 640 if your kernel kept the old freq table )
up_rate 20000
Cpu freqs:
Min CPu freq : 51
[*]Max Cpu freq: 1000
[*]Scheduler: SiO
Multicore power saving : 2
GPU max frequency : 416
Undervolting SAME AS on interactive ( look above )
And heres what users reported with PMC V7 performance setup =)
fade2blak said:
XM 188v2 with your PMC v7 performance version gave me the best results ever. period. thank you :highfive:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Insecret said:
now v241 on Viper 3.4.0 with row and pmc gov, UC at 1200 and the rest like Shan89 sayed in previus page ... Unthinkable how much improves in performance and batt life <3 Xmister and Shan89
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
bienjie said:
U r superb dude! U are gifted! Damn u r sooo good in this....(^~^)/
Sent from my HTC One X using Tapatalk 2
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
kkarnaout said:
im using the the new kernel with viperx 3.4.0 and all pmc settings, phone is amazing FB app is working i didnt see any problem till now this is the best kernel i tried till now from all the passed weak!
All thanks go to Xmister and Shan89
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
-------------------------
---------------------------
===============================================================================================
How to use FULL PMC setup.
Simple:
1st: thing to do enable 2d GPU rendering in developers options.
2nd: lower your CPU max freq to 1000mhz ! Yes 1000 mhz ( you wont feel much of a difference in terms of fluidity except when loading apps )
3rd: Use RoW or Sio scheduler ( for more info about these schedulers look at my signature guide theres explanation of every scheduler we use )
4th: Undervolt your CPU - here are the SAFE FREQS for these variants v0 - 50 , v1/2 , -75 , v3 - 100/125 (this are safe you could do more on some freqs)
5th: This is for those who don't play GAMES Underclock the GPU freqs here are the freqs you should use:
2d UC = 304 304 304 304 267 267 200 200
3d UC = 267 267 267 267 200 200 200 200
6th: Those who game you SHOULDN"T play with GPU UC only CPU UC.
Important: Make sure you use Trickster MoD app from playstore when using XM kernel for tuning and another vital thing to do is set in trickster app Multicore Power saving to 2 This will try to use as long as it can 1/2 cores unless desperate need for 4 cores.
A tip how to speed up loading times of the apps:
Since we have boost at 500 mhz if you open some app , lets say for example *Trickster MoD* after clicking on it you can hold your finger on the screen and move it in any direction , that way your CPU wont be locked onto 51 MHZ freq it will be on either 620 / 640 mhz ( boost freq ) or at MAX freq you set for CPU ( 700 if you use full PMC setup )
Final words:
PMC will try to force your phone spend 90% of the time in LP (low power) cores which barely use any power , if you do use PMC full setup the only real battery drain you'll have is your SCREEN and when in desperate need for some boost it will use your highest CPU freq you set.
Note:
Don't complain about bad speed etc etc etc , this governor is made only and only for BATTERY LIFE with basic usage.
And of course if this governor is *too laggy/slow* you can always use original *Smartmax governor*
NEW - SetCPU profiles setup balance v2 = SENSE =:​
SENSE SetCPU profiles v2
This profiles fixed every little issue that exited in 1st release , just make sure to re-read the guide , some things has changed.
Anyway to make some kind of *changelog* if i can even call it like that this is what has got fixed / added:
Gaming works perfect now
Added profile for 2d games
Added profile for safety ( over heating to prevent it 2 steps )
Added more apps into profiles
Changed freqs on some things for better performance/battery life
Some other stuff i can't remember right now lol
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Q) What does this do ?
A) Makes your phone smarter , boosts it when needed and downscales CPU freqs when not needed , It changes Governor / scheduler / CPU Freqs / .
Improves Loading times alot vs old PMC setups. The default loading times speed varies between 1100 mhz and 1300 mhz now.
Example:
Sense launcher: is set to use 640 MAX Cpu freq with smartmax governor + SiO scheduler.
Messaging: email / sms / gmail / etc = It will switch governor to PMC v7 ( Interactive version ) Boost max CPU freq to 840 and use Deadline scheduler so it makes sure it's liquid smooth and rotation works perfect.
Gaming: When you hit some , in my case NFSMW , MC4 , RR3 it will change to interactive governor + Row Scheduler and use MAX Cpu FREQ 1300mhz.
HOW TO SETUP ( Important ! )​
1st: download SetCPU ( google it if you can't buy it you should be able to find it for free)
2nd Set max CPU Freq to 1300 and min freq to 51
3rd: Go to trickster and do the following:
Trickster settings:
PMC Governor = Leave as it IS
Scheduler = SiO
Multicore power saving = 0
Gpu Max freq = 520
Smartmax Governor settings = Change the settings to PMC V7 BATTERY Settings ( This is important thing to do if you want the profiles to work )
Undervolting - UPDATED:
Variant 1/2 = freqs 51/1250 undervolt - 100 ( if is unstable for you use -75 ) Freqs 1300-1500 Undervolt - 50 ( if is unstable use -25 )
Variant 0 should use 25mv more compared to v1/2 and variant 3 can do additional -50 on freqs 51/1250 and 1300/1500 freqs -25 compared to variants 1/2.
And last thing to do is *Set on boot / enable* - Do this only if UNDERVOLTING doesn't cause any reboots for you , it shouldn't anyway.
4th: copy my SetCPU Profiles to your SDcard and open SetCPU App , load the profiles and Apply them , make sure to tick * Enable Profiles * Also on the *MAIN* settings for CPU / Governor / Scheduler tick *Set on boot* and finally @ *Governor* also tick *Set on boot & Set With profiles*
5th: Download greenify app from playstore:
Set greenify app at your likings but make sure you don't put Trickster and SetCPU Apps in there.
6th: Downlaod LagFix (Fxstreem) App from playstore as well. Use this app once a day or whenever you like it.
Note: This will work ONLY With XM kernel unless another kernel dev includes PMC Governor in their kernel.
Tips:
[*]New - for MAX Speed when not using apps listed in profiles set in trickster & SetCPU Max Freq 1300 ( For absolute max performance 1500 ) min 51 INTERACTIVE governor and DEADLINE Scheduler. What will this do: Well simply it'll use max freq 1300 / 1500 depends on your choice whenever you're using something that is not listed in the profiles E.G. when you hit *Settings* it'll use interactive + deadline , same goes for other things that are not listed in the profiles.
[*]If you do full reboot make sure to open SetCPU app so profiles start working after the reboot.
[*]For 2d games *temple run* Etc just add them into *2d gaming profile*
[*]Tip for heavy 3d games sucha are Mc4 NFSMW , RR3 etc etc , i've set on 1300 max CPU freq so we avoid heat etc , note that those games are on MAX DETAILS for me and i don't have laggs so you guys who use those games without those details you should be fine in fact you can change max freq from the profile onto 1200 if you like. If you play some other 3d heavy games just add them in *Gaming* profile.
[*]A Tip for gaming with low details: Change the max freq from my profiles to 1100/1000 , i played NFSMW on max details with some FPS Drops on 1000mhz freq.
[*]@Those who use more social apps then facebook , simply add those apps in my profile where is facebook. If you use another messaging apps simply add them to my messages profile. Do the same to the other apps that you use which are similar to the apps in my profiles.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@Those who don't game at all and want maximum battery life they can get , also this would be useful for those who game as well , just apply those 2 things after you done with gaming:​
Go to trickster app and do the following:
Max Gpu speed = 416
Multicore power saving = 2
If you want even more battery life visit my signature theres everything else you need to know on the post 2.
IMPORTANT: I've set on every profile *Notification* just so you guys can see it does it work , for those who want to remove it simply do this:
SetCpu > Profiles > click on the profile > Next > Untick *Show a notification* and that's it , do the same for other profiles.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If by any chance you don't see notifications after first time applying my profiles make sure you enable *Set on boot * where ever i wrote above and reboot your phone. That should fix it.
If anyone experience any issues ETC please lemme know.
AOSP/AOKP/CM SetCPU profiles + PMC v7 Setup - NEEDS UPDATE DON"T USE THEM - Will add them in few days when i switch to AOSP.:​
DOWNLOAD THE AOSP PROFILES HERE​
Download these tools 1st:
SetCPU app
Trickster app
Greenify app
Trickster settings:
Choose smartmax governor and apply these values in governor control:
Boost_freq: 620
Ideal_freq: 340
max_cpu_load: 90
min_cpu_load: 50
touch_poke_freq 620
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Apply the values
Scheduler:
Deadline
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Cpu settings:
Max freq 1000
Min freq 51
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
After that change to PMC Governor and apply.
Next thing to do swipe to specific settings
Smartdimmer: ON
Multicore power saving 2
GPU Max freq: 416
Undervolt how much you can.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
APPLY all these and SET ON BOOT
Next thing to do open SET-CPU app make sure it's showing same CPU freqs as on trickster and same governor and scheduler.
Set on boot
Go to PROFILES and load my AOSP profiles after that tick Enable profiles
Important:
This profiles will work ONLY on AOSP rom and ONLY on XMkernel since other kernels don't have PMC interactive governor.
After applying the proffiles go to LAUNCHER and if you don't USE NOVA remove NOVA from that profile and ADD your launcher that you use.
TIPS / IMPORTANT:
[*]After you apply the PROFILES and you don't use INVERTED BLACK FACEBOOK APP delete that from profile and add the facebook app you use.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As for your own apps just go to profiles and add those apps into profile you like.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lastly Thx to Xmister for the great kernel and his devhost link for uploading the profiles.
Heres the screenshoots from ICJ 2.8.1 with PMC v7 battery/interactive SetCPU Profiles:
----------
--------
-------
==================================================================================================
Note:
You shouldn't really relay and trust benchmarks at least not in antutu and quadrant , the most reliable and most accurate benchmark we have is Epic citadel , almost every single time same results. and 52.6 is quiet high result for sense rom. Btw for those who care s3 scores average 44-45fps on epic and note 2 scores average 46-47fprs.
]]=====>>> Wakelocks guide thx to Goku80 <=====[[
This is for those who have bad battery life !
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=38629490#post38629490
Guys who follow this guide and use it , Please leave us the feedback about your battery life and rom you used. It's gonna be easier for us to locate the best battery life RoM, Thx in advance ! Also rating the thread would be nice
And those who USE this guide but apparently *doesn't help them* please post a replay with what you did and what happened, your battery/undervolting , whatever that came out from this guide, theres a chance you didn't do something RIGHT so we can try and help out. THX !
ADDITIONAL INFO - UPDATE:
I tought it would be nice to add some info about schedulers , and governors so ppl better understand what they are and what they do
Update: added governor info.
Update: added info about MpDecision and Cpu Quiet per request..
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Governors:
- OnDemand Governor:
This governor has a hair trigger for boosting clockspeed to the maximum speed set by the user. If the CPU load placed by the user abates, the OnDemand governor will slowly step back down through the kernel's frequency steppings until it settles at the lowest possible frequency, or the user executes another task to demand a ramp.
OnDemand has excellent interface fluidity because of its high-frequency bias, but it can also have a relatively negative effect on battery life versus other governors. OnDemand is commonly chosen by smartphone manufacturers because it is well-tested, reliable, and virtually guarantees the smoothest possible performance for the phone. This is so because users are vastly more likely to ***** about performance than they are the few hours of extra battery life another governor could have granted them.
This final fact is important to know before you read about the Interactive governor: OnDemand scales its clockspeed in a work queue context. In other words, once the task that triggered the clockspeed ramp is finished, OnDemand will attempt to move the clockspeed back to minimum. If the user executes another task that triggers OnDemand's ramp, the clockspeed will bounce from minimum to maximum. This can happen especially frequently if the user is multi-tasking. This, too, has negative implications for battery life.
- Performance Governor:
This locks the phone's CPU at maximum frequency. While this may sound like an ugly idea, there is growing evidence to suggest that running a phone at its maximum frequency at all times will allow a faster race-to-idle. Race-to-idle is the process by which a phone completes a given task, such as syncing email, and returns the CPU to the extremely efficient low-power state. This still requires extensive testing, and a kernel that properly implements a given CPU's C-states (low power states).
- Interactive Governor:
Much like the OnDemand governor, the Interactive governor dynamically scales CPU clockspeed in response to the workload placed on the CPU by the user. This is where the similarities end. Interactive is significantly more responsive than OnDemand, because it's faster at scaling to maximum frequency.
Unlike OnDemand, which you'll recall scales clockspeed in the context of a work queue, Interactive scales the clockspeed over the course of a timer set arbitrarily by the kernel developer. In other words, if an application demands a ramp to maximum clockspeed (by placing 100% load on the CPU), a user can execute another task before the governor starts reducing CPU frequency. This can eliminate the frequency bouncing discussed in the OnDemand section. Because of this timer, Interactive is also better prepared to utilize intermediate clockspeeds that fall between the minimum and maximum CPU frequencies. This is another pro-battery life benefit of Interactive.
However, because Interactive is permitted to spend more time at maximum frequency than OnDemand (for device performance reasons), the battery-saving benefits discussed above are effectively negated. Long story short, Interactive offers better performance than OnDemand (some say the best performance of any governor) and negligibly different battery life.
Interactive also makes the assumption that a user turning the screen on will shortly be followed by the user interacting with some application on their device. Because of this, screen on triggers a ramp to maximum clockspeed, followed by the timer behavior described above.
- Suggestion : Use this governor (Interactive) for GAMING , it's the best when using Xm kernel for this purposes +deadline or Row scheduler.
- Smartmax
Long story short if you want crazy battery life USE this governor with either noop/sio/row governor, depending on what you want , read about schedulers under and chose what fits your needs.
- PMC ( Performance may cry )
ok so i made this governor based on Smartmax except it's heavily tweeked for better and maximum battery life you can get out of HOX.
- TouchDemand:
This governor pretty much do what the name says, boosts cpu freqs by touches, this one actually can be pretty great for battery life if you underclock the CPU imho and use max 2 cores, you can do that by doing this: edit touch_min_cores under governor tuneables and set 2
Anyway i still prefer *SmartMax* for battery life. But up to you to test and find out.
As for other governors like : Conservative and powersave , i wont be adding info about them since i doubt anyone ever uses them , all they do is take more space in the list
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Schedulers:
- Noop:
This scheduler assumes I/O performance optimization will be handled at some other layer of the I/O hierarchy , on the more simple way this scheduler is MOSTLY used for battery life since it's slow - it raises freqs slower then other schedulers.
- Deadline::
This scheduler attempt to guarantee a start service time for a request It does that by imposing a deadline on all I/O operations to prevent starvation of requests. It also maintains two deadline queues, in addition to the sorted queues (both read and write). Deadline queues are basically sorted by their deadline (the expiration time), while the sorted queues are sorted by the sector number. To make it more simple this scheduler raises freqs much faster then noop and keeps them longer active then noop which means more battery drain ( not by much anyway ) and faster I/O as well the gaming should be the best with this scheduler.
- SIO:: - ( my favorite )
This scheduler in simple words is basically this : It's a mix of noop and deadline schedulers , noop is more for battery while deadline is more for performance , and sio is perfect balance between them ^.^ to be more specific it's more like almost having noop+deadline activated at the same time.
- ROW::
ROW: stands for "READ Over WRITE* The ROW scheduler is in favor for user experience upon everything else (means it should make things stupidly smooth ),so that why ROW scheduler gives READ IO requests as much priority as possible. Usually it¡¯s a single thread or at most 2 simultaneous working threads for read & write. Favoring READ requests over WRITEs decreases the READ latency greatly. == Even more speed.
The main idea of the ROW scheduler is // == If there are READ requests in pipe - it WILL dispatch them but don't starve the WRITE requests too much.
Also this scheduler is much better optimised for our phones since in the smart phones we use flash memory and not hard drives.
Finally : Think of this scheduler as a mix OF deadline+ Performance governor put in scheduler while you can use another governor e.g. Smartmax. It's quiet fast scheduler and even good for daily usage without much of impact on the battery life.
Hope this prevents the question about schedulers / governors and which one to use
And a tip: Sio scheduler should be PERFECT with smartmax governor for battery life + speed , in fact it's the best scheduler if you guys want speedy performance while saving the battery life.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MPdecision:
MORE INFO >
For us mpdecision is a cpu hotplug system, which replaced the default nvidia hotplug system. It was written by showp1984(Dennis Rassmann).
It's more configurable, better for battery life, and much much better for gaming.
Cpu quiet:
- Cpu quiet driver regulates the cores by them acting more syncronized. they scale up n down in a more uniform fashion. therefore it gets better battery life without losing performance. You can't manage each core like with morrifics. so the cpu quiet driver is doing all the regulating. So the cpu quiet driver basically replaced hotplugging as far as cpu core management goes.
- In simple words it should give better battery life.
Good thread mate!
I know people have been looking for a guide for ages.
Goku was gonna do one in fact, guess you beat him and me to it.
geko95gek said:
Good thread mate!
I know people have been looking for a guide for ages.
Goku was gonna do one in fact, guess you beat him and me to it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lol thx, i was actually waiting for you or him to make one, i guess i got tired of waiting and besides that i saw tons of questions in past few days about *which kernel , rom* are the best so i guess they have their answer now.
Oh and if you have anything to add that i might forgot or anyone else please feel free to do so.
Edit - I'll probably add new screenshots when i manage to waste this 9% i got left, this battery refuses to die, i feel like i have note in my hands lol.
Shan89 said:
Lol thx, i was actually waiting for you or him to make one, i guess i got tired of waiting and besides that i saw tons of questions in past few days about *which kernel , rom* are the best so i guess they have their answer now.
Oh and if you have anything to add that i might forgot or anyone else please feel free to do so.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'll have a think, I've got a little battery guide of my own that I wanted to write.
I'll have to see if wilky will want to put it in the OP, if not then you can use it in this thread.
Also I'll talk to wilky and see if he wants to add a link to your thread when we next edit the OP.
geko95gek said:
I'll have a think, I've got a little battery guide of my own that I wanted to write.
I'll have to see if wilky will want to put it in the OP, if not then you can use it in this thread.
Also I'll talk to wilky and see if he wants to add a link to your thread when we next edit the OP.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sure , i'd be honored :good:
Re: The ULTIMATE BATTERY LIFE+ GAMING PERFORMANCE setup/guide
What is maxwen governor? Where can i find it?
Sent from my HTC One X using xda app-developers app
jarein95 said:
What is maxwen governor? Where can i find it?
Sent from my HTC One X using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Its called Smartmax and its included in NCX and XM kernels.
Re: The ULTIMATE BATTERY LIFE+ GAMING PERFORMANCE setup/guide
geko95gek said:
Its called Smartmax and its included in NCX and XM kernels.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
xD jajajaa is what I am using since yesterday jajajaa but i didnt recognised it with the name of maxwen!! Jajajajaa
Sent from my HTC One X using xda app-developers app
jarein95 said:
xD jajajaa is what I am using since yesterday jajajaa but i didnt recognised it with the name of maxwen!! Jajajajaa
Sent from my HTC One X using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Maxwen is the nick of the guy who wrote it.
jarein95 said:
xD jajajaa is what I am using since yesterday jajajaa but i didnt recognised it with the name of maxwen!! Jajajajaa
Sent from my HTC One X using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lol, anyway looks like i'll have to edit OP so ppl know the name of the governor
Re: The ULTIMATE BATTERY LIFE+ GAMING PERFORMANCE setup/guide
If you use the repacked xm I posted it's set to smartmax automatically
Sent from my HTC One X using xda premium
mwilky said:
If you use the repacked xm I posted it's set to smartmax automatically
Sent from my HTC One X using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah i did use your repack cuz of original s2w Also cuz of Smartmax as default on boot. thx for that.
Btw OP updated with final battery results. Ppl i think we have the perfect match here about battery + gaming + speed. It's simply revolution of HoX. And all thx to everyone who developed for HoX sucha amazing stuff, and we must not forget things can get only BETTER for hox from now on not worse, so we might expect even better stats.
Just a small comment on smartmax
Setting boost_freq has actually not much of an effect
This is only used for the "external" boost interface of smartmax
This can be used e.g. from the android power module to boost
the cpu if required. But thats of course not implement in most roms
So only touch_poke_freq has an effect since this is use to boost
on input events from the touchscreen
maxwen said:
Just a small comment on smartmax
Setting boost_freq has actually not much of an effect
This is only used for the "external" boost interface of smartmax
This can be used e.g. from the android power module to boost
the cpu if required. But thats of course not implement in most roms
So only touch_poke_freq has an effect since this is use to boost
on input events from the touchscreen
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thx on the correct info.
Edit - Benchmarks updated.
Re: The ULTIMATE BATTERY LIFE+ GAMING PERFORMANCE setup/guide
Hi. What app did u use to change governers? Any preferred?
Sent from my HTC One X using XDA Premium HD app
gilbertvpuen said:
Hi. What app did u use to change governers? Any preferred?
Sent from my HTC One X using XDA Premium HD app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello , for changing the governors and schedulers undercloking , overclocking and changing the governor values i use SetCpu you can find it on apkmania site, as for undervolting and further more tweeking i'm using System tuner , you can find that one on the playstore. Btw it's in the Op
Re: The ULTIMATE BATTERY LIFE+ GAMING PERFORMANCE setup/guide
Shan89 said:
Hello , for changing the governors and schedulers undercloking , overclocking and changing the governor values i use SetCpu you can find it on apkmania site, as for undervolting and further more tweeking i'm using System tuner , you can find that one on the playstore. Btw it's in the Op
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi shan,thanks. One last thing. I noticed you have changed your fonts, im also in renovate rom with xm106. I dont see any options for that. Can u guide me too a link? Cnt find it in themes/ add ons thread.
Sent from my HTC One X using XDA Premium HD app
Re: The ULTIMATE BATTERY LIFE+ GAMING PERFORMANCE setup/guide
Thnks shang, will try it in SkyDragon rom to see how it works, as Base 3.17 its better, hope to get better results,
Btw.. Kernel Devs makes our roms better.
Cheers
SkyDragon Team© No Kangy rom allowed.

{KERNEL}[JB][TWRP+CWM]Trinity Ultimate Kernel V2.2 - FiXed - UltraKernelX - <OTA> -XT

{KERNEL}[JB][TWRP+CWM]Trinity Ultimate Kernel V2.2 - FiXed - UltraKernelX - <OTA> -XT
~ Trinity Ultimate Kernel RipJawsZ Edition V2.2A TUX ~
{
"lightbox_close": "Close",
"lightbox_next": "Next",
"lightbox_previous": "Previous",
"lightbox_error": "The requested content cannot be loaded. Please try again later.",
"lightbox_start_slideshow": "Start slideshow",
"lightbox_stop_slideshow": "Stop slideshow",
"lightbox_full_screen": "Full screen",
"lightbox_thumbnails": "Thumbnails",
"lightbox_download": "Download",
"lightbox_share": "Share",
"lightbox_zoom": "Zoom",
"lightbox_new_window": "New window",
"lightbox_toggle_sidebar": "Toggle sidebar"
}
INTRODUCTION -
I NOW Present you the Best Of the Best Trinity Ultimate Vengeance Kernel V2.2 TUX, I Assure you the Best Performance and Battery Life, In Your Phones Xperia S / SL, This is Based On the Official JB Sourced.. And This Kernel Have More than 12+ Optimization and Tweaks.. To Have the Best I/O And The Best Score in your Benchmark! For Now Ive Use LINARO or Code Sourcery
DOWNLOADS - STABLE
Main Server Download / Website - 2.2 =
Standard Scores - More Battery - Version
1.7Ghz Capped Freq :http://bit.ly/12QYz6f
1.9Ghz Capped Freq :http://bit.ly/1c9xm5y
High Scores - Less Battery and More Battery - Version
1.7Ghz Capped Freq : Soon!
1.9Ghz Capped Freq : Soon!
Donate To Me TrinityHaxxorX : >> TrinityHaxxorX <<
" @mericon and @TrinityHaxxorX , We Don't Allow Other Devs to Use the TWRP That We Create, Its A Unique Feature in Our Kernel, Respect Use We Respect You "
​
" NOTE AFTER FLASHING JUST REBOOT AND ITS OKAY! "
Press thanks when you download, just once, if every person that have downloaded TVRx ROMs since the start had pressed the thanks button I would have more than 10000000 Thanks , and if every person that have downloaded TVRx ROM since the start, had donated well you know the sentence, I would be really rich , so please :
KERNEL SECTION DONORS
Thomas Rush - 10$
AnTuTu: OC To 1.7Ghz Both | Sometimes You Get Low Score Because Of Dif. Governor and Scheduler
V1 = Trinity - 9621 V2 = 10K+
Doom - 9286
Other Kernel : N/A
Kernel Source : http://bit.ly/10Y0uF3
Proof or Vouch -
almost 22 min on battery didnt lost 1% coooool BEST WITH ALL JB ROMS! Specially My ROM! - By @sparxx4
Hello Trinity! Im just posting to say thank you for you're work. Im using your kernel in combination with ur rom. Very very good work. Kernel is very stable imo and the rom is very snappy. Buttersmooth experience, increased battery life and very good benchmark/games performance. Thumbs up @Michielwashier
Dear Trinity, I think this version is the best kernel that you've created!
Works very good for me Thank you And it's seem dancedance performance is very good in this version Did you tweaked it? It's really dancing mate Wheatley is nice too Both is my favorite And I can confirm cpu1 jumping freq is gone @LLy_BosHi
Changelog -
V2.1A | 2.2B ( Re-Fixed and Re-Vamped Version )
Added CRT Hack
Kernel 3.4.20 Thanks To @Forzaferrarileo For Commit
Added New TCP Congestion Control Thanks To @Forzaferrarileo For Commit
Weak WiFi Tweak
Switched To Forza. OC Table Thanks To @Forzaferrarileo For Commit
Simple KGSL
Re-Enabled CONFIG_TRINITY_CHANGE ~ Easy 1.7 To 2.0 Ghz
eMMC in Sleep mode before suspend
Increased DMA size To 1 * 16
Enable AFTR Feature
Added Frandom
Added SLQB Memory Allocator
Revamped VMDirty
Revamped VM
Revamped PageWriteBack
Fix Benchmark Score Output
Initial 2 BootSplash - Waiting For @mericon Bootsplash
Enabled Group Scheduling
Reverted 30 Touch Gestures
Added Conservative Governor
Added CPU1 Fix V1.3 - Revamped
Added New Mpdecision - Revamped
Added Stable 2.0Ghz OC
Added Stable Voltage
Increased ReadAHead
Added CPU1 and CPU0 Info
Added Workaround To Link CPU0 and CPU1
Added Initial File for 1.7Ghz and 2.0Ghz - CONFIG_TRINITY_CHANGER=y For 2.0 and =N for 1.7
Revamped Fastcharge
Revamped I/O
Added -O3 Optimization
Increased I/O Float
Added NTFS Support Again
Removed Old Mpdecision Replaced with CPU1 Work
Frandom V1.1
Added Initial Files For ZRAM 1.1
Added Initial Files For Snappy Google Compression
Stat For CPU1 Mpdecision Should Update From Time To Time
V2.0 - Uploaded
Using Newest TWRP
Re-Enabled Color Control
FastCharge V1.3
Smooth Cpufreq Scrolling - From galaxy s2
Re-Enabled MSM_Thermal_Management 8x60 | 8960
GPU OC (?) - What is "(?)" In A Possibility That I Won't Be Added
Added SMARTMAX
Added BADASS
Added Wheatley
msm : rpm-smd : Configure WQ for High Priority
Added LIONHEART
Added Fiops
Added ROW
Added FiFo
Added Conservative
Added I/O Tweak V1.3
Added Ondemand Tweak
Possible Fix For cpu core #1
V1.9 - Uploaded
Using 1.5 Kernel Source
Using Linaro
New VR
New SIO
New CFQ
New Dancedance
Added Mpdecision V2.0
Battery Tweak
mpdecision
ZRAM
Force To Charge At Unsupported Chargers
Optimized Build Flags
msm: cpufreq: Configure WQ for higer priority
msm_fb: display: Use spinlock instead of mutex in vsync timer handler
lib/memcopy: use glibc version
switch do_fsync() to fget_light()
Lowered Swap
Tweaked Page Write Back
JIT For Default
Update Topology V1
Added XZ Compression
Boost I/O Performance
LOAD_FREQ (4*HZ+61) avoids loadavg More
random: add new get_random_bytes_arch() function
block/deadline: tweaked for better performance on android
Reduced Android Logger RAM usage
mm.c Tweak
Drivers Tweak
I/O Tweak
msm: cpufreq: Add API to allow limiting of min and max cpu frequencies
Increased Battery Capacity
V1.8 - Uploaded
OC Upto 2.0Ghz
Patched Freq to 1.5Ghz
Fixed All Freq Except Cpu1
Revamped All Governor Except Ondemand
V1.7 - Uploaded
Added Source Added AOSP Source Defconfig
Increased 2D and 3D
Compiled With code sourcery
Fastcharge V2
remove 64Bit
I/O Tweak
Tweaked Lionheart
Tweaked Ondemand
Tweaked Dancedance
Tweaked Mpdecision
Tweaked UV
Added Battery tweak V2 Alpha
V1.6 - Uploaded
BB Installer Thanks to @letama
Exp Version
TWRP
Added @mericon to my Team.
Added New Bootsplash
Added New 3D OC
AROMA Installer
Kernel 3.4.49 with SoD Fix, Memory Leak Fix, And FPS Drop Fix - WIP -
2D OC Scallable - Upto 310Mhz
Fixed Missing Config Of Governors
Improve ADB file push/pull performance
msm: iommu: Synchronize access to IOMMU cfg port
msm: kgsl: Synchronize access to IOMMU cfg port
msm: kgsl: Make the GPU device aware of the next pending event
Improve MTP File Transfer Performance
V1.5 - Uploaded
Added Fiops
Added Smoothass
Added Lagfree
Added BrazillianWax
SuperStamina Support Beta #1 @ 1.7
driver/thermal: create kernel MSM thermal management for MSM8x60
mpdecision
msm: cpufreq: Configure WQ for higer priority
msm_fb: display: Use spinlock instead of mutex in vsync timer handler
lib/memcopy: use glibc version
switch do_fsync() to fget_light()
LOAD_FREQ (4*HZ+61) avoids loadavg More
random: add new get_random_bytes_arch() function
block/deadline: tweaked for better performance on android
Reduced Android Logger RAM usage
msm: cpufreq: Add API to allow limiting of min and max cpu frequencies
Increased Battery Capacity
Increased Charging Current - Higher is Better FTW!
V1.4- Uploaded
REMOVED DOOMLORD NEW RAMDISK VIOLATES I READ OP ALREADY. Thanks Re-Uploading
Reverted To the OLD Freq. Table
Remove Frequency Table Based On Fer. Kernel
Removed Native GPU OC That I Made
LINARO Compiled
ZRAM
Force To Charge At Unsupported Chargers
Optimized Build Flags
Added Lagfree - Not In Kernel In Defconfig It Will Be Available @ 1.5
Added BrazilianWax - Not In Kernel In Defconfig It Will Be Available @ 1.5
Remove Wheatly
Added Smoothass - Not In Kernel In Defconfig It Will Be Available @ 1.5
Fix Leak Memory
Fix Frequency Boot-up
V1.3 - Skipped Private Testing For 24hrs
V1.2 - Uploaded!
Voltage Control
New Build Flag
I/O Tweak V2
New Bootsplash By @Yakandu
GPU OC 2D/3D
GPU Control
New Frequency Table
Battery Tweak
FastCharge V1 Port from NOVA
V1.1 - Uploaded!
Increased I/O Performance x2
SIO Tweak
Compiled with Linaro Cortex
Linaro Optimization
Added Wheatly
Added SIO
Added HotPlug
Increased Entropy
Lowered Swap
Tweaked Page Write Back
JIT For Default
Update Topology V1
Added XZ Compression
Boost I/O Performance
V1.0
DoomLord RAMDISK
Pre-Rooted
Busybox
Compiled With Linaro ToolChain
Snapdragon Optimization
mm.c Tweak
Drivers Tweak
I/O Tweak
VM_READHEAD Tweak Increased
Battery Charge Tweak
dancedance Governor
Overclocking Support
Undervolting Support
Future Plan -
TWRP Recovery
Add Fugeswap
Arm: Allow CPU-supported unaligned accesses
CS ToolChain
O3 Optimization
SuperStamina Support
All Governors
USB OTG Support
USB Fast Charge
Nightmare Governor - TEST
Trinity Governor Based On - Dancedance
Tweak audio buffers for Beats
Complete I/O Scheduler
Many More That Is My Plan For 1.2 To 1.5
What Is A Kernel?
Android (like many other Smartphone operating systems) runs on the Linux kernel. The Linux kernel was created in the early 1990’s by a gentleman named Linus Torvalds in Helsinki Finland. It’s incredibly stable, incredibly friendly, and incredibly difficult for the layman to understand and modify. Thankfully it’s also very popular so it has been ported on to a multitude of hardware, including our Android devices.
Think of the kernel as an interface layer between the hardware and software on your device. The kernel decides when things happen, such as the LED indicator gets lit. An application sends a request to the operating system to blink the LED. The operating system then sends the request to the kernel, which makes the light flash for the amount of time requested by the OS.
What sounds like a round-about way to get things done is also what makes the system so scalable and robust. Application developers only have to code in a way the operating system understands and the kernel makes it work on the hardware. This also keeps the application running in it’s own user-space and separate from the kernel. That means when you run the latest uber-cool app that wasn’t designed for your particular OS version, or is still very beta and it crashes, the kernel gives you the option to Force Close the application and the kernel can run untouched.
In a standard Android ROM (we will leave developer images and the like for another discussion) the kernel is bundled along with a set of instructions that tell the device how to load the kernel and the OS during boot. This is the boot.img that you see inside a zipped ROM that you're not able to easily open. The device knows to extract this image to internal memory (the ramdisk) and follow a series of scripts (init scripts) to load the kernel and then the other portions of the OS. That’s what’s happening while you’re watching the boot animation. Interestingly enough this is done the same way for a PC, your smartphone, an Android tablet, or even a smart Linux powered toaster. If you’re feeling exceptionally geeky, plug your Android phone into the USB port on your PC and let the PC boot from the USB device. No, it doesn’t actually load, but you can watch the animation while it tries to match up the hardware support with what’s inside your PC. As I said, Linux is amazingly scalable and as a result so is Android.
​ Credits -
DooMLord
Sony
XDA
BitBucket
!THREAD UNDER CONSTRUCTION!​
Mpdecision and Sweep2Wake @ 1.5 Kernel SooN!
What is msm_mpdecision?​
100% kernel based multi core decision! (should cpu1 be online or not?)
This replaces your /system/bin/mpdecision binary which is renamed by the installer to mpdecision_backup.
Check /sys/kernel/msm_mpdecision/conf/ for the configuration.
startdelay = time until mpdecision starts doing it's magic (70000)
delay = time between checks (500)
pause = if something else plugs in the cpu, fall asleep for 10000
scroff_single_core = if the screen is off, don't plug in cpu1 (1)
nwns_threshold_up = runqueue threshold, if this is reached cpu1 will be hotplugged (35)
nwns_threshold_down = runqueue threshold, if this is reached cpu1 will be unplugged (5)
twts_threshold_up = time threshold, this amount of time must have passed (250)
twts_threshold_down = same as above (250)
enabled = enable(1) or disable(0) mpdecision. This does not affect scroff_single_core!
idle_freq = a value against that will be checked if a core +/- is requested. (486000)
If cpu0 is below that value and a core up of cpu1 is requested, nothing will happen.
If cpu1 is above that value and a core down of cpu1 is requested, nothing will happen. (otherwise it would now put down cpu1 even though it is still working)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
GOVERNORS
----
Official Governors to Be Added In My Kernel
----
I) MANUAL:
These are the 19 governors we're talking about.
1) Ondemand
2) Ondemandx
3) Conservative
4) Interactive
5) Interactivex
6) Lulzactive
7) Lulzactiveq
8) Smartass
9) SmartassV2
10) Intellidemand
11) Lazy
12) Lagfree
13) Lionheart
14) LionheartX
15) Brazilianwax
16) SavagedZen
17) Userspacce
18) Powersave
19) Performance
NOTE: Info on Samsung's own multi-core aware governor - Pegasusq is here
1) Ondemand:
Default governor in almost all stock kernels. One main goal of the ondemand governor is to switch to max frequency as soon as there is a CPU activity detected to ensure the responsiveness of the system. (You can change this behavior using smooth scaling parameters, refer Siyah tweaks at the end of 3rd post.) Effectively, it uses the CPU busy time as the answer to "how critical is performance right now" question. So Ondemand jumps to maximum frequency when CPU is busy and decreases the frequency gradually when CPU is less loaded/apporaching idle. Even though many of us consider this a reliable governor, it falls short on battery saving and performance on default settings. One potential reason for ondemand governor being not very power efficient is that the governor decide the next target frequency by instant requirement during sampling interval. The instant requirement can response quickly to workload change, but it does not usually reflect workload real CPU usage requirement in a small longer time and it possibly causes frequently change between highest and lowest frequency.
2) Ondemandx:
Basically an ondemand with suspend/wake profiles. This governor is supposed to be a battery friendly ondemand. When screen is off, max frequency is capped at 500 mhz. Even though ondemand is the default governor in many kernel and is considered safe/stable, the support for ondemand/ondemandX depends on CPU capability to do fast frequency switching which are very low latency frequency transitions. I have read somewhere that the performance of ondemand/ondemandx were significantly varying for different i/o schedulers. This is not true for most of the other governors. I personally feel ondemand/ondemandx goes best with SIO I/O scheduler.
3) Conservative:
A slower Ondemand which scales up slowly to save battery. The conservative governor is based on the ondemand governor. It functions like the Ondemand governor by dynamically adjusting frequencies based on processor utilization. However, the conservative governor increases and decreases CPU speed more gradually. Simply put, this governor increases the frequency step by step on CPU load and jumps to lowest frequency on CPU idle. Conservative governor aims to dynamically adjust the CPU frequency to current utilization, without jumping to max frequency. The sampling_down_factor value acts as a negative multiplier of sampling_rate to reduce the frequency that the scheduler samples the CPU utilization. For example, if sampling_rate equal to 20,000 and sampling_down_factor is 2, the governor samples the CPU utilization every 40,000 microseconds.
4) Interactive:
Can be considered a faster ondemand. So more snappier, less battery. Interactive is designed for latency-sensitive, interactive workloads. Instead of sampling at every interval like ondemand, it determines how to scale up when CPU comes out of idle. The governor has the following advantages: 1) More consistent ramping, because existing governors do their CPU load sampling in a workqueue context, but interactive governor does this in a timer context, which gives more consistent CPU load sampling. 2) Higher priority for CPU frequency increase, thus giving the remaining tasks the CPU performance benefit, unlike existing governors which schedule ramp-up work to occur after your performance starved tasks have completed. Interactive It's an intelligent Ondemand because of stability optimizations. Why??
Sampling the CPU load every X ms (like Ondemand) can lead to under-powering the CPU for X ms, leading to dropped frames, stuttering UI, etc. Instead of sampling the CPU at a specified rate, the interactive governor will check whether to scale the CPU frequency up soon after coming out of idle. When the CPU comes out of idle, a timer is configured to fire within 1-2 ticks. If the CPU is very busy between exiting idle and when the timer fires, then we assume the CPU is underpowered and ramp to max frequency.
5) Interactivex:
This is an Interactive governor with a wake profile. More battery friendly than interactive.
6) Lulzactive:
This new find from Tegrak is based on Interactive & Smartass governors and is one of the favorites.
Old Version: When workload is greater than or equal to 60%, the governor scales up CPU to next higher step. When workload is less than 60%, governor scales down CPU to next lower step. When screen is off, frequency is locked to global scaling minimum frequency.
New Version: Three more user configurable parameters: inc_cpu_load, pump_up_step, pump_down_step. Unlike older version, this one gives more control for the user. We can set the threshold at which governor decides to scale up/down. We can also set number of frequency steps to be skipped while polling up and down.
When workload greater than or equal to inc_cpu_load, governor scales CPU pump_up_step steps up. When workload is less than inc_cpu_load, governor scales CPU down pump_down_step steps down.
Example:
Consider
inc_cpu_load=70
pump_up_step=2
pump_down_step=1
If current frequency=200, Every up_sampling_time Us if cpu load >= 70%, cpu is scaled up 2 steps - to 800.
If current frequency =1200, Every down_sampling_time Us if cpu load < 70%, cpu is scaled down 1 step - to 1000.
7) Lulzactiveq:
Lulzactiveq is a modified lulzactive governor authored by XDA member robertobsc and is adapted in Siyah kernel for GS2 and GS3. Lulzactiveq aims to optimize the second version of luzactive from Tegrak by a) providing an extra parameter (dec_cpu_load) to make scaling down more sensible, and b) incorporating hotplug logic to the governor. Luzactiveq is the first ever interactive based governor with hotplugging logic inbuilt (atleast the first of its kind for the exynos platform). When CPU comes out of idle loop and it's time to make a scaling decision, if load >= inc_cpu_load CPU is scaled up (like original luzactiveq) and if load <dec_cpu_load, CPU is scaled down. This possibly eliminates the strict single cut-off frequency for luzactiveq to make CPU scaling decisions. Also, stand hotplug logic runs as a separate thread with the governor so that external hotplugging logic is not required to control hotplug in and out (turn On and Off) CPU cores in multi core devices like GS2 or GS3. Only a multi core aware governor makes real sense on muti-core devices. Lulzactiveq and pegasusq aims to do that.
8) Smartass:
Result of Erasmux rewriting the complete code of interactive governor. Main goal is to optimize battery life without comprising performance. Still, not as battery friendly as smartassV2 since screen-on minimum frequency is greater than frequencies used during screen-off. Smartass would jump up to highest frequency too often as well.
9) SmartassV2:
Version 2 of the original smartass governor from Erasmux. Another favorite for many a people. The governor aim for an "ideal frequency", and ramp up more aggressively towards this freq and less aggressive after. It uses different ideal frequencies for screen on and screen off, namely awake_ideal_freq and sleep_ideal_freq. This governor scales down CPU very fast (to hit sleep_ideal_freq soon) while screen is off and scales up rapidly to awake_ideal_freq (500 mhz for GS2 by default) when screen is on. There's no upper limit for frequency while screen is off (unlike Smartass). So the entire frequency range is available for the governor to use during screen-on and screen-off state. The motto of this governor is a balance between performance and battery.
10) Intellidemand:
Intellidemand aka Intelligent Ondemand from Faux is yet another governor that's based on ondemand. Unlike what some users believe, this governor is not the replacement for OC Daemon (Having different governors for sleep and awake). The original intellidemand behaves differently according to GPU usage. When GPU is really busy (gaming, maps, benchmarking, etc) intellidemand behaves like ondemand. When GPU is 'idling' (or moderately busy), intellidemand limits max frequency to a step depending on frequencies available in your device/kernel for saving battery. This is called browsing mode. We can see some 'traces' of interactive governor here. Frequency scale-up decision is made based on idling time of CPU. Lower idling time (<20%) causes CPU to scale-up from current frequency. Frequency scale-down happens at steps=5% of max frequency. (This parameter is tunable only in conservative, among the popular governors )
To sum up, this is an intelligent ondemand that enters browsing mode to limit max frequency when GPU is idling, and (exits browsing mode) behaves like ondemand when GPU is busy; to deliver performance for gaming and such. Intellidemand does not jump to highest frequency when screen is off.
11) Lazy:
This governor from Ezekeel is basically an ondemand with an additional parameter min_time_state to specify the minimum time CPU stays on a frequency before scaling up/down. The Idea here is to eliminate any instabilities caused by fast frequency switching by ondemand. Lazy governor polls more often than ondemand, but changes frequency only after completing min_time_state on a step overriding sampling interval. Lazy also has a screenoff_maxfreq parameter which when enabled will cause the governor to always select the maximum frequency while the screen is off.
12) Lagfree:
Lagfree is similar to ondemand. Main difference is it's optimization to become more battery friendly. Frequency is gracefully decreased and increased, unlike ondemand which jumps to 100% too often. Lagfree does not skip any frequency step while scaling up or down. Remember that if there's a requirement for sudden burst of power, lagfree can not satisfy that since it has to raise cpu through each higher frequency step from current. Some users report that video playback using lagfree stutters a little.
13) Lionheart:
Lionheart is a conservative-based governor which is based on samsung's update3 source. Tweaks comes from 1) Knzo 2) Morfic. The original idea comes from Netarchy. See here. The tunables (such as the thresholds and sampling rate) were changed so the governor behaves more like the performance one, at the cost of battery as the scaling is very aggressive.
To 'experience' Lionheart using conservative, try these tweaks:
sampling_rate:10000 or 20000 or 50000, whichever you feel is safer. (transition latency of the CPU is something below 10ms/10,000uS hence using 10,000 might not be safe).
up_threshold:60
down_threshold:30
freq_step:5
Lionheart goes well with deadline i/o scheduler. When it comes to smoothness (not considering battery drain), a tuned conservative delivers more as compared to a tuned ondemand.
14) LionheartX
LionheartX is based on Lionheart but has a few changes on the tunables and features a suspend profile based on Smartass governor.
15) Brazilianwax:
Similar to smartassV2. More aggressive ramping, so more performance, less battery.
16) SavagedZen:
Another smartassV2 based governor. Achieves good balance between performance & battery as compared to brazilianwax.
17) Userspace:
Instead of automatically determining frequencies, lets user set frequencies.
18) Powersave:
Locks max frequency to min frequency. Can not be used as a screen-on or even screen-off (if scaling min frequency is too low).
19) Performance:
Sets min frequency as max frequency. Use this while benchmarking!
So, Governors can be categorized into 3/4 on a high level:
1.a) Ondemand Based:
Works on "ramp-up on high load" principle. CPU busy-time is taken into consideration for scaling decisions. Members: Ondemand, OndemandX, Intellidemand, Lazy, Lagfree.
1.b) Conservative Based:
Members: Conservative, Lionheart, LionheartX
2) Interactive Based:
Works on "make scaling decision when CPU comes out of idle-loop" principle. Members: Interactive, InteractiveX, Lulzactive, Luzactiveq, Smartass, SmartassV2, Brazilianwax, SavagedZen.
3) Weird Category:
Members: Userspace, Powersave, Performance.
Thank To Droiphile
Which are the linaro beneficts? I heard a lot about it months ago...
megamarini said:
Which are the linaro beneficts? I heard a lot about it months ago...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Here you Go Buddy http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1371044
TrinityHaxxorX said:
Here you Go Buddy http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1371044
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you mate... and what about dance dance governor??? something really new??? i'm not able to find it on Google,...
we win a great devolper here ,, great job man you making alot of things in short time
keep up the good work
megamarini said:
Thank you mate... and what about dance dance governor??? something really new??? i'm not able to find it on Google,...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah Its New...
TrinityHaxxorX said:
Yeah Its New...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's battery friendly or performance?
sparxx4 said:
we win a great devolper here ,, great job man you making alot of things in short time
keep up the good work
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not A Shorttime lol I Worked 8-14Hrs For my ROM / Kernel Since Im Out of gaming Like MW3 and LOL So I Focus Development
megamarini said:
It's battery friendly or performance?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
For my Opinion Yes... I'll Add the dancedance Info Later Im Still In my Friend house
@megamarini Thats Why Ive Default that as My Governor Its Likely Deepsleep Much better and the Performance is in the Core kernel or source files
It's Snuzzo's own creation. It's based on conservative, but with higher ramp rates (similar to lionheart) and better sleep routines (similar to wheatley).
TrinityHaxxorX said:
@megamarini Thats Why Ive Default that as My Governor Its Likely Deepsleep Much better and the Performance is in the Core kernel or source files
It's Snuzzo's own creation. It's based on conservative, but with higher ramp rates (similar to lionheart) and better sleep routines (similar to wheatley).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It looks very interesting... Thank you for your work!!:victory:
megamarini said:
It looks very interesting... Thank you for your work!!:victory:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Its Okay Just Give Feedback Later or Sooner
Oh yeah new kernel! XD
btw was the kernel boot up screen are SONY logo or?
jimRnor said:
Oh yeah new kernel! XD
btw was the kernel boot up screen are SONY logo or?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Cause I Dont have any Custom Bootsplash yet lol
yes its sony logo
___
almost 22 min on battery didnt lost 1% coooool
sparxx4 said:
yes its sony logo
___
almost 22 min on battery didnt lost 1% coooool
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What Governor
ondemand
just flashed the kernel and didnt touch any thing
26 min on battery for 1% its roock dude with brightness almost 50% you can get more great job
sparxx4 said:
ondemand
just flashed the kernel and didnt touch any thing
26 min on battery for 1% its roock dude with brightness almost 50% you can get more great job
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good Use dancedance soon and give feedback
Future Plan -
TWRP Recovery
Add Fugeswap
Arm: Allow CPU-supported unaligned accesses
CS ToolChain
O3 Optimization
SuperStamina Support
All Governors
USB OTG Support
USB Fast Charge
Nightmare Governor - TEST
Trinity Governor Based On - Dancedance
Tweak audio buffers for Beats
Complete I/O Scheduler
Many More That Is My Plan For 1.2 To 1.5

[Q] Devil Kernel Settings

I'm using Conch Republic Edition 3D without F2FS and was having some issues with my phone locking up occasionally (pull battery to fix) and audio slowing to a stutter when the screen was off using the default settings. I found a post with some one recommending some changes for an S3, which have alleviated my issues, but I was guessing these weren't ideal since it was a different device. I was hoping to get pointers on getting the best performance/ battery life balance. Also wondered if there was a place that outlined the IO scheduler and CPU governor differences so I can learn more.
Current Settings:
IO sched: row
Governor: devilq 200-1600 mhz
Gpu steps: 266-440-533-640-700
Gpu steps voltages: 925-1000-1050-1075-1100 mv
Cpu voltages: -50 on all frequencys.
Zram and swappines off.
Thanks!
zenmatt said:
I'm using Conch Republic Edition 3D without F2FS and was having some issues with my phone locking up occasionally (pull battery to fix) and audio slowing to a stutter when the screen was off using the default settings. I found a post with some one recommending some changes for an S3, which have alleviated my issues, but I was guessing these weren't ideal since it was a different device. I was hoping to get pointers on getting the best performance/ battery life balance. Also wondered if there was a place that outlined the IO scheduler and CPU governor differences so I can learn more.
Current Settings:
IO sched: row
Governor: devilq 200-1600 mhz
Gpu steps: 266-440-533-640-700
Gpu steps voltages: 925-1000-1050-1075-1100 mv
Cpu voltages: -50 on all frequencys.
Zram and swappines off.
Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
the s3 and the n2 are very similar

Weird behaviour with some cpu governors

I am currently on RR with the m8 kernel.
I am seeing a very bizarre behavioural pattern where powersaving governors and hotplugs such as alucard have ha huge battery consumption whereas interactive governors such as yankactive or intelliactive consume way less.
For example my current settings are smartmax_eps governor with msm_hotplug,
Code:
CPU Maximum Frequency 1267Mhz
CPU minumum Frequency 268Mhz
Sync threshold disabled
Input boost frequency disabled
For my hotplug I have the MSM Hotplug
Code:
all defaults
For GPU governor
Code:
Max Frequency 462Mhz
GPU governor powersave
I have also enabled vomer accurich in screen settings, but I don't think it should have any bearings on the battery life.
and it still consumes more than Intelliactive with the MSM Hotplug and 2 Boosted cores. and max boost frequency 2419MHz.
I don't even want to talk abour zzmoove that has an incredible power drain when I have enabled the zzmoove all hotplugs disabled and zzmoove native hotplug enabled (23%/h).
Am I doing something wrong or are some of my configurations wrong? I have tasker and wanted to have the best powersaving experience while on the go and then switch over to a good interactive governor when playing some games sometimes. I am missing the power saving profile with great battery life.
Does here someone have a better configuration profile or an idea of what the problem might be or the thing that I am missing?
Alucard, arteractive and SavagedZen use more 2.4GHz(max freq). I noticed that, and I don't know why mentioned governors do that.
That's on Team M8 kernel.
@Zile995
What is the reasoning behind using max freq so much? Isn't it so that 4 slow cores tend to be more energy effiecient than 2 fast ones?
What is the setup you are using if I may ask?
Nyquis said:
@Zile995
What is the reasoning behind using max freq so much? Isn't it so that 4 slow cores tend to be more energy effiecient than 2 fast ones?
What is the setup you are using if I may ask?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=68121297
+ intelli_plug
They have bugs, I don't know why.

Categories

Resources