On Fri, Jan 18, 2019 at 12:22 AM Stuart D. Gathman wrote:
>
> Still stuck at 600Mhz with heat sinks attached and mini-fan from kit
What about running
watch cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpufreq/policy0/scaling_cur_freq
___
arm mailing list --
Still stuck at 600Mhz with heat sinks attached and mini-fan from kit.
So I guess it is a software problem.
On Thu, 17 Jan 2019, Stuart D. Gathman wrote:
On Thu, 17 Jan 2019, Stefan Wahren wrote:
Am 13.01.19 um 23:37 schrieb sam tygier:
I've been trying to adjust the frequency but never seen
Hi Sam,
Am 13.01.19 um 23:37 schrieb sam tygier:
> Hi.
>
> I've been trying to adjust the frequency but never seen
> /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpufreq/policy0/scaling_cur_freq say anything other
> than 60 even with 2 cpu intensive processes running.
>
> I have 4.19.13-300.fc29.aarch64
>
> It
Hi.
I've been trying to adjust the frequency but never seen
/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpufreq/policy0/scaling_cur_freq say anything other
than 60 even with 2 cpu intensive processes running.
I have 4.19.13-300.fc29.aarch64
It seems that despite
# cat scaling_available_frequencies
60
Hi John,
> John Walicki hat am 31. Dezember 2018 um 00:18
> geschrieben:
>
>
> In Peter's blog post (1), he mentions that there now experimental CPU
> frequency support for the Raspberry Pi.
>
apologize for being the grinch, but there are reasons that the cpufreq driver
isn't in mainline
Thanks for the replies.
> In my testing while Gnome isn't as snappy as some of the lighter
> weight desktops I've not seen Firefox take anywhere near that long,
When using LXDE, Firefox starts up in under a minute. Something else with
Gnome might be the cause. I also tried running Gnome
> Thanks - I have been monitoring the Raspberry Pi's current frequency by
> looking at: /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_cur_freq
> Even after adding force_turbo=1 to config.txt and rebooting, cpu0 never seems
> to scale above 600
> A closer peek at
> $ sudo cat
Thanks - I have been monitoring the Raspberry Pi's current frequency by looking
at: /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_cur_freq
Even after adding force_turbo=1 to config.txt and rebooting, cpu0 never seems
to scale above 600
A closer peek at
$ sudo cat
On Sun, Dec 30, 2018 at 11:18 PM John Walicki wrote:
>
> In Peter's blog post (1), he mentions that there now experimental CPU
> frequency support for the Raspberry Pi.
>
> I can't get my Raspberry Pi 3 B+ to scale beyond 600MHz. How do I enable
> the experimental CPU frequency support in